Hannah Orange Mum with Carex grass and Vera Jameson Sedum
Cabbages, Pansies and Violas in the Shed Hayracks
Instead of mums I have put in more cabbages of various colors, grasses (on sale), violas and pansies. More and more rudbeckias are coming on the market for fall planting, long lasting and sometimes return if planted in the garden. Pansies are also a good filler for containers, however, I have learned through the years that if they are too small they don't have the time to mature in the colder climates.
I kept the Rush Mohawk Blue from the summer and added a faux pumpkin and willow branches.
As I ready my containers for fall I am surprised by Pink Promise Rose, a Rose of the Year a few years ago. It has never looked like this and each year I consider pulling it out because it has never been really pink, plagued by rose midge and Japanese beetles just not a keeper. It is very tall, a hybrid tea, and always wondered where it belongs. It is fragrant and I guess it is telling me it belongs here!
Boltonia Pink Beauty is another surprise this year, looking more dainty than ever such a delight in a late summer garden!
Violas will fill out quickly if you deadhead the faded ones, a little slug bait and some liquid fertilizer, not super bloom this time of year.
Swiss Chard, Violas and Pansies
If you plant too late in the colder zones the plants will not have a chance to mature and fill out the containers.
I found a dwarf Sedum Sieboldi that looks like Vera Jameson and works well as a spiller and blooms a littler later. These will come back if planted in the garden before the ground freezes.
Dwarf Sedum Seiboldi
Cabbages with Red Mustard, Pansies and Sedum. I left the Euphorbia Diamond Frost for now but I may change this out, not sure it will look right with gourds and pumpkins.
The Cordyline and Dracena have been saved from the summer, faux autumn leaves with rudbeckia, cabbages and pansies.
Who am I kidding, I know I will buy a few more mums for the front garden!Well, I did it Bronze Mums and a White Aster. I do not have room in my garden to winter over mums and asters so I am not too concerned about my mum buying this year, three mums and one aster.
Please don't count the cabbages, pansies violas mustard and swiss chard! However, all of the aforementioned do last longer than mums!
I love your fall garden, Eileen. The sedum with the pink flowers is beautiful. I love the color combinations with the pumpkins, cabbages, violas etc. Very nicely done.
ReplyDeleteBeth
Hi Eileen, I cringed a little and then bought mums too. It is not that there is anything wrong with mums, its just it is the same old, same old. It is rather like wearing an old dress. There is nothing wrong with it, other than you are tired or bored with it. Though they are nothing new, cabbages and pansies don't provoke that same feeling. I wonder why that is? Your fall containers plantings look terrific. I wish I was half as good at it!
ReplyDeleteWow, so beautiful! I just bought a container of gorgeous maroon mums at Costco today. I think they perk up the fall grays around here.
ReplyDeleteYour containers and plantings are inspiring! Now that it feels like fall is really here I'm ready to start some fall planting. Your post gave me an idea for what to do with all of the Kale I just started, add them to containers!
ReplyDeleteThanks for Sedum sieboldi. I find it very helpful to learn about a new late bloomer.
ReplyDeleteEileen, if anyone will have a gorgeous fall display this year, you will! I love your planters which are so pretty now, but just wait until they bloom. I had some garden visitors here tonight who said they follow your blog because they learn so much from you and take copious notes on your plant selections. I was so glad to hear that, because I do the same thing!
ReplyDeleteEileen, your garden is so beautiful!
ReplyDeleteWow - what a lovely fall garden! so much going on!!!! Mum's here rarely make it through winter! Evey year - i give them "one more try" & it fails miserably! xoox
ReplyDeleteMums the flower!!! Color is what I needed and I am on number 4 in those purchases! I need more!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for a great Fall post!!
Mary Anne
You've got an interesting mix of cabbage plants, and dainty blooms in your garden and landscape as a whole. And it looks like your rose is begging for you to keep. Hope you give it another chance :)
ReplyDeleteI am loving the entire Hannah orange planting. What a great idea to use Vera Jameson Sedum as a spiller! If I get out this weekend and see a big orange Mum, I may have to buy it. I was not planning to buy any until I saw your planting!
ReplyDeleteAs always you do a great job desiging your planters.
Eileen girl you are way ahead of me .. I haven't sorted out how I will do the front entrance yet .. I have lots of the pretty kale and the mystery ornamental grass .. and a BIG pot of dark mums (love the dark against the light gray here) BUT wow !! you are on your game lady and I might have to do something about me now ? LOL
ReplyDeletebeautiful displays as ever : )
Joy
Thanks Beth,
ReplyDeleteI love the sedums this time of year. I wish I had room for more.
Eileen
Hi Jennifer,
ReplyDeleteMy husband thinks mums are a waste of money for such a short bloom time. Years ago I didn't do much for the fall, maybe some cornstalks, pumpkins and a mum. Now it seems fall decor is over the top for such a short period.
Eileen
Hi Aerie-el,
ReplyDeleteI haven't been to Costco in a few weeks. They always have huge mum plants, always wondered how I would get them home.
Eileen
Hi Cathereine,
ReplyDeleteThe Kale is great because it lasts so longer, probably longer in your area. It looks even pretty good when the snow flies and then turns mushy around December.
Eileen
Hi Allan,
ReplyDeleteI had not seen this dwarf variety before so I will put it in the garden before it gets too cold.
Eileen
Thanks Karen,
ReplyDeleteIt's fun knowing that people enjoy our blogs. You will be having visitors until the snow flies.
Eileen
Hi Tracie,
ReplyDeleteI have had luck with mums coming back a few times but they take up a lot of room in the garden for a short bloom time. I just keep them in the pots now.
Eileen
Hi Mary Anne,
ReplyDeleteSeeing all of those blooms in the fall can be enticing. It is so hard to go from so much color to cabbages and mums.
Eileen
Hi Katy,
ReplyDeleteI think I will be keep this rose but I may have to move it as it is so tall.
Eileen
Hi Zoey,
ReplyDeleteI wasn't planning on buying any this year either. When I saw them at one of my favorite nurseries I couldn't resist.
Eileen
Joy,
ReplyDeleteI bet the dark mums look great with the grey. I saw a purple called Stellar Purple that is later blooming but it wasn't open enough to see the exact coloe.
Eileen
Girl you always have the greatest container displays.The new Mum looks like it is going to be a great color. I have a couple of old Mums that hang around in the garden but my potted ones are getting puny looking. I think I will have to get a couple of new replacements.
ReplyDeleteI think the Rose is beautiful.
hahahaha...I'm the same way...as fall approaches, I'm a sucker for anything orange!
ReplyDeleteYour garden looks incredible right now. The Carex works so well with mums and the cabbages knock my socks off.
ReplyDeleteLona,
ReplyDeleteI am looking at that new mum as it opens and it is not how I remember Hannah. Oh well, it is orange.
Eileen
Scott,
ReplyDeleteI really have fallen for orange in the garden, even in my front garden this summer. In my book it goes with everything!
Eileen
Patrick,
ReplyDeleteThat Carex doesn't even look real but it is and it grows, could be used as a wig!
Eileen
Hi Eileen! I like the look of your garden, the mix of the autumn plants and the summer plants!
ReplyDeleteGorgeous, just gorgeous! Pansies, petunias, dianthus, mums and the such do well here through the winter..I need to go shopping!
ReplyDeleteI love my Mums. Ever since I found Belgian Mums on the internet maybe 3 or 4 years ago...mine have been coming back again and again. They were divided last year and all are doing fine. I only wish that I had picked out an earlier variety. Mine were blooming still when the snow fell last year.
ReplyDeleteYour fall garden is spectacular.
Balisha
Those flowers look great! so many blooms
ReplyDeleteYou have all the plants i adore, pansies, violas, ornamental cabbages. But even if i am not so much fan of mums, that form is awesome. Did you plant many seedlings of mums in one container to produce that look? Really very beautiful. I also have a question, i thought pansies are also called violas, but this is the 2nd post i read they are different. How are they different, i wonder! They look the same.
ReplyDeleteYour mum plants are huge!...and will be lovely when in full bloom! I love ornamental cabbages, and you have used them beautifully...
ReplyDeleteHi Hundreds of Ideas,
ReplyDeleteMy fall plantings will not live over the winter but I have friends in the South who have pansies blooming all winter.
Eileen
Hi Balisha,
ReplyDeleteI wish I had room in this garden to grow the very hardy mums. I grew some at my last home but I had a very large yard.
Eileen
Hi Andrea,
ReplyDeletePansies and violas are related, violas being smaller and slower to go to seed. Both must be deadheaded to continue full bloom.
I bought the mums that way from a local nursery, just one mum per container. They are pinched multiple times to achieve that shape, not at all leggy like some mums that I have had.
Eileen
Eileen you are still leaving me in the dust with decorations girl .. BUT ! I bought a net bag of Baby Boo white pumpkins, the small ones which means I have to start thinking of decorating the kitchen .. my main room in the house because everyone has to be in there at some point ? LOL
ReplyDeleteJoy : )
You have given me such wonderful ideas...a real inspiration. Wow!
ReplyDeleteI see that I am not the only one that is "wowed" by your gorgeous display! :)