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upcoming events

Portland Audubon Native Plant Sale

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Trillium_ovatum

Trillium ovatum, the native wakerobin

Portland Audubon is holding its annual Native Plant Sale this weekend, Saturday May 14 and Sunday May 15, 2011 from 10 am to 4 pm.

Over 100 species of Oregon wildflowers, shrubs, and trees will be available, suitable for gardens, wetlands, and wooded areas. There will be special lists of plants suitable for shade, sun, butterflies, and hummingbirds, as well as on-site plant experts to answer your questions.


There will also be educational sessions:

-Why native plants benefit habitat
-How to design a native plant area
-Planting and care of native plants

The sale, and the educational sessions are all free and open to the public. Proceeds benefit Portland Audubon programs such as nature education, wildlife sanctuaries, and wildlife rehabilitation.

For more information: 503-292-6855 × 106

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Tags: Plant Sale, Native Plants

garden tours

A Garden With Chutzpa

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Wynton-Pajunas garden

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Native garden

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A vertical wall panel – like a painting – on the wall above the rain garden

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A rain garden, where the water from the shed roof drains in winter. Natives are planted in here, too.

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A view of the front garden, including the green roof on the shed (right, center) and, to the left, the entry along the front sidewalk.

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The vegetable garden is one of the best places to sit with a cookbook and plan dinner!

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What an enticing combination! (That’s Cotinus ‘Golden Spirit’.)

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A view of the sunny part of the garden… from the shady part. To the right, hot pink bee balm (Monarda sp.)

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The creative duo – Marina Wynton and Mike Pajunas

Last weekend’s ANLD garden tour included a garden that really captured my interest and my heart. The garden’s husband-and-wife creators – Marina Wynton, artist/landscape and interior designer and Mike Pajunas, artist and tile/stone contractor – have made a remarkable outdoor space that integrates natives and exotics in a way that is both intelligent and fun. And definitely gutsy: it takes real chutzpa to paint your house magenta with lime-green trim, don’t you think?

The garden has just about everything I love in a garden in one place: great lounging spots, lots of sparky color, crunchy paths and patios (river rock, in this case – not gravel), site-appropriate planting and a diverse array of plants to support native insects and birds.

The day of the tour was hot. I stumbled around the garden for a while, snapped some pictures, and eventually plunked myself down in a shady chair and absorbed. When I found Marina and Mike, we chatted about the ingenious structures, the diverse collection of native plants and more. Mike, who built the new driveway, shed, fences, and pretty much every other structure and bit of hard-scaping in the place, enthusiastically showed me some of their native plant treasures including some local Willamette Valley natives. I appreciated how the native plants were layered so well (understory, mid-story and canopy) – it was nice to sit in a chair opposite it and just stare into the layers of plantings.

I loved the rich purple-blue hydrangeas against the pink house, the hot pink bee balm (Monarda), and many other punchy and colorful plantings. And several other interesting features of the garden (and there are many) were mentioned in an earlier article in Portland Monthly Magazine.

The native garden in particular captivated me. I loved how the plants fit together much as they do in nature – not only the layering of individual plants in relationship to each other but also the siting of the plants in places where they were destined to thrive (sun-loving plants in hot spots, moisture-loving plants in low-lying areas etc). It always surprises me how easy it is for avid gardeners to forget that we must take our cues on what to plant where from the environment itself – rather than choosing plants based on what we want to see in a particular spot! We all do it sometimes – and sometimes it even works – but there’s a special grace and beauty in a garden where plants are growing in proper relationship with the environment.

Their garden has earned quite a collection of wildlife, habitat and environmental certifications – testament to their commitment to land stewardship. See the slideshow to get a better sense of the many environmental features of this garden.

The garden will be open (free) three more times this year to members of the Hardy Plant Society of Oregon – one more reason to join up for a mere $35 per year.

Marina Wynton and Mike Pajunas, Garden and Interior Designer: Olivine Landscape Design

Hardy Plant Society of Oregon

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Tags: Slideshow, Native Plants, Garden Visits

upcoming events

Plant Sales, Garden Tours and More

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Swallowtail_on_buddleia

A swallowtail enjoying the nectar from an invasive plant, butterfly bush (Buddleia davidii) – learn about both the butterfly and the butterfly bush, this weekend.

This Friday, Saturday and Sunday hold some fantastic garden-related events: you can buy quality native plants, train to identify invasive weeds, tour ten fabulous Naturescaped gardens, and – my favorite – learn about native pollinators at a seminar at the Zoo.

Xerces Society’s Pollinator Workshop
Friday May 14 from 9 – 3:30 Seminar at the Oregon Zoo (directions here)
This seminar will cover pollinators and pollinator conservation including native bee biology and identification and choosing plants and creating habitat to support pollinators around your home, garden or farm. Register on line. The cost – $33 – includes lunch and zoo admission. For more information, contact Melissa Protz: 503-226-1561 x5868.

Multnomah County Weed Watchers Free Weed Training
Friday May 14 and Saturday May 15 from 12 – 2
Metro Regional Center
600 NE Grand Ave.
Portland, OR USA 97232
Help protect Oregon’s landscape by preventing the spread of harmful invasive species. You’ll discover tips to identify, locate and report invasive species before they become a problem, with live and preserved invasive specimens to examine. Details here; register here.

Naturescaping for Backyard Habitats Garden Tour
Saturday May 15, 11 – 4
Organized by the Backyard Habitat Certification Program and East Multnomah Soil and Water Conservation District’s Naturescaping program.
Visit 10 Certified Backyard Habitats – tour the gardens, chat with garden hosts, and gather ideas for naturescaping your own yard to create habitat for native creatures including birds and insects. Register on line here. If you’re interested in turning your own garden into a Certified Backyard Habitat, sign up for a home visit here.

Portland Audubon’s 14th Annual Native Plant Sale
Saturday May 15 and Sunday May 16, 10 – 4
Audubon Society of Portland
5151 NW Cornell Road
Portland, OR 97210
For information about this and other Audubon events, go to the Audubon Society’s calendar.

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Tags: Gardening Events, Plant Sale, Native Plants

plant of the week

Ceanothus thyrsiflorus ‘Oregon Mist’

a star in the May garden and great for wildlife, too

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Ceanothus-thyrsiflorus-siskyou

Ceanothus thyrsiflorus growing in the wild, Siskiyou County, OR – courtesy of Josh McCullough, Phytophoto.com

If you love blue flowers, look no further than Ceanothus – absolutely no shrub rivals it for vibrant blue color saturation. Also known as California wild lilac – but called Ceanothus (“see-ya-no-this”) by Oregonians in-the-know – these dramatic flowering shrubs are also drought-tolerant and wildlife-friendly.

There are some 50-60 species of Ceanothus, native from southwestern Canada down to Guatemala and in the Rockies but with the greatest concentration of species in California. Several are native to Oregon, although the most intensely blue-flowered species are from the region to our south.

Oregon Mist was selected by wholesale nurserymen Paul Bonine and Greg Shepherd of Xera Plants from a wild Ceanothus thyrsiflorus plant growing at the northernmost part of its range in Coos County, Oregon. I profiled Oregon Mist Ceanothus for Portland Monthly’s May issue here.

This selection produces showy sprays of tiny, honey-scented blue flowers in late April and May. It grows into a small tree to about 15 feet high if let go – or, with annual pruning, can be maintained at 8-10 feet tall. West Coast Ceanothus species are fast-growing but short-lived shrubs, maxing out at 10-15 years in the garden. Give them well-drained soil, avoid fertilizer and provide minimal (or no) summer water – they’re perfect for that hot, sunny corner, out of reach of the hose or sprinkler system. (Just remember to supply water during its first couple of years in the ground.)

I love the aromatics of Ceanothus – their flowers are honey-scented and some species’ foliage have a faintly resinous scent. (Or, in the case of one of our natives, Ceanothus velutinus, the foliage smells like vinyl car seats – a scent I’ve come to love, thanks to this shrub.)

Pollinating insects adore Ceanothus and hummingbirds are said to relish the nectar, although I personally haven’t seen it yet. A large Ceanothus shrub will hum with the sound of insect wings when in flower – it’s an incredible sight – and sound.

Oregon Mist is a low-maintenance but high reward plant that quickly fills in space and attracts myriad valuable native insects. It’s available wherever Xera Plants are sold including Cistus Design Nursery, Garden Fever, and Dennis’ Seven Dees. Also check with these retailers for availability.

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Tags: Flowers, Native Plants, Drought-Tolerant Plants

garden events

Native Plant Sale & Green Gardening Fair

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Trillium

Long-lasting Western wake-robin (Trillium ovatum) flowers nestled in tough, evergreen western sword fern (Polystichum munitum) – a fantastic combination for a native woodland garden.

TUALATIN HILLS PARK & RECREATION DISTRICT is sponsoring the Green Gardening Fair and Native Plant Sale.

When: Saturday, April 10, 10 am – 2 pm
Where: Tualatin Hills Nature Park Interpretive Center

This is a day of gardening workshops and demos focusing on sustainable techniques for composting, water conservation, minimizing pesticide use, growing native plants, insect pollinators, pruning, tool sharpening, and more. A schedule of events can be found on the event website.

A native plant sale will offer over 100 species of native trees, shrubs and perennials. A free bag of potting soil comes with every $35 purchase.

Exhibitors include landscape designers, mason bee suppliers, garden art, sustainable stores and services, and some governmental agencies.

Hosted by Tualatin Hills Park & Recreation District
http://www.thprd.org/facilities/naturepark/nativeplantsales.cfm

Salmonberry

Salmonberry (Rubus spectabilis) – its hot pink flowers serve as important hummingbird fodder

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Tags: Gardening Events, Places to Go, Plant Sale, Native Plants

Frozen Landscapes

frozen but not necessarily dead

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H

Helleborus argutifolius ‘Silver Lace’

The ground may still be rock-hard and cold but all is not lost. This morning, I noticed plenty of lovely hellebores that are frozen solid but by no means dead – just hanging on until the the weather warms up so they can return to the slow, inexorable process of producing flowers.

Yes, there is damage and more will show up over the coming months. I can see the signs of it: the sad off-color of cell damage on the leaves of February daphne and some rock roses and hebes.

This has been a historic cold spell: Portland’s low of 13 degrees Thursday morning broke a record for cold that had been standing for 37 years. It was the seventh consecutive day of below freezing in Portland. And while the lack of wind during the past few days helped prevent some damage, it also permitted the Arctic air to really settle in. It remains to be seen what defoliates and what bites the dust this year.

…And we thought last year was bad…

Of course, while it’s fun to take risks and try growing interesting plants of unknown or untested hardiness, there are plenty of fabulously beautiful plants that are quite unfazed by the cold.

Arcto_-_lovely_

Arctostaphylos

Undamaged and smashingly beautiful in my own garden right now are several rusty and bronze-tipped Arctostaphylos, silvery Olearia macrodonta, and bright golden and white variegated Elaeagnus pungens ‘Hosoba Fukurin’. Golden-flowered Mahonia x media ‘Winter Sun’ is even blooming away, if a bit limply!

M_x_media_winter_sun

Mahonia x media ‘Winter Sun’

And that’s just a little sampler: there are just so many fantastic cold-tolerant winter flowering plants – and even more winter-interest plants whose bark, stems or berries offer color and sparkle in the winter garden.

If you’re thinking of adding some winter flowering plants to your garden, check out witch hazel (Hamamelis ); winter hazel (Corylus ); wintersweet (Chimonanthus ); winter viburnum (Viburnum x bodnantense and Viburnum farreri ); early spiketail (Stachyurus praecox ); Mahonia x media hybrids as well as our beautiful native Mahonia (known as Oregon grape), and winter apricot tree (Prunus mume ). And those, my friends, are only a few suggestions.

Vib_x_farreri_alba

Viburnum farreri ‘Album’ (syn. V. farreri ‘Candidissimum’) may look funky now (and yes, my plant’s still a gangly adolescent) but once the spicily fragrant white flowers open up on those handsome, chestnut stems, you’ll see why I like it so well!

OK, so the ground’s too hard to plant right now. But there’s no harm looking!

This weekend, I plan to stop in at a couple of local nurseries and have a wander around. Maybe I’ll visit somewhere I haven’t been in a while. I’ll bundle up, wear my mittens, pick up some hot chocolate or coffee, and enjoy the bracing air and the sweet scent of violas in the greenhouses.

If there’s a lucky gardener on your holiday shopping list, maybe you could do the same – and find just the right gift at a local nursery for a gardener you know. For as you, you garden-lover, know, there’s nothing more entrancing to someone who loves to dig in the ground than the promise of new life – in the form of a gift certificate to a plant nursery! And after this winter, there are bound to be a few empty spaces in our gardens.

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Tags: Outdoor Gardening, Native Plants

Upcoming Plant Events

All About Fruit Show

The Home Orchard Society’s Annual Fruit Fest

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Quince

Many are familiar with the shrubby quince (Chaenomeles sp.), the early blooming shrub with coral, red, pale pink or white flowers and small, hard fruit that are sometimes made into jelly. This is a world apart from the edible quince tree (Cydonia oblonga), with large, intensely fragrant yellow fruit that are much used in Middle Eastern/Mediterranean cooking. The fruit pictured are from the Smyrna quince, one of my favorite edible quince varieties, available from Raintree Nursery

Every fall, the Home Orchard Society holds its All About Fruit show. If you have fruit trees – or are considering planting some – this event ought to be on your calendar. It runs Saturday October 10 and Sunday October 11 from 10 am to 4 pm. Here’s what you’ll find there:

  • 100s of apple, pear, & other fruit varieties to taste
  • Custom-made (grafted) fruit trees – order at only $12 each
  • Publications on research, disease & insect control
  • Unknown apple varieties identified (bring 5-6 samples of each)
  • Speakers
  • Sales of delicious, home-grown fruit & fruit pastries
  • Vendors of edible trees and shrubs
  • Contests: 2-crust apple pie; largest tree fruit; & longest apple peel

Saturday’s speakers include Portland’s own Vern Nelson (fabulous Oregonian edible gardening columnist) speaking at 11 am on designing the edible landscape, Bob Denman (Red Pig Tools) at 12:15 discussing the ergonomics of tools and tool design; and Susan Dolan (author) at 1:30 discussing preserving heirloom orchards.

Sunday’s speakers include Barbara Ghazarian (the “Queen of Quince”) at 11 am discussing and signing copies of her new book “Simply Quince”, the first tribute/cookbook devoted to this incredible fruit; Jeanne Brandt (Master Food Preserver and OSU Extension representative) at 12:15 discussing current techniques for home food preservation; and at 1:30, David Karp (freelance writer and photographer, fruit devotee and “Fruit Detective”) discusses the greengage plum, which he deems “the most delicious fruit in the world,” as well as the next big thing in fruit.

The Home Orchard Society’s All About Fruit Show

When: 10am-4pm Saturday and Sunday, October 10 & 11
Where: Washington County Fairplex (New), Hillsboro, Oregon.
Admission:
Members: Adults $4, Family $8
Non-Members: Adults $6, Family $10
Become a HOS member at the show, and get in free!
Free Parking

See you there!

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Tags: Places to Go, Plant Sale, Native Plants

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