I was just thinking it's been a while since we've walked around my garden together and it's even time for the August Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day!
I have to start with this retro green and rusted lawn chair, which I found curbside. I struggled with at least five contortions before fitting it into my non-hatchback Focus. At one point it fell out of the trunk and was dragging on the road (I am not exaggerating)... and it hit my foot on one lift. But I'm stubborn and just knew it would make the perfect plant stand for my pot of elephant ears, ferns, and coleus.
I grew potatoes for the first time this year. I decided to use a storage tub (with holes drilled in the bottom), so I could fill it with composty goodness. You know they're ready to harvest when the foliage dies. I started them from seed potatoes, and they were ridiculously easy to grow and they tasted so good. And digging for the taters was fun — there's just something about sticking your arms elbow deep into a nice soil-compost mix and rooting around... aaaahhh!
Here's my second harvest of 'Bintje' potatoes. Nom nom nom!
I'd more or less given up getting eggplants this year, when I saw a tiny 2-inch fruit on August 8. Holla! I thought it was solely because, as Lisa put it, they were "abused as a seedling" (I left them in those small cell packs way too long before transplanting), but it turns out several others have reported their eggplants are late this year too (Ha! it's not all my fault!). We had a really heavy rainstorm and on August 14, the eggplant had tripled in size.
Tomatoes are looking a little small compared to everyone else's, but I don't have too much sun and the soil is bad here, despite improvements, so I'm glad to get even a few tomatoes per plant. They're all heirlooms and each plant is a different variety. I have another two tomatoes in the ground out of view, plus five more in containers. I just realized this whole shot, with my home-made compost bin and rain barrels, plus the random stuff I have set around to squelch weeds, makes this an excellent #uglygardens vignette.
![August Blooms](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhArPWIslSOMFO-tgaSmb4GC5kI-D3wImCKULQkdN5usIa7dHix1Yv8eX6uDjaBOmIoyskB1mEtY_YjglgmGu8D1vLMSfSSvrCG87NvgmCL5p6nPvfr-1sRh-mtadYHAt8AoDKFCg4j28o/s400/BGPSeeds.jpg)
The other thing I did differently this year was to wait for mold to form in the initial seed soaking. This fermentation step isn't necessary in terms of seed viability or vitality, but it makes the seed coating (gooey tomato gel) come off the seeds much more easily. Last year I skipped that step and rinsed and rinsed and rinsed and rinsed in a sieve. That worked, too, but was a lot more work.
My cup plant (Silphium perfoliatum*) is only 5 feet tall, though they can get to 10 feet in optimal sun. I wrote a bit more about it here.
Look who I found on the cup plant blossom — the soldier beetle is not only a pollinator, but it eats aphids. I love beneficial insects. Plus, it's just so cute!
Despite my laziness in not having planted this nodding wild onion (Allium cernuum) since my friend gave it to me in {looks around furtively} early June, it's blooming and doing well!
I love the almost-ready-to-bloom buds of rough blazing star, Liatris aspera.
Love the turkey-foot shaped seed head of big bluestem grass, Andropogon gerardii.
I have several clumps of tall coreopsis (Coreopsis tripteris), this one along the neighbor's fence.
Butterfly bush is bright and cheerful.
One of my many cultivar Viburnums. I love the berries. I do have a native arrowwood Viburnum, too. :)
I adore the buds of Japanese anemone. (All together now: "Noogie!")
Some of my Japanese anemone have already starting blooming.
The berries on this purple beautyberry shrub will turn bright, vivid, holla! violet in another month or so.
The front bed taken from the driveway, looking south. (Pinky says hi.)
The front bed along the house, taken from the porch facing south.
The front bed on the other side of the walkway, taken from the front porch looking west. (Say hi to Bizi** so she can ignore you!)
One of my favorite garden spots. I love the rattlesnake master (Eryngium yuccifolium) paired with the Russian sage.
And that combo close up.
Mexican hat.
The sunflowers I sowed on July 4 are about a foot tall and look like they're getting buds!
The Mexican petunia Sweetbay sent back in May finally has a bloom!!
My first-ever rose 'Golden Wings' is blooming again since I pruned the dogwood, which was blocking her sun, waaaaay back.
Even though I cut my sneezeweed back over a foot in early July, it's blooming now. 'Mardi Gras' has long since finished, and now it's time for 'Moerheim Beauty'...
...and the native yellow Helenium autumnale. It's tall and makes a great screen for one of my rain barrels. (See how you can't see it?)
I just love it close up.
Bees love my dahlia 'Bonne Esperance.'
I'd say my one (and only) 'Uchiki Kuri' squash is ready.
The ironweed (Vernonia missurica) outside my front door is a good six feet tall. I've read it likes it wet, though I never water mine. I also read it can spread, but mine hasn't (though it is true I collect its seeds).
I love its vibrant purple flowers.
And that's about it for today. It's too humid and there are too many mosquitos. Let's go in and have some zucchini bread and lemonade.
* I'm marking native plants in this post by also giving their Latin name. (No Latin name = not a native plant.)
** Bizi is Fiona's nickname; Jimi is James' nickname. People often mention "all your cats" and as much as I'd love to be a crazy cat lady, I have just those two. It hit me that perhaps the nicknames were interpreted as individuals, esp. as Bizi isn't so obviously derived from Fiona.
Thanks to Carol of May Dreams Gardens for hosting Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day.
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