Looking for a fun garden party idea for fall? Sure, the garden may look a little weary after all the leaves have fallen and perennials have faded to the ground in preparation for winter. But, this is the perfect time to invite friends to join you in the garden to divide perennials from your overflowing beds. Read on for more ideas:
Archive for the ‘moving plants’ Category
Perennial Dig ‘n Split Party
Wednesday, October 28th, 2009Options to Chopping Down a Big Tree
Monday, November 10th, 2008Today my heart hurts for the death of a beautiful specimen tree I’ve enjoyed daily for the past 10 years. One of my neighbors was blessed with one of the most beautiful Stewartias I’ve seen. It had fantastic orange, peeling bark to enjoy in the drab days of winter. It bloomed later in spring than most other blooming trees offering bright white blossoms amid its sweet green leaves. And, it was branched low to the ground with fantastic form. True, it was planted closer to a foundation than I would have liked, but over the years it had been pruned with loving care to keep it away from the house and allow it to develop beautifully.
Today it was hacked into stumps. And, I’m about ready to cry about it. This tree was a fantastic specimen, and now it has been decimated. I didn’t have a camera, so I don’t have a picture of the hack job. I don’t think my soul can handle going back to take one right now — maybe later.
Instead, I offer this help for anyone wondering what to do about a tree that they no longer want or that has fallen to the ground or that needs to be removed. There are options to hacking them up or making them into firewood.
Two companies in the greater Seattle area will rescue and remove (and sometimes purchase from you) specimen trees. Not only does someone do the removal work for you, but you might just make some money on it. And, you get the added joy of knowing the tree is going to LIVE! Try contacting them before you get out the saw and start cutting:
If you have a smaller tree or shrub that you no longer want, try offering it for free to someone else (or even charge for it):
And, if you have a big tree that’s fallen, broken or about to do so, there are companies that will buy the lumber:
If you’re outside the greater Seattle area and know of tree recycling programs in your area, I invite you to share them here. If you need help deciding what to do about a tree on your property, I invite you to ask here before you head out with your saw. We might just have some ideas that will save your tree’s life and possibly help your bank account at the same time.
Dig ‘n Split Party Wrap
Friday, October 31st, 2008Last night’s forecast for Seattle: Dumping rain all Halloween morning.
My plan for this Halloween morning: Dig ‘n Split Garden party.
Result: Happy, soggy gardeners!
I woke up really early for no good reason on a pitch-black rainy day. I got up and wondered how much it was really raining. When the black sky changed to a lighter shade of grey, I knew it was wet out there. Actually, it was pouring.
Knowing that we’ve been short on rain so far this fall, I emailed all the gals planning to come to my garden party to divide perennials and told them we were still on. (I can be known to cancel an event if I’m worried about soil compaction, but since only the top 2-4″ of soil –actually mulch– are significantly wet this fall, I knew the beds would be okay.)
I headed out a little while before the party was going to start. I wanted to pull out tools, pots and yard waste bins. I wanted to clean up dog poop in some areas. And, I wanted to start doing divisions of plants as samplers to get people started. Eventually, all three ladies showed up, braving the sopping morning. It was fun to share loads of plants with them, enjoy their enthusiasm over all the options and see my overcrowded beds get a little more breathing room as we cleared various plants out.
Here’s a rough list of the prizes my guests took away:
- Geranium m. ‘Album’
- Geranium samobar
- Tiarella (a couple of cultivars)
- Rose Glow Barberry
- Vine Maple
- Midwinter Fire Twig Dogwood
- Cala Lily
- Ligularia ‘The Rocket’
- Gunnera
- Angel’s Fishing Rod
- Pulsatilla
- Sedum (many kinds)
- Black Mondo Grass
- Autumn Fern
- Sword Fern
- Iris
- Japanese Anemone
- June Bearing Strawberry
- Amazing Red Flax
- Tall Garden Phlox (White and Pink)
- Leopard’s Bane
- Artemesia
- Lamb’s Ear
- Donkey Tail Spurge
- Vancouveria
- Monkshood
- Climbing Hydrangea layered starts
- Japanese Maple seedlings
- Ribes viburnifolium
- Mahonia (came with the vine maple/left with the vine maple)
- Seed garlic
I think that about covers it, but who knows what else they got…probably some fireweed and shotweed just for the fun of it! I like to think even with these, this is the best halloween haul anyone will get today.
Hmmm…note to self: Next year require costumes?!
Ladies, thanks for clearing the way for changes in my garden. It’s been a while since I’ve had some larger open spaces to work with. Now to take a hot shower!
Is Your Garden Soil Ready For Fall Planting?
Tuesday, October 21st, 2008Yesterday, I worked with a client to install shrubs along his foundation. When he bought his new home earlier this year, the sellers had left a mishmash of polka dot plantings along the south side and a grassy mess of spiraea along the west side foundation. The polka dots were clearly the result of a “what’s at Home Depot? Let’s buy a bunch of stuff to fill in some blanks”. The spiraea was probably somebody’s summertime idea of a fun hedge that went wrong when it met winter and the grass moved in. In any case, my client had cleared the beds fairly well for us to put in the new plants, but we ran into a couple of common issues that slowed us down.
- Grass Weeds in the Planting Beds: My client had hired a “clean up” crew to clear out the weedy, overgrown beds. Unfortunately, in some areas they didn’t do a great job. The west beds were fully infiltrated with running grass weed. In parts of the beds, the clean up crew cleared out a lot of grass. Anyone who has fought grass in beds knows that this can be an ongoing battle. The smallest segment left behind can result in a fresh crop of annoying weed. In other areas the clean up crew had essentially mowed over the weedy grass and left large growths of it fully intact in the planting beds. So, what to do in situations like this?
- Clearing out the weeds now will save you later. Working together, we finished clearing as much of the loose grass weed as we could and followed up each section with planting the new shrubs. In the areas where the grass is thick and was “mowed”, my client is going to completely dig out the grass before planting. Getting the grass cleared and the bed re-edged is going to make his life a lot easier down the road.
- Hydrophobic Soil: In western washington, the fall rains have started to return following our natural summer drought cycle. Unfortunately, many soils are still fairly dry in the planting root zones. In foundation planting beds this often is the case at any time of year as the house may create a drip zone “rain shadow” that keeps the soil from getting well saturated. And, some soils like my client’s fairly sandy soil, the water just runs through the profile. Plus, once soils get dry, they can seem difficult to get wet again. The water pools; the soil floats in it. In these cases, it can take a while to get the water to penetrate the soil to keep it moist. This is what we rain into yesterday. So, what did we do?
- My client’s soil does have some clay and some organic matter. Together these will help the sandy soil hold moisture — once it gets wet. I suggested that we water the beds ahead of planting (and water the rootbound plants at the same time). It seemed strange to get out the hose while we were working in the rain, but we did.
- Don’t turn the hose on full blast and try to get the soil moist. Instead, be patient and use a slow drip or light rainshower spray to moisten the soil. If you use a big jet stream, the water will pool and run off.
- Water slowly and intermittently. Water one section slowly, move to the next section and repeat a few times. Let the water drain between each watering. Check the soil moisture depth periodically. Remember, you want the soil moist down where the roots are going, not just in the top few inches.
- Plant after the soil is moist and the soil has drained. Make sure the plant roots are moist going into the soil. Water each plant on a slow drip after planting.
- Check newly planted plants occassionally, even if you think they’re getting rain. You may need to add supplemental water to ensure they do well.
A couple of final notes on fall planting. We did not add fertilizer to the new plantings. This time of year we don’t want to encourage the plant to put on a lot of top growth that might get zapped if we have a freeze. Instead, we want the plants to do their work underground until spring. So, add a good couple inches of composted mulch to the top of the finished planting beds. As this decomposes through the work of rains and microbial activity, slow release fertilization will be available to the plants by spring when they really want and can use it.
Fall is a fantastic time to transplant and renovate gardens. It’s just important to stay in tune with the environment in which you are working.
Moving Daffodil Bulbs
Wednesday, June 11th, 2008Robbie D. of Philadelphia, PA asks,
“I want to move my daffodil bulbs. Can I dig them and replant without harming their cycle?? “
Robbie, I prefer to dig and move my daffodils after their top growth has withered for the season but before they go completely dormant, and I can’t see them anymore. This way they’ve stored up nutrients in the bulb, and they make a nice compact little package to move. In Seattle, that’s usually around June/July.
That being said, I’ve moved daffodils in early spring before they bloom, and they’ve done just fine. If you move them at that time of year, take extra care to move them with a lot of soil attached to the bulb and roots. About the only time of year I haven’t moved them is when the ground is frozen or during our natural drought time, which occurs in Seattle during late summer/early autumn. (Given we’ve got snow in the passes in mid-June this year, who knows what we’re in for this season!)
If you have a wide selection of bulbs and want to be sure to (say) move the ones with an orange center but not the ones that are pure white, put a garden tie on them before the flowers fade to help remind you which is which.
I hope this helps. Please let me know if you have other questions & good luck!


