Monday, September 13, 2010

Fall Is Just Around the Corner

This is a fall grouping by my garden shed, mums in baskets, faux pumpkins, faux Reggie, Vera Jameson, Bronze Sedge, Rudbeckia (peeking out) cabbage, superbells, pansies, curly willow all with a background of still blooming summer perennials.

The concrete urns on each side of the garage are planted with deep colored cabbages, Vera Jameson Sedum, Bronze Lights Swiss Chard, rudbeckia, purple pansy, faux grass which has been separated out to give a more natural look, and marine varnished faux pumpkin on florist stake.  I used to use real pie pumpkins but the squirrels climbed up on my container and made a big mess.

I have tried to use my summer plantings whenever possible.  I  left the Creeping Jenny and the Profusion Orange Zinnias and added some violas and Coffee Twist grass.


I used smaller different colored cabbages along with a red swiss chard with orange and blue pansies.  The pansies are small this year so I hope they grow fast so we can see them.


I kept the cordyline from the summer as a backdrop and added peacock cabbage to the brown ceramic planters.

The cast iron containers are out in front with a very tall blue green grass from the summer plantings.  It looks very nice with the blue-green cabbages and frosty looking sedge.


Becky Rudbeckia is an annual in my area but I have had luck with Prairie Sun up in Wisconsin coming back three years in a row.




Fall begins next week, so I will be adding some gourds and small pumpkins  to the containers.  Halloween is a big holiday around here, so I will get to put out some big pumpkins and spooky things! 

Friday, September 10, 2010

Around The Garden

Pretty soon there won't be much to see around the garden except for sticks and mulch!

Heliopsis Lemon Queen

Boltonia Pink Beauty

Boltonia Nana is a light blue and blooms most of the summer (much shorter than the other Boltonias)

Phlox Miracle Grace (this phlox bloomed in the container for two weeks before I planted it)


Laura and Franz Schubert Phlox (still blooming if you deadhead)

 Plumbago and Marigolds planted when Becky Shastas were cut down

Cinco de Mayo has bloomed very little this summer, eaten alive by earwigs and japanese beetles,  happy to see it back for a grand finale!


One lonely Becky Shasta has come back

Mango Hibiscus (getting much deeper as the weather cools)




 Coleus Redhead

The above coleus is not mine but a planting at my local nursery.  I will definitely be looking for this one next year.

Coming Fall Containers (I'm working on them)

Have a great weekend!

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

Amaryllis and Paperwhites

Each and every fall for many years I have grown amaryllis and paperwhites for the holidays.  They are very easy to grow in a good potting soil. I am really a fan of the Christmas Amaryllis because it blooms in four to six weeks rather than the eight to twelve of the regular amaryllis.

Rock 'n Roll Amaryllis


Merry Christmas Amaryllis

Razzle Dazzle Amaryllis


Paperwhite Ziva

There are double and single Christmas Amaryllis and I find that the red twig dogwood stems sold in many nurseries around the holidays are great for holding up the stems of both the amaryllis and the paperwhites.

It is time to order both bulbs now and keep them in a cool place until ready to plant.  http://www.johnscheepers.com/ or http://www.vanengelen.com/  I better get going as I have already ordered my spring bulbs but not my holiday bulbs!

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

A Little Break

We had a little break this weekend at Lake Geneva, Wisconsin.  The weather was cooler, so I was able to test out our furnace, change the filter and put some new batteries in the thermostat.  We also brought in the succulents on our front porch and deadheaded most of the perennials.  I do not plant any annuals up here anymore because there is no watering going on when we are not up here.  Even a few perennials didn't make it this year because of the heat, but overall, most of the plantings look better than at home.


The Vera Jameson Sedum and Nepeta Walkers Low look much more vivid in my Wisconsin Garden than back at home.

This is also supposed to be Vera Jameson, but since planting a couple of years ago, it has always had a different look.  Vera Jameson always looks better either hanging over something or planted in front of other plantings just peeking out.

Sedum Autumn Joy

Rudbeckia, Knockout Roses and the Juniper that fell over last winter (seems to have recovered)

We even got in a little kite flying

On Sunday, we made our way to Elkhorn to the Walworth County Fair.  The fair dates back to 1850 and is everything you can imagine about an old fashioned county fair, rides, philly cheese steaks, corn dogs, cotton candy, homemade lemonade and even the church hall diner (where we ate).




Lots of horse races

The vintage church dining hall where we had lunch

We had come to the fair two years ago but it was so hot we could barely move through the congested aisles of concessions.  I remember lots of funnel cakes, my daughter riding a camel, a man carving beavers out of wood and my grandchildren posing on a fire engine.  This year, it was all about looking for the scariest ride, the tornado, silver streak, tilt a whirl, bumper cars, fireball and the octopus.



My favorite as a child, much to my mother's dismay, I came home with lots of goldfish!




Picture perfect veggies competing for a ribbon

Pastry ribbons, the one in the middle won first prize.


Crafts everywhere!


Pumpkin judging


This one won the blue ribbon

What a departure from my everyday life, miles and miles of farmland and open fields, a pristine blue sky and even though we saw many locals pulling out their BlackBerrys, there is still a feeling of the simple life.  I am not sure I could live there full time, but it is certainly a relaxing break from the daily treadmill of city life.

Friday, September 03, 2010

Loving Frank

This is the name of a book about Frank Lloyd Wright a famous worldwide architect who was never trained as an architect but had two years of engineering school in Wisconsin.  I should have done this years ago, but a few friends and I took a trip to Oak Park, Illinois to view the first home he built and lived in with his family.  It was also his studio where he and his underling architects worked for twenty years.  Louis Sullivan, another famous Chicago architect lent Frank the money to build this home and would be an influence in his life forever.


These are the pillars at the entrance made out of plaster which require a lot of maintenance.


This is his business card that is embedded in each home he built.

We were not allowed to take pictures of the inside of the house because of the flash affecting the artwork and the wood.  However, I did buy a book and hopefully you will get an idea of the groundbreaking design, Prairie Style, this was in 1889. 

Sculptures on each side of the doorway


This is a huge Ginkgo Tree that was here before the house was built.  It has outlived its projected lifetime.  Frank was a great lover of nature and even built the house around the limbs of a tree that projected through the side of the wall and up through the ceiling.  The tree had to be cut down so now it is faux limbs that project through the wall just to give visitors and idea of what it looked like.  It looked a little ridiculous to me just like the grand piano that he projected through the wall of the children's playroom coming out over a hallway staircase.  This idea required reworking the whole staircase and one still has to duck so as not to bump your head.


Sorry about the snow but it would not allow me to download the picture in the summer - kept flipping it.

My old house was a Prairie Style house built after the turn of the century with 4" oak trim that dropped from the ceiling and trimmed out the room, 6" oak moldings around the floor, canvas lined plaster walls, push button electrical wall plates, large wrought iron gravity air grates in the floor, leaded glass windows and doors with prisms.  It had a large ironstone fireplace in the living room with cabinets on each side missing the leaded glass doors.  The root cellar and the coal room in the basement were a fascination both for adults and the children. 

This is the children's playroom in Frank Lloyd Wrights house, beautiful mural depicting his favorite story as a child, built in storage all around the room for toys and an ironstone fireplace just like I had in my old home.  The lighting is original and designed by Wright.


This is magnificent stained glass that was boarded up for sixty years in his meeting room for prospective clients where he showed them his drawings.  It is believed that his sister many have done the stained glass designed throughout the home.

That is why I wish I had gone on this trip many years ago so I could have appreciated  more fully the design of the home I had and where this influence came from.  This is where my woodland garden was, huge trees, raccoons in our overhangs, a garage that had bifold doors that you closed manually and digging grounds in the back where the kids found artifacts from decades past.


This is an octagonal room and supposedly Frank's favorite.  The furniture in the home is all original being given back by all of the family members after the renovation in 1972.

This was his wife Catherine's day room with the baby crib that held forty Wright descendants.  Anne Baxter (the movie star, All About Eve, was Wright's granddaughter) returned the crib and several other pieces to the home after the renovation in 1972.

My husband had stripped off ten layers of paint from the beautiful moldings (it took seven years) and we peeled off the crumpled canvas in a few rooms to reveal perfect plaster walls.  We put on an addition to add
a master bedroom, family room, a bathroom and a screened in porch.  It was a money pit but it had an atmosphere and a history that can never be replaced in a newer home.  Some children long ago had carved their graduation date from the local high school in the huge beams in the basement, my children also carved theirs.

This is the master bedroom with commissioned artwork on each wall.  The light is original to the home.  The lights were designed by Wright and are original to the home.


This is the small dining room which they soon grew out of with six children in eleven years.  It then became a study area for the children.  The hanging green glass lights are original to the house.

Living Room with Inglenook (notice the curved fireplace, which there are many throughout the home, in the  style of Louis Sullivan.)

This is the larger dining room with all original furniture designed by Wright.  Take note of the overhead lighting, first ever indirect lighting.  He had the house wired when built knowing that a year and a half later electricity would come to Oak Park.

They say you can never go back, but my husband did when they were doing a complete renovation.  He walked in on them painting his beautiful oak moldings.  My daughter and I also went back two years ago when it was up for sale, liking what they had done with the layout, but not liking the white moldings in a Prairie Style home.  They are so many knockdowns in our area, but just last year our old house was granted historic status so it will be around for many lifetimes.

*I apologize for the flashes in the photos.  They were all taken from a booklet and could not be obtained online.  Frank was a minimalist and did not care for flowers in the house or on tables.  He commented on some of his furniture that he designed that if you sat in it long enough you would have black and blue marks.  He experienced a severe mid-life crisis, leaving his family, chopping up the above house to rent out and accommodate his family, eventually becoming an apartment rental for sixty years until it was restored beginning in 1972 taking fourteen years to complete,