Three great plants are stars of my fall garden
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After just about the (almost 50 inches!) and in the nation (rain, rain, and more rain), we out here in fly-over country are finally catching a break -- Indian summer.
Three weeks after our average first freeze date, we鈥檝e had only a couple of light frosts 鈥 just enough to kill the crabgrass and leave almost everything else green and lush, looking as if I had actually finished weeding the place.
Somehow the veg garden is still pumping out beans, peppers, and tomatoes. The Yukon Gold spuds are all in, but the sweet potatoes 鈥 which need a longer growing season 鈥 are still half in the ground, waiting to get bigger and sweeter. And it just may happen.
Three other things I like about this time of year:
鈥 Apples: More than 10 years ago, when I first started the orchard, I was enchanted by heirloom/antique apples. I figured, hey, they didn鈥檛 have chemical sprays back then, so they must do OK now without it. And every time I saw the words 鈥渙ne of Thomas Jefferson鈥檚 favorites鈥 in a catalog, I bought one.
Evidently, Tom never met an apple tree he didn鈥檛 like, because I ended up with about 30 of them. (Unfortunately, I found that many of them suffer from all kinds of awfulness.) For insurance, I planted a couple modern-day, disease-resistant trees in the backyard. , and, to my mind, the best- tasting of this genre.
When I swing by on my weekly marathon with the lawn tractor, I usually grab at least one to munch on while performing this dreary chore. The dogs like them, too. Not always a good thing.
While not as disease-resistant as originally thought, is another hardy modern with great taste.
鈥 Roses: I have a large semicircular border of roses out back 鈥 probably 25 bushes 鈥 dividing the formal garden from the more wooded, informal area and the three-row evergreen windbreak.
In central Iowa鈥檚 usually nasty Zone 4/5 climate, our selection of roses is somewhat limited, but rugosas feel quite at home and are blooming quite handily even now. My faves:
鈥 The double pink .
鈥 The semidouble white .
鈥 Another hybrid, the exceedingly fragrant, semi-double white .
鈥 And the clear-yellow, hybrid single .
鈥 Lablab bean vine: Annual vines area sadly underused utility player in the garden. They don鈥檛 take up any room, they are quite colorful, and they bloom forever. Unfortunately, one of my favorites takes a while to really get going 鈥 especially after such a dark and stormy summer as the last one. But when -- also called hyacinth bean -- finally shoots its nearly radioactive purply-pink pods on high, it is a glorious thing.
Also: With the warm weather lasting so long, we may actually be able to finish painting the house, which I tend to think of as the backdrop for my garden. A three-story Victorian takes a while. But it鈥檚 now all scraped and primed, awaiting our latest Painted Lady color scheme. (Decisions, decisions 鈥)
Unfortunately, right now the place kind of looks like something from war-torn Beirut. Here鈥檚 hoping the weather holds out, so the house doesn鈥檛 have to suffer the indignity of spending the winter clad thus.
Also. too: Do you have any favorite things gardenesque about this time of year? Post them below 鈥 and tell us why.
What else I鈥檓 into this week: , the best slice of post-punk power-pop I鈥檝e run into since 鈥 well, I can鈥檛 remember that far back. Think of them as the No Doubt for the next decade.
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Craig Summers Black, The Transplanted Gardener, is an award-winning garden writer and photographer who blogs regularly at Diggin' it. You can read more of what he's written by clicking here. You may also follow Craig鈥檚 further adventures in gardening, music, and rural life on .