July 26, 2011

Wishes & Seeds + Pretty Things (3 posts rolled into 1)

Every summer, I like to gather up a hearty handful of garden photos, to share in one long post.  Today happens to be that very day.  A day to share insights and tales, and pretty things too…

Zinnia 12

As you have heard one too many times, I love to garden.  However, I am by no means a professional, or super fantastical gardener (I know many of you are).  Like everything else in my life, I was drawn to gardening (at 19) and tried it by blindly jumping in.  This goes for almost everything else in my life as well.  If I am intrigued by something, I jump in.

I have to admit, I don't take classes for anything I have ever tried (hardheaded).  I get anxious in a classroom.  I don't know how I ever got through college sometimes.  Although I did enjoy many of my classes, come to think of it.

One thing I do enjoy is reading books.

So, whenever I have been interested in something that I know nothing of, I try it, and then pick up some books to assist me along the way.  But I am mostly a "wing it" kinda girl.

Concocting and inventing along the way, sometimes making my life more difficult.

The thing about gardening is that, over the years, I have planted many different seeds, and over the years, the seeds which have chosen to grow, are the ones I usually stick with…

(front yard below)

Zinnia 1

I decided to create this post, after receiving different e-mail questions about which seeds grow best, if container gardening works, how much water seeds need, etc.etc.

Of course, I live in the desert, and different climates make a world of difference in the garden.

Here in Southern Arizona it is hot in summer (over 100+ almost all summer).  However, where I live is a very different climate from say Phoenix, or even Northern Arizona.  Northern Arizona is much much cooler, and Phoenix is much hotter.

Here there is little rain, until monsoon season comes (now), and a snap of winter rains. (autumn and winter are wonderful here (little to no snow), but it does get into freezing temps sometimes in winter)

The summer sun is more than hot, but we do have a lot of huge shade trees.

The flowers that do the best for me, year after year are cosmos, marigolds, roses, hibiscus, black eyed susans, coreopsis, verbena, snapdragons, sunflowers, yarrow, morning glories, nasturtium, dahlias, a handful of assorted wild flowers, and last but not least, the ever kind zinnia.

Zinnia 20

The zinnias have been incredible this year.

I planted Stover brand zinnia seeds, both Lilliput and California Giants Mixed.  Both in the ground, and in pots.

Zinnia 9

The results have been rather jaw-dropping.

Small tree like zinnia bushes (3-4 ft), that keep giving and giving and giving.  So, as you can imagine, I highly recommend trying zinnias.

Zinnia 29

They like to be watered everyday, and every time you cut a bloom, a handful of others turn up to take their place.

Zinnia 11

When I lived at the city house, I tried to plant zinnias from small store bought plants.  They never worked.  Oh and, believe it or not, at the city house I had a beautiful ficus tree, and ferns, all of which freeze just 30 minutes away at the country house due to different elevation.

Anyhow, this year I planted a ton of zinnia seeds…

Zinnia 3

The color assortment has been amazing, with even some giant two toned zinnias…

Zinnia 24

The bees, hummingbirds and butterflies stop by for rests on the zinnias all day…

Zinnia 8

The thing is this…

When you find seeds that like to grow in your garden, you can then start delving into all the different kinds of flowers within that one kind.

Also, I tried a test.

I planted seeds in all of my pots this year.

I pulled out all the pots I had, in every different size.

All my pots are concrete or clay, and the seeds did wonderfully in pots.  Something I didn't really expect, as I have always been an "in ground planter."  But, because of the gophers and the bunnies, and the lizards, I tried pots.

It was a huge hit.

So, I hope you are inspired to plant in pots (if you don't already)…

Zinnia 31

It can be as rewarding as planting in ground.

Zinnia 18

Such a great thing to learn this year.

Zinnia 17

This year, my hibiscus is in ground.  But at the city house, the hibiscus grows beautifully in a giant clay pot that is about 3 ft. tall, and 3 ft. in diameter at the opening.

Zinnia 5

The zinnias are doing excellent in the ridiculously hot sun all day.

Zinnia 7

I am really impressed by their resilience.

The lilliput zinnias below, burst up through our orange tree.

Zinnia 13

So many colors!

Zinnia 6

The other thing I have learned, is to plant seeds that I harvest each year.  Last year I had 4 ft. tall marigolds and cosmos, so I made sure to harvest seeds.

This year I planted those harvested seeds, and got some amazing tall beautiful flowers.  This is especially true of the cosmos and marigolds.

Zinnia 15

When I harvested the seeds last year, I mixed them all together, and I put them in an airtight glass jar.  Then, I simply planted the seeds in spring.

The large white cosmos are from last year's harvested seeds.

Zinnia 47

I also have a huge respect for self seeding flowers…

Zinnia 49

You never know what you are going to get from last year.  The best thing I ever did was plant a cottage seed mix in 2009.  It has been the gift that keeps on giving.  With evening primrose galore, and coreopsis, and more…

Zinnia 14

The original cosmos came from store bought seeds, however, these below are also from my own harvested seeds.

Zinnia 19

Now, here is the fun thing.  Since cosmos do so well here, I decided to try different kinds of cosmos.  In spring I planted Rose Bon Bon cosmos seeds, from Select Seeds.  They are beautiful with a triple ruffle.  Right now they are blooming all over the garden. They are super tall, and ever so pretty…

Zinnia 21

Such a delightful addition.

Zinnia 23

As for growing in pots…

I personally, overfilled (not good) some of my pots with seeds.  I had a seed mixture of my own seeds, and plunked them in all of my pots.  I also threw in a few seeds I bought.  I thought the birds would get some of them, but they really didn't.

(my home-office courtyard below)

Zinnia 34

Very full.

The good thing is that, all of the sunflowers below have already bloomed, and I got to put them in vases.  There are giant sunflowers still around the garden (in ground).  But these small to mid sized sunflowers worked great in vases.  And, now that they are gone, the cosmos, calendula, bachelor's buttons, and hearts n'flowers that were also growing in the pots, are doing great…

Zinnia 36

The point is, pots work.

Oh and, I don't believe that some people can't grow anything.  You just have to find the right plants/seeds for you, your climate, and figure out how to care for them best.

Zinnia 39

Before you know it, you'll have all sorts of goodies growing like crazy.

Zinnia 48

Pretty pretty!

Zinnia 44

So, pots are good.

I am now a huge planting in containers advocate.

Zinnia 38

Go for it!

Zinnia 41

A burst of color in pots is such a lovely treat…

Zinnia 26

I have had this very ivy growing in this pot for 7+ years, and it is going great.  It is just a matter of making sure your plants get water, that they are pruned if need be, and that you check for bugs.  Also, do research on the type of fertilizer your plants might need…

Zinnia 40

The reward is excellent.

Somehow, a yarrow seed got in one of my pots last year, and gifted me a nice little yarrow bush.  From that bush last year, through wind and birds, yarrow has been dispersed all over my garden.  It is pretty to look at.  And, the pot it gifted itself in last year, was self seeded, and now bursting this year…

Zinnia 37

Planting seeds in pots is one of my new fave things.  Oh and, I even tested some pumpkin seeds in pots.  They are growing beautifully.  I will take a photo and show you.  For those of you in apartments, wanting to grow pumpkins?  It is totally possible if you have a little patio.

(front yard below)

Zinnia 42

Pretty…

Zinnia 28

Mood enhancing…

Zinnia 32

Color bursts…

Zinnia 30

A true gift from nature…

Zinnia 22

With the power to lift the spirit, even when you feel gloomy.

Zinnia 25

I found a way to pull myself out of a bout of sadness at 19 years of age, by discovering the garden (and that I loved it).  Playing with seeds and dirt keeps my brain healthy.

I keep gloomy feelings at bay by finding things that work for me.  Like gardening, painting, playing piano & not having cable (and my beloved furry children).  We all have things that will work for us.  Finding them is the secret key 😉

Zinnia 33

Yes, I am having an epiphany.  The garden keeps me sane.

Thank you garden!

😉

This is my favorite singing in the garden song.  It is Mister's favorite song too (not really), teehee! 

The tune is called Weep You no More Sad Fountains, and I listen to it daily as performed by the Crouch End Festival Chorus (it's on iTunes).  If you can get your hands on it, it is quite lovely.

With that, I must say, see you soooooon!

Love, V

 

A sparkly heart
 

 

ps:  Bracelet winners, selected by random number generator are…..

Betsy Baliey  and Stephanie, Hoooray! Hooray!!

  1. Kim says:

    Vanessa…
    Simply put, you have left me speechless ~
    Kim
    Gerushia’s New World

  2. Jackie says:

    Missy V….planting in pots takes all the fun out of “poop patrol!” =)

  3. Miss Linda says:

    Miss Vanissa, You grow the most amazing flowers. I would love the chance to walk among them. They are all just wonderful and a job well done. great growing.

  4. Kristal says:

    Thanks so much Vanessa for giving us a tour of your lovely garden and telling us what kind of flowers you have. We are renting a house right now and I hesitate to go a lot of planting but I miss getting my hands deep in the soil and have been thinking about buying some pretty pots and wasn’t sure what to fill them with!! Thanks for this great post!
    XoXo,
    Kristal

  5. Oh what a beautiful song! I too love to garden – it soothes the soul. Unfortunately I live in the desert but I look forward to the day we can retire from the Air Force and move on to “greener” pastures! Happy Gardening!

  6. Oh me oh my! What a lovely garden space. I know you say that there is a plant for everyone but I really don’t think that is true for me. At least not in this new home (can the climate be that different three miles down the road? That is what I am blaming it on!). I have bought many container plants (our growing season up here in the frozen tundra is such that I have to rely on the kindness of the garden centers!) this year and most of them have withered away. I know too much water or not enough. Or the wrong plant for the sun that I have. I don’t know. I am not so good with green things. But I love to look at yours and envision a leisurely jaunt through the posies with you on my arm and a tea cup in my hand! Thank you for letting me garden vicariously through you!
    Enjoy the day!
    Erin

  7. Kim says:

    Hi there,
    What a beautiful garden you and our soil created. The photos of the flowers are beautiful, you captured them perfectly!
    Thanks for sharing the sweet song! I’ve been humming it ever since 🙂
    Take care,
    Kim

  8. Linda Diane says:

    Thank you for the official garden tour and the behind-the-scenes scoop! I thought it was very interesting that you said that not having cable was one of the things that “works” for you. That got me curious! Do you mean you are afraid you’d become addicted and that it would eat up your time if you had it? Afte years of NOT having it, we just got cable some months ago. My husband especially loves Turner Classic Movies (I like them, too!), and I love HGTV, but I reall don’t feel like we over watch. MY big bugaboo is the computer. *Sigh* I really need to watch myself!!!

  9. Danni says:

    I’ve always been someone who jumps into things head first too! This year I started my first vegetable garden by plopping seeds in the ground and just waiting. It’s grown beautifully!
    You flowers look gorgeous! I’m planning to sprinkle some sort of cottage mix of seeds around the yard next spring and can only hope to have half as many blooms as you. 🙂

  10. You live in a fairy land of enchantment…your flowers are beyond beautiful…
    I think I like the Rose Bon Bon the best…it is so breathtakingly lovely with its fluffy petals. May I come join you in your lovely fairy garden and dwell there forever? :}
    I will shrink myself and become a fairy, that is how I will do it. I am stamping my tiny fairy foot in stubbornness like Tinker Bell, sprinkling my fairy dust everywhere, if you see some golden dust floating around in your garden at dawn, you will know I have arrived!!!
    Thank you for sharing your lovelies with us all.
    Miss Teresa

  11. BTW…Alan Rickman is one of the most amazing actors of all time…he was absolutely superb in the Harry Potter series. And that song is enchantingly sung by Kate.

  12. Leslie says:

    Hello Hello! I am sooo excited to read this post, especially as I have been looking at seeds and always wondering what will actually grow with lots of color, as I am in Phoenix. I am going to give all of these a try. I always seem to gravitate to Vinca during the hot months. I would have never thought of growing pumpkins in a pot! That is going to be first on my list! Does the time of year you plant pumpkins seeds make a difference? Do you think it is to hot to start them now?

  13. Oh wow, I have just happened across your blog and this utterly scrumptious garden has thrilled me to the tips of my toes… what I wouldn’t give to come sit drink pink lemonade with you there!
    Enjoy…

  14. such a pretty post. I love gardening I plant seeds in pots but they dont always work, sometimes they do though. I love your photos hugs Sara

  15. lisa skiles says:

    Your post resonated with me for a couple of reasons. I am a certified master gardener, but you know what? I don’t really use much of what I learned. I garden by instinct and emotion. I’m a sensitive and imaginative person, and that’s how gardening works for me. I ignore “soil science” and allow the flowers and veggies and herbs to speak to me – we have a relationship. Being in my gardens keeps me centered, happy, and in touch.
    Hugs,
    Lisa

  16. Jill James says:

    …..even though you live in Arizona, your pictures always look so shady! so restful at your little piece of heaven……

  17. Alisa says:

    Bellissimo!!!
    Which flowers do you find grow best for you in complete shade?

  18. Alli says:

    I love that you posted a lot about container gardening 🙂 I’m one of those who is in an apartment with a small balcony, but still determined to have a garden no less 😀 I have always wanted to grow a pumpkin, and now I may have to try it in a pot! Your garden is sooooo beautiful! It reminds me of “The Secret Garden” 🙂
    ~Alli

  19. marjorie says:

    Oh you garden makes me miss my old FL sun garden….I’ve planted zinnias in our wee cunny spot out front this season….but alas the weather that is ever so good for moss and misty mornings and raining days is not too nice for tomatoes and sinnias…they are, all of them, quite soggy, indeed. I should just embrace the fog and only plant shade loving dainties, no? tee hee
    And! ‘Weep you no more Sad Fountains” has been a favorite of mine for a very long while, indeed….I’ve never heard this version you mentioned! Must go seek it out!! meeep! 🙂 hoooooray hooorah!!
    Thankeeeeeeee Miss!

  20. Your flowers are absolutely LOVELY! I too like container gardening. I find it a little easier to handle and love all the flower filled pots around the patio and yard.
    Take care!
    Tracy M.

  21. reading this it makes me wonder why i dont read any gardening blogs at all??? Hmm I may have to go hunt some down because I love your gardening posts. I wonder if its because what you are doing is what i am about to be doing with the difference in our seasons. I have seeds a plenty waiting with many new flowers circled in my new seed catalog. I am so happy you are into pots, take that nasty gophers! I love it all, its sunny winter today so im off to now do gardening, so thankyou for your inspiration!
    much flowery love
    sheree
    PS.
    Have you read the ‘Secret garden’ by Frances Hodgson Burnett? I read it every winter to make me ecstatic about the planting season. I love this book sooo much.

  22. gina says:

    Oh how does your garden grow? Very well & beautiful Miss Vanessa!

  23. Tiffany says:

    Every corner a little wonderland. Love it V!

  24. After my dad passed away I got a bit consumed with gardening – I think it was the hopeful nature of the hobby intertwined with life and renewal that I really loved. I did something like you and jumped in and tried to remember all the lessons from my grandpa and great uncle (who were old farmers and knew a lot about plants). Now my garden is my sanctuary and while it sure is a lot of work, I wouldn’t have it any other way.
    Your garden is gloriously beautiful and I always love when you share it with us.

  25. Just gorgeous, as always! Thanks so much for giving us a glimpse. You’re inspiring me to try gardening from seed next year (I usually just buy the plants, lots of annuals)…
    Happy gardening!
    🖤 Carolee

  26. Cassandra says:

    You have a gorgeous garden! I think I would spend hours there just daydreaming.

  27. Erin says:

    I love this movie and Kate Winslet.
    It is hard to believe that that romantic and hunky Colonel Brandon is the same person as that horrible awful Professor Snape…although, even Professor Snape in the early years (at least in the movie) was somewhat hunky.

  28. Elaine L. says:

    I love your Zinnias. When I was in the fifth grade, I had a teacher named Mr. Zinn. His grandfather developed the Zinnia flower.
    I do not have good luck at all in pots, unless I put them in among my regular plants. I have a couple of plants in those black pots that I never have gotten around to planting and they’ve been growing for the past two years in among my in ground plants.
    You know, people do all sorts of vegetable gardening in pots. Some people grow potatoes in black plastic trash bags.
    ~elaine~

  29. I just love your garden, so enchanting and romantic! And that movie is one of my favorite 🙂 (just like almost Jane Austen’s books turned into movies).

  30. Rebecca says:

    Oh, your garden is so gorgeous! I’d never really garden(I have a phobia of bees), but I do love to look at the flowers. Gorgeous! And I had to smile when I saw the video from Sense and Sensibility…that’s a lovely movie, you have to love Jane Austen. 🙂

  31. linnea-maria says:

    Professional or not, if you love gardening, then you will always be successful in any way, I beleive. Beautiful pictures. /Therese

  32. Katharine says:

    Did you see the version with Kiera Knightly? It is absolutely fabulous and well worth seeing. I dragged Natalie to watch it and we both just loved it. I saw this version many years ago and loved it too.

  33. Theresa says:

    What a lovely post, Vanessa! It was wonderful to read about your experiences with gardening and what works best for you. It really is trial and error in all different regions of the country, isn’t it? What works for us might not work for you – and vice versa. Sometimes it makes me sad because I want oodles and oodles of pretty flowers and shrubs all over the yard – but my hubby reminds me to be practical in that it just might not grow in our soil! LOL Sense and Sensibility – oh that is my favorite version!!!! I fell in love with Alan Rickman in this version. I must own several different versions of all Austen films…I am hooked!!! LOL xoxo

  34. Theresa says:

    I almost forgot…congrats to your lucky winners!!! 🙂

  35. Jo says:

    Glorious blooms, just glorious! because of here we live, I grow all sorts of wonderful things in containers, including veggies 🙂

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

next Post