Coming soon to an online retailer near you …
I will not talk about the weather.
I will not talk about the weather.
I will not talk about the weather.
I will not talk about the weather.
I will not talk about the weather.
I will not talk about the weather.
With the cool and damp weather we’ve so thoroughly enjoyed these past few months weeks, it’s become a breeding ground for that harmless mold so lovingly known as lichen. I don’t mind it and kind of dig it so I don’t bother treating it at all.
I’ll take what I can get.
Anticipation is everything to me.
Although as I mentioned last week, I can’t wait for the scent of these flowers to pull me out of the cold weather doldrums.
They continue to multiply year after year. Not too unlike the grays on my head.
The bee balm is everywhere. That’s okay. I’m on it. Fear not.
Year two for a tulip? My awesomeness knows no bounds.
A glimmer of hope.
I still get pumped up when they reveal themselves.
Fool me once, blah blah blah. I can’t seem to grow Sambucus ‘Lemony Lace’ in the garden so I’m going to nurture her in a container.
We’ll see.
I have plans to do the same with additional shrubs. My design eye will be put to the test.
This is how we gain entry into the diehard club.
This is what separates us from those weekend gardeners.
This is when our significant others look at us strangely.
This is when we brave the cold, get on our hands and knees and look to the sky with appreciation when we see any sign of life.
This is when we get our mojo back.
This is when the game begins.
Who’s with me?
My wife loves the lilac. There’s a legendary pic of her with my newborn son at our old house standing in front of a blooming lilac. I killed at least three different lilacs once we moved to our current home. I don’t take the signs of new growth here lightly.
The Viburnum carlesii ‘Aurora’ is the first impact bloomer in my garden. It is the shrub I protect from the deer the most in winter. I’ve won again. Killer scent is right around the corner.
Lady’s Mantle has no equal on a mid-spring morning, post rain. I cherish and salute its return.
The first perennial I ever planted and the first perennial I ever greeted upon its return in spring.
The reward after wading through the dead foliage. I’ve grown to love the variegated iris.
Thalictrum ‘Black Stockings’ (Meadow rue) looked bad in late summer/fall. I feared it had reached the end. Nope. Fist pump. Amazing foliage on this one.
Filependula rubra (queen of the prairie) just peeking out of the soil. I’m banking on her to dominate this summer. I’ve massed it and it should have a big impact when in bloom.
Out with the old …
… in with the new.
I’m thinking these Baptisia seed capsules could be collected, put in a container and used to make a loud intimidating noise when the deer appear. Or I could just toss them. Hmm.
The mass ornamental grass cutting is under way.
The blooming daffodils will help screen these grasses before they explode in growth.
The nasty weather continues.
Five more inches of snow on Monday, followed by the melting of said snow and some additional rain to boot. Thou shalt not set foot in the garden and compact the soil even more.
Today we anticipate 50 mph winds for good measure. I had to snap the following pics in a very small window of time before all hell broke loose.
But who’s complaining. In the grand scheme of life, this means nothing. It’s the weather and we have no control over it. In due time our spring will be here and this will all be forgotten.
So while it still looks like November outside.
And it’s wetter than wet.
And pruning tasks have been put on hold.
And none of the ornamental grasses have been cut back.
And paths have yet to be cleared.
Bulbs continue to fight their way through debris.
Or feel like they’re imprisoned by old dead stems.
And the evergreens are still bothered by last years flowers.
There are still new signs of spring on a daily basis.
And the return of perennials where I had feared the worst.
Even bulb wars are keeping things interesting and weird.
And our enemies have returned for another year of the fight.
It is all good my friends.
It is all good.
The first flower of 2018 has arrived.
And it bores me.
Sorry Crocus fans, I’ve never taken to them and have dug most of them up over the years. Yet a few continue to survive. I guess I should appreciate their resourcefulness. And should count any flower as a blessing considering where we are as April is just about here.
But enough of the negative. I was thrilled to see that almost all of the Allium have returned yet again this spring.
And bulbs planted last fall will be providing a show in the near future. By the way, how great of a job did I do perfectly spacing these bulbs? You know you’re jealous.
More Crocus escaped my wrath. I shall not forget them.
My first “thank you for surviving” shrub of the year. This is Hypericum ‘Blue Velvet’. I planted two last summer, falling in love with the blueish foliage. You’ll see plenty of this one as spring rolls into summer.
Daylilly, yeah (a sarcastic “yeah” if that wasn’t obvious). Every year I’ll continue to be bored by them and every year I’ll continue to leave them be. There is something to be said for a plant that can be left to its own devices, fills space and requires zero care.
All of the Spirea are back. Again, a bit eh, but super useful and tough.
Many of you warned me and did you ever hit the nail on the head. My False Spirea (Sorbaria sorbifolia) has suckered like mad in year two. I have given them plenty of space to operate but I can already see that invasiveness may be an issue.
Game on.
Moss phlox is back. Smile.
My Sedum ‘Red Carpet’ appears to have suffered this winter but there are finally signs of hope.
The annual foliage transition of Arborvitae ‘Rheingold’.
I had one simple task to tend to. I assigned it a duration length of three minutes on my “Daily Tasks” spreadsheet. It fit beautifully between “replace the light bulb in the bathroom” and “find my W2 form”. It was this:
Carry the recently cut branches of the Ninebark to the woods and deposit them there.
The spreadsheet entry looked like this: rmv 9 brnchs
Yes I frown upon vowels with my abbreviating.
This was to be a simple dump and run. One task out of many for the day. A mindless job that would get my lazy butt outdoors. An easy one to remove from the list.
It all went spectacularly wrong.
I made the mistake of looking to my left as I approached the woods. I knew better than that. Never ever allow the eyes to wander when outside in the yard this time of year. A glance toward the garden in winter never turns out well. It’s always devastating. With all of the storms we’ve suffered through the past few weeks, it was even more of a reason to do nothing but stare straight ahead.
It was not the time to speculate on plant damage.
That could be done another day, after I’d had enough time to prep myself emotionally.
But I couldn’t un-see this.
Or this.
All of which then sent me down a path of pacing. That annual dread-filled pacing in the garden. Dread-filled pacing that on this day, went on for twenty three sad minutes where I compiled a full assessment of all that had gone wrong.
The light bulb would have to wait.
That witch hazel planted in fall? Deader than dead.
The ‘Wichita Blue’ juniper that anchored this corner? Split in half from the ice and winds.
And these were only the easily visible victims. The list goes on.
Winter, you are not and will never be my friend.
After the inventory and mourning was complete, I stepped back inside, blew my nose and returned to the couch where I could reflect and stew. I was 51% sad and 49% pissed off. All of those years tending to these plants went for naught. All of the design decisions were an exercise in futility. All of the blood and sweat could have been funneled elsewhere.
I know gardening isn’t a life or death thing. I understand it’s just a fun little hobby. I’m fully aware that I require a perspective adjustment. But fuck, I take the failures personally. I question my past judgment, believing it had a hand in the plants’ demise.
I consider giving up. I scream, flail and shed a tear.
This malaise typically sticks around for a lot longer than I’d like to admit. It takes weeks before it even starts to dissipate in the slightest.
Once the weather warms up, greenery arrives and a few flowers reveal themselves, I push forward like a man possessed. I become nothing but task-oriented as I try to replace what has perished and get my garden back to a point where it looks presentable again.
The labor keeps my mind occupied.
It’s exhausting but necessary.
It’s all consuming.
I miss out on the joys of spring while I’m lamenting the pains of winter.
By summer I’ve finally moved on and I’m not sure if I’ve had one moment of true happiness in the garden.
Rinse and repeat.
For those of you who don’t know, I recently finished writing my second book. It’s tentatively titled:
Seed, Grow, Love, Write
One man’s slow journey to fulfillment
Another big thank-you to all who offered up title suggestions. We’ll see if this one actually sticks.
The book is a series of short stories that cover the entirety of my life from childhood to current day. It’s memoir-like, but I refuse to call it a memoir. I’m not that interesting.
I like to think of it as a look back on how I discovered my love of gardening which ultimately led me to my true (and I hate to use the word but here it goes) passion, which is writing. The stories are small in a purposeful way. Stories that we all can relate to without any huge “A Ha” moments.
I discovered more about myself as I was writing this book than I could’ve ever imagined. The journey made more sense as I pieced it all together.
My hope is that readers will relate and maybe grab even the slightest bit of inspiration with their own lives.
But enough romanticizing about the book. The full-court sales push will come at a later date (May?). You’ve been warned.
My point is this:
A good portion of the stories in the book focus on gardening:
The early years outside with my dad.
The first garden at our first home.
The discovery of ornamental grasses.
Planting minutes after getting stitches in my arm.
Transplanting using my car’s headlights.
After writing and editing them all, I came to realize that all of the stories share a common thread.
They all reveal the joy of the journey.
I honestly look back fondly on all of the struggles and all of the mistakes. I wouldn’t change a thing if I could go back in time.
I’d still welcome the deer.
I’d still battle the poor draining soil.
I’d still make the same mistakes.
The book has changed my perspective on my garden. I no longer have dreams of creating anywhere near the perfect garden. I’ve given up on ever hosting tour through my impeccably maintained landscape.
I’m comfortable being freakishly organized in my life and with my plants and also realizing that it can’t be sustained.
I’m good with complaining incessantly one day and then living in the moment the next day.
The garden, she is my muse.
I can post pretty pictures along the way and I can educate readers as best I can, but the joy comes in the writing. The joy comes in the sharing. The joy comes in the creating. The joy comes in getting lost for hours as I dig, as I plant and as I write.
And this garden, she’ll be my muse for a lifetime.
That is so freeing.
I didn’t say I’ll be 100% chill overnight. As you can see from the beginning of this story, I still lost it the other day when confronting destruction in my garden.
But I allowed myself to get angry.
I allowed myself to be sad.
I allowed myself to question my abilities.
That’s the journey.
As is the calm me who has since moved on and is writing this right now.
With the threat of yet another snowstorm on the horizon (we’re expecting up to 10 inches of snow/ice Tuesday into Wednesday), I made the executive decision to “get shit done” early this morning. While I only had about a half hour available, I like to think I made the most of the time.
I have an ‘Arctic Fire’ red twig dogwood and for years now, I’ve been pruning it to the ground each spring. Without fail it reaches four to five feet in height by summer and still shows off those bright red stems each fall/winter.
So here she was today, pre-cut.
And within five minutes, she looked like this.
Fun fact: I planted bulbs in front of the ‘Arctic Fire’ many years ago so they could fill the empty space and distract from the red stump in spring.
The daffodils continue to come back year after year and make me look like a genius year after year.
Fun fact #2: I save all of the cut stems of the dogwood and bring them indoors for decorative display. My genius knows no end.
By early May, ‘Arctic Fire’ shows signs of growth.
And rapidly grows all spring/summer.
Another annual March event is the “selective” pruning of the Ninebark (Physocarpus) ‘Diablo’. I cut the older branches to the ground, which typically results in about 2/3 of all the branches being removed.
The “to-be-cut” branches are grayer in color and display more peeling bark.
This keeps this large deciduous shrub small enough so it doesn’t overtake all of the other plants in my foundation bed along the front of the house. Unfortunately this is the only area in the garden where it will thrive as the deer rarely find it here. I’d love to leave it alone and allow it to grow to the max but it would get devoured in any another location in my garden.
While the red twig dogwood pruning is brute force, the ninebark pruning is more of an artistic endeavor. I don’t follow any guidelines. I just know.
Here he is this morning, before I attacked him with a sharp object.
As you can see, he stayed within bounds this past year. Good job by me.
And here is post extreme haircut.
He may look sad and awkward now, but within weeks, he’ll be back to his handsome form.
Eventually making a big statement as that dark foliage dominates and contrasts beautifully with its neighbors.
Congrats to …
The winner …
Whose name was randomly chosen …
And will now be the lucky owner of $100 to spend at Santa Rosa Gardens
The winner’s name is …
Congrats Kate, I’ll forward your email address to Santa Rosa Gardens and you should be hearing from them shortly.
To all – thank you for entering and we’ll do it again soon.
I’m staring out the window at nothing but white. It would be pretty if I didn’t hate it. I’m pretty sure I just heard what my daughter tells me is “thunder snow.” We’re expecting up to two feet of the white stuff today with winds that could lead to power outages across the area.
Fun.
My wife and I continue to work from home while the kids sleep late, eat like crap and throw out the occasional “I’m bored”. The dog cries at my feet begging to play in the snow outside. I’ll make one of the kids take her out.
All I want to think about is the garden. It’s March and it’s that time. Bulbs have emerged and there are subtle signs of perennials coming to life. The fun is just starting.
So you know what I want to do to celebrate even with this crappy weather? I want to give something away. I want to fire you all up and get you plant shopping. I want you to forget about the nasty weather and think spring and green.
How would you like a $100 gift card to my favorite place to buy plants online, Santa Rosa Gardens?
You want it? Just leave your email address in the comments section below and I’ll pick a winner in a week’s time.
Here are the specifics:
After you’ve entered, why not head to the Santa Rosa website and get yourself:
Seriouly, head to their site now and do some shopping. I’ve never been disappointed by a single plant I’ve ordered from them and I’ve been doing so for at least seven years running.
Enjoy.
Tell them John sent you.
Did you hear that?
You did, right? And you’re as friggin pumped as me, right?
That my friends is the sound of determined bulbs breaking through the brutally wet clay and shoving aside stones with a single-minded purpose. They’re all like “you can’t hold us back any longer. It’s mutha f’n time“.
Let me be the first to welcome them, at least in my neck of the woods.
They’re a sight for sore eyes and a sign that it’s time to get my gardening on.

We even have some green activity beyond the bulbs. Holy crap’n crap.
It may be a little difficult to say goodbye to those who helped make the winter somewhat bearable.
Oh who am I kidding.
Later suckers.