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Your guide to top plants

Two perfect plants for Canada’s 150th

Want to do a special planting for Canada Day this year? Here are a couple of plants that are being marketed this spring specifically to appeal to those gardeners who want to show their patriotism when it comes to celebrating Canada’s 150th birthday on July 1. Dahlia 'Canadian Celebration' is a striking white dahlia with red stripes that is expected to...

Love me tender: it’s the hottest new trend in clematis and exotic vines

People don't care anymore when they buy a clematis if it dies at the end of summer. They just want to have good flower impact on their patio, balcony or deck for a few months. After, they don't care what happens to the vine. This according to Rob Wein, one of the owners of Clearview Horticultural, the biggest grower of clematis...

Six for success: Smart rules for gardeners.

Remember plants are living things. If you neglect them, don’t feed them, don’t care for them, force them to live in the dark when they need light or in the hot sun when they need shade, they will experience stress. They will either live out their life weak and failing, or get sick and die. First rule of good...

Honeysuckle pillar is a great space-saving idea for all gardens

I have been agonizing over what to do with a space in the garden that has become an eyesore since a large Clematis montana growing over a Viburnum Summer Snowflake collapsed and died over winter. The viburnum had grown into a small tree and the clematis had scrambled into it and smothered it, creating a beautiful canopy of flowers in...

Perfect small tree for a home garden

There are dozens of excellent trees for the average sized home garden, but forced to choose just one tree, I would pick this one - the Japanese snowbell tree (Styrax japonicus). It's the perfect tree for any home garden. My snowbell tree is at its peak right now in front of my house and is literally covered with beautiful, delicate,...

Why I’m feeling glad all over because these flowers are all mine

Some friends brought us a huge bouquet of gladioli the other day - four bunches containing red, purple, orange and peach ones. They were barely in flower when they arrived, but they have since started to open up and we have placed them in two tall vases and they actually look very good. In fact, the more the flowers open,...

Hot new perennials for my sunny border

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First thing this morning, I found room for a bunch of new perennials in a sunny spot already home to some ornamental grasses and weigela and burgundy and lime green ninebark. I put in six Coreopsis Uptick, considered the “kings of summer” and have the added appeal of being hybrids of a native North America species. The names of the ones I planted...

Gorgeous rose collapses under weight of blooms

My Reine des Violettes old-world rose has collapsed under the weight of abundant blooms and smothered the little wooden bench below. I never expected this rose to produce such an avalanche of flowers, particularly after the hard winter we had this year, but it has bounced back with renewed vigor. Reine des Violettes is a once-flowering, old-world Hybrid Perpetual with an...

A little shocker for some summer fun

What’s the quirkiest plant on the shelves this spring? It could well be the “electric daisy” (Acmella oleracea), possibly the hottest novelty plant of 2017 that also is known as the toothache plant. This also goes by the botanical name Spilanthes acmella. It has glossy green  leaves and golden, bud-like flowers with a dark red eye. In Brazil, where it is an...

Do hostas look better with or without their flowers?

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Do hostas look better with or without their flowers? Many people don't like the flowers and cut them off the moment they appear on their long stalks. Other love the flowers and would never think of cutting them when they are their peak. It really comes down to a matter of taste. But the conflict of whether to cut or not to...

New and exciting plants in my garden this spring

One of the new plants I have added to my garden this year is Euonymus japonica ‘Paloma Blanca’ which sometime goes by the name White Candles. I have used it to create a short, formal hedge behind which I grow a variety of taller shrubs including purple nine bark, calycanthus and Korean lilac. The euonymus replaces a drift of Carex...

Six great vines for spring planting

Here’s a quick look at six of the best vines to plant in your garden this spring. These will get visitors to look up. Raising their head will give them a positive feeling and you'll also be giving them something beautiful to look up at. This list, of course, is just a start. There are many other vines worth...

Why barrenwort is no longer one of my most loved plants

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In the early 1990s, I suffered, as did most other young gardeners who were starting out on their first major gardening project, from a serious case of plant lust: I felt I just had to have all the great plants in the book. Of course, I ended up with a hodgepodge, a disjointed jumble of plants, some of which obviously...

Wonder of germination: It’s all about the will to thrive and succeed

Germination is one of the great mysteries of life. Yes, we see it working. Yep, we have lots of science on the process. But the reality of a seed springing to life, forcing its way out of the ground, showing a steely determination to succeed, an energy and will to live and grow and become something more than it...

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