
Happy Monday GPODers!
Today we’re seeing how Carla Zambelli Mudry’s garden is handling some uncharacteristically warm weather this fall. Carla sends regular updates on her garden in Malvern, Pennsylvania (some submissions from this past year are: Ahead-of-Schedule Flowers in Pennsylvania, Hydrangea Season in Carla’s Garden, and A Weird Summer in Carla’s Garden), so we have a great record on how her space has evolved over the years. Despite the ups and downs that climate likes to bring to our gardens, Carla is always able to create and capture plant magic.
Unbelievably, it is November and it’s over 60°. It has been a very stressful fall gardening season because we’ve been in a drought. We are under a burn ban for the county I live in Pennsylvania through the end of this month, and I wouldn’t be surprised if they extended it.
We’ve had a little bit of rain in the last week, which softened the soil up enough for me to get the rest of the bulbs planted. I think about 500 bulbs again this year, a lot of of them are in the lawn. I have been working on a Stinzenplanten the past couple of years. It’s more of a common occurrence in European countries, here in the US so many people just bow to the lawn gods and I remember when I was a child there were all these lawns of these houses where I lived that would explode with little daffodils and crocuses in the spring, and as the years went by and people started using chemical laden lawn services and developing larger parcels of land into multiple small parcels of giant McMansions, it disappeared.
The drought is really stressing my shrubs and trees. I believe I’ve lost some deciduous azaleas, but I’m not sure. I won’t know about the tree damage until the spring. As we adapt to climate change, I hope our gardens will do so as well happy Thanksgiving to everyone out there at Fine Gardening.
Carla sent in so many sensational photos from her garden, that we’ll be back in Pennsylvania to see more of her fall scenes tomorrow. We’ll take a look at more flowers that are still putting on a performance in the late season as well as Carla’s hanging baskets and containers full of edibles.
Have a garden you’d like to share?
Have photos to share? We’d love to see your garden, a particular collection of plants you love, or a wonderful garden you had the chance to visit!
To submit, send 5-10 photos to gpod@taunton.com along with some information about the plants in the pictures and where you took the photos. We’d love to hear where you are located, how long you’ve been gardening, successes you are proud of, failures you learned from, hopes for the future, favorite plants, or funny stories from your garden.
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Comments
Love your witch hazel. Sadly, mine has never done much of anything -- maybe 4 or 5 blooms.
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