Lobelia Cardinalis: Prettiest Mistake I've Ever Made!
by
Tandy Arnold
(IC: homeowner)
What do you do with your gardening mistakes???
By mid September---the end of it's blooming season in zone 5---my two lobelia cardinalis (both fallen and "deformed") created a glorious mess in the front garden!
It all started with two healthy lobelia cardinalis bought at Mounds State Park native plant sale in early May, 2014. Unfortunately, I didn't get them in the ground for another 6 weeks. The one in the center of the pic was over 4 ft tall when planted and the one in the lower lefthand corner was much shorter---later, I figured out that the growing tip had been broken off.
The tallest one started blooming first and I feared the other was going to be stunted and look too weird this year.
Uh, oh...probably because it was soooo tall and rootbound when planted, the tallest one fell over after a heavy rain and was lying across the spirea Goldflame.
I didn't get outside to get it staked up, and within a few days, the main stem had fallen into the spirea and was sprouting new growth along the (now horizontal) stem. Determined, to do what nature intended, the new growth quickly started blooming. Now, if I staked it, it would definitely look weird. Besides...this was becoming interesting!
The shorter of the two started catching up in height. However, instead of one stem---there were five! Another mistake worth replicating!
The spirea Goldflame in full bloom with Cardinal Flower---you don't see that every day!
Another heavy rain...and the second Cardinal Flower fell over. With it's five shoots it started sending out off-shoots all over the place. Some mixed in with the black-eyed Susans.
Some blooms grew up through the asters, "September Ruby."
These mistakes created interesting vertical elements (along with the butterfly weed's vertical seed pods) all throughout a larger area than they would have otherwise.
No matter where they grew---or how they fell---the hummers loved them!
Bloom where you are planted and even if you fall over...keep reaching for the sun!
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Published September 15th, 2014 10:16 AM
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5 of 11 comments
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Douglas Hunt on Sep 16, 2014May lobelia happily wend its way through your garden for a very long time.
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Jeanette S on Sep 16, 2014This is sooooo pretty. I have seen so many different colors planted together this year that I told hubs, "next year I am going to go to the nursery and get one of everything in every color!"
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Tandy Arnold on Sep 16, 2014Lol, @Jeanette S..."one of everything in every color"...I think that's what Monet did with paint! Actually, I also have a color scheme...well, it's evolving. It started when I finally "found myself" after reading Elisabeth Sheldon's book, The Flamboyant Garden. All "hot" colors and no pastels. Instead of cooling things with white, I use dark leaved plants. Then last fall (2013) a friend, @Victoria Phillips , used the phrase "jewel tones." I think I've got the "jewel tones" going well, but next year I'll add more dark leaved plants as a backdrop.
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Jeanette S on Sep 16, 2014@Tandy Arnold That never dawned on me, but I think you are RIGHT! That is why it is so pretty! HA!
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