Thank you for introducing some wonderful perennials that will add color to the garden. Especially the flowers that bloom in August and September. Great information and beautiful video!
Such a beautiful garden and so much colour and variety ! I loved the tour thank you so much and many ideas there but definitely Sedum Touchdown Teak is on a must buy list now, what a stunning colour 🤩
Oooh, so glad you popped up in my feed today! Loving this first video and subscribed within minutes. I’m in far northeast Tennessee, USA, zone 6b and googled to find that your equivalent is warmer at zone 8, but I also focus on these same perennials - so lovely! And what you call dove heads, we call turtle heads; I have two masses of them backing a fern garden in my one shady spot and they’re blooming beautifully right now, like yours. I’m in a rural area with a lot of deer, so I’ve found out the hard way that early spring plants get eaten, but plants that thrive in the hot, late summer are left alone because the surrounding farms must have a better buffet. 😂 Excited to find you and to learn more about your gardens!
Hello to Tennessee from Denmark :) Yeah... we have very mild summers and we're coastal here in Fredericia... so that keeps our winters from the heavy snow and minus temps that the north gets. Turtle heads! I guess they do look like those, too :) Crazy names.. would be fun to have that job... naming all of them :)
Thanks guys, it's looking so beautiful. We haven't got any sanguisorba in our garden but do love them. S. 'Pink Brushes' is so lovely. Love the story about the witch festival you have! We would love to see that 🧙♀️😊
I am so happy that I found your channel. Subbed right away! So much information which I need so much. I focused the last 30 years on fruit trees and veggies. No I converted. Actually I know a lot about perennial ornamentals, i.e. I knmow most of them by name even in latin, but I failed to learn about propagation, winter care and husbandry
We're so glad you found us, too! And how exciting with a new gardening journey... we know very very little about trees especially. Fortunately, Lars works with a few experts at the cemetery garden... otherwise we'd be really lost! haha
What a beautiful late summer show! Fantastic. Just a tip re.the sedum: with the taller ones, if you cut back the stems in late May/early June, by ⅔ say, they will branch out, and flower with shorted stems that don’t fall over! And all the stems I cut off I made soft cuttings from…now have lots more! Really love your sedum Touchdown Teak….on my wish list, with the Agastache and sanguisorba
Hi You have a beautiful, beautiful collection of plants. I must buy some of those dark leaved sedums. A lot of 'wants' on my list. 33° temperatures today,so I relax indoors and go out around 6pm to check on my plants. Lovely to hear from you 💯💞🌟🌟
Congrats to your beautiful garden and the tasteful selection of perennial flowers. Really enjoyed your video and got some inspiration for my own border.
I discovered you not very long ago and boy, am I happy I did! I get so much inspiration and great ideas from your channel. You have plants I’m constantly researching.
I love your garden, so beautiful. My favourites at the moment in my garden are the anemones, sanguisorbia, sedums and asters. I must get some dark sedums and the verbena bampton is 💚. Look forward to your next video. .
Beautiful 😻 Garden… always bright with colors…u guys doing great job.. Heleniums, Rudbeckias. Cornflowers always beautiful in the end of the season…my favorites for fall
The late flowering perennials are lovely aren't they? I particularly like Rudbeckias and Heleniums. In fact anything that has a daisy flower. Your new Hydrangeas are looking at home where you've planted them. Love the story about the witch. Glad I didn't live in those times. Imagine being burned at the stake. I'm jumping around if I burn my finger!
I totally agree! It's a really interesting 'festival' or holiday.... not sure exactly how it classifies ;) The Swedes do a big mid-summer celebration... the Danes have their witch burning party. hahaha. On the odd Scandinavians ;)
I am watching and by the time @4:06mins you said June 23 is your bday, is same as my husband and those time are when my roses are in bloom, feels sooo good
Everything is always stunning!!! How’s the weather there? I’m having a hard time having anything excel because it is so hot and humid here in WV. Thanks for the gorgeous tour of your garden ❤
You're so kind! Thank you. Here, we're having a great end of summer... it's around 77-degrees F (25C) these days... that's quite hot for Denmark! Autumn is just around the corner tho... you can already feel the light slipping away as our days start to get shorter.
This year I am growing heliopsis "bleeding hearts" which is similar to your heliopsis "burning hearts" only it has more red and orange tones. I highly recommend if you can find it. Thanks for sharing your beautiful gardens.
I noticed most of the plants are North American natives! This garden would do well in Albuquerque, New Mexico. 😊 What is your perennial helianthus cultivar? We have a perennial native sunflower, helianthus maximiliani, which can get up to 10 feet high.
@@katemaria1And what’s so cool is that I also grow these in zone 6b, far northeast Tennessee! We are lucky to have a lot of rain, but also strong sun at 2500 ft altitude. (started to say strong “hot” sun but realized where YOU were… 😂 but, then, we regularly have to deal with >90% humidity, so there’s that).
Beautiful garden walkabout! Thank you for showcasing your favourites! I’m able and do plant a lot of your perennials in my garden too (near Niagara Falls, Canada). Of the hyssop, do you cut it back to the ground each year? I’ve heard you can leave it for birds…but of course it’ll self seed. Mine is as high as my fence (2nd year).
Great questions :) We don't water -- only the pots and if anything is newly planted. We're blessed that Denmark is very very very wet and rainy ;) So that takes care of our watering issue. Plus, most of what we grew is perennial... established after several seasons, so the roots are strong and deep. We fertilize once a year with organic chicken manure -- otherwise it's just the soil we have in the garden. We do spread compost (that we make ourselves) once-twice a year (whenever our little compost bin is full).
We moved in in 2018 - so we started then. The middle flower bed is just 1 year old - so is the bed around our dahlias. The new bed near the deck and around the cherry tree are new this year. 💚
Your garden just amazes me. Thank you for your informative and enjoyable videos. I have tried to get my hands on Burning Hearts for several years now, but haven’t been successful. Do you know if seeds for this plant are available in your area, or are the plants available in your area or did you get yours by cuttings? Thank you.
Lars just told me that we bought our plant first... and have since collected seeds. Maybe that will be easier?... if you look plants instead of seeds. Not sure. If you ever come here... we'll give you seeds. :)
Beautiful! Do you do anything special when starting verbena Brampton from seeds? I’ve tried to start some and they didn’t germinate 😢 are they perennial in zone 4 ? Thanks for showing us your wonderful gardens ! 😊
Those seeds do need cold stratification (Cold Treatment). This mimics the natural winter conditions and helps break the seed dormancy. We winter sow ours... or you could place the seeds in a damp paper towel inside a plastic bag and seal the bag and refrigerate it for about 4-6 weeks. After this period, you can sow the seeds as usual. Verbena seeds also need light to germinate. Don't cover the seeds with soil; instead, press them gently into the soil surface to ensure they have good contact but remain exposed to light. Hope that helps -- and you can start some this winter! You can also check around the plant, it self sows quite easily... you might have little seedlings around it already :) You can pot these on or move them in the garden.
We don't water actually. Here in Denmark, we get lots and lots of rain. When we do water (our pots for example) we use rain water that we've collected. We did have to water our new cherry tree when we first planted it in... and we just used the water hose for that. Otherwise, since we work with mostly perennials, once they are established, they don't require much watering... and if they do, it'll rain today or tomorrow or the next day here in Denmark :)
That's incredible! In Denmark, if it rains on your birthday, it means that you were not a very nice person that year ;) haha. (In Lars family, they said it meant that you didn't eat your vegetables that year ;) )
I love watching your videos.. my favorite garden on this channel… thank you for sharing ❤
Wow, thank you! We're glad you're here with us :)
Thank you for introducing some wonderful perennials that will add color to the garden.
Especially the flowers that bloom in August and September.
Great information and beautiful video!
Thank you for watching! Hope you have a great day in the garden today :)
Just now found you. Lucky me!!!! I subscribed.
Lucky us! Glad you’re here with us. Big hello from Denmark 🇩🇰
@@bunnyfrancis7006 you will love them....this will become one of your absolute favorite garden channels, if not your absolute favorite!😀
🥹💚💚💚
Such a beautiful garden and so much colour and variety ! I loved the tour thank you so much and many ideas there but definitely Sedum Touchdown Teak is on a must buy list now, what a stunning colour 🤩
It's one of our favorites, too! Love that dark foliage in the middle of all the green around it :)
Oooh, so glad you popped up in my feed today! Loving this first video and subscribed within minutes. I’m in far northeast Tennessee, USA, zone 6b and googled to find that your equivalent is warmer at zone 8, but I also focus on these same perennials - so lovely! And what you call dove heads, we call turtle heads; I have two masses of them backing a fern garden in my one shady spot and they’re blooming beautifully right now, like yours. I’m in a rural area with a lot of deer, so I’ve found out the hard way that early spring plants get eaten, but plants that thrive in the hot, late summer are left alone because the surrounding farms must have a better buffet. 😂 Excited to find you and to learn more about your gardens!
Hello to Tennessee from Denmark :) Yeah... we have very mild summers and we're coastal here in Fredericia... so that keeps our winters from the heavy snow and minus temps that the north gets.
Turtle heads! I guess they do look like those, too :) Crazy names.. would be fun to have that job... naming all of them :)
Beautiful garden. Ideas for late summer bloom. Thank you for the video.
Thank you for watching 💚
Thanks guys, it's looking so beautiful. We haven't got any sanguisorba in our garden but do love them. S. 'Pink Brushes' is so lovely. Love the story about the witch festival you have! We would love to see that 🧙♀️😊
These Danes and their celebrations 😅🥰🇩🇰. There’s another one involving a goose and a hidden Saint 🤓
@perennial-garden Sound intriguing 🤔 We are fascinated by these kinds of celebrations that are entwined in local folklore and history 😀
I am so happy that I found your channel. Subbed right away! So much information which I need so much. I focused the last 30 years on fruit trees and veggies. No I converted. Actually I know a lot about perennial ornamentals, i.e. I knmow most of them by name even in latin, but I failed to learn about propagation, winter care and husbandry
We're so glad you found us, too! And how exciting with a new gardening journey... we know very very little about trees especially. Fortunately, Lars works with a few experts at the cemetery garden... otherwise we'd be really lost! haha
❤so nice! wonderful chat and tour. Thank you for sharing.
Glad you enjoyed it! 💚💚
What a beautiful late summer show! Fantastic. Just a tip re.the sedum: with the taller ones, if you cut back the stems in late May/early June, by ⅔ say, they will branch out, and flower with shorted stems that don’t fall over! And all the stems I cut off I made soft cuttings from…now have lots more! Really love your sedum Touchdown Teak….on my wish list, with the Agastache and sanguisorba
That's a super great idea! And we love that Touchdown Teak, too --- such a beautiful color amongst all the green :)
Hi
You have a beautiful, beautiful collection of plants. I must buy some of those dark leaved sedums. A lot of 'wants' on my list. 33° temperatures today,so I relax indoors and go out around 6pm to check on my plants. Lovely to hear from you 💯💞🌟🌟
Those dark ones are so nice!
And 33?! Oh my goodness - I’d stay indoors too 😅. It did hit 25 today! So glad we’re still getting a bit of summer 💚
Congrats to your beautiful garden and the tasteful selection of perennial flowers. Really enjoyed your video and got some inspiration for my own border.
Thanks so much! 😊 so nice to hear that you can find inspiration from ours 💚
I discovered you not very long ago and boy, am I happy I did! I get so much inspiration and great ideas from your channel. You have plants I’m constantly researching.
I'm so glad! That is exactly why we keep showing up :) Thanks for taking the time to write to us :)
De elektrisk blå planter, som f.eks asta´s er bare super flotte. Elsker at du siger mojn til sidst.
Ja det er nogle skønne staude farver. Vi elsker alle farver. Ja jeg siger altid mojn i videoerne☺️ da jeg er fra Sønderjylland.
so nice, beautiful views
Thank you for watching 💚💚
This was so helpful, thank you! I’ve been looking for more ideas for late summer colour and this was perfect.
Glad it was helpful! 💚💚
I love your garden, so beautiful. My favourites at the moment in my garden are the anemones, sanguisorbia, sedums and asters. I must get some dark sedums and the verbena bampton is 💚. Look forward to your next video. .
Wonderful! Those dark sedums are some of our favorites, too! The Touchdown Teak especially :)
Thank you for such a colourful and beautiful video. Happy gardening 🙂
Thanks a lot! Hope you have great weather for gardening this week too!
Beautiful 😻 Garden… always bright with colors…u guys doing great job.. Heleniums, Rudbeckias. Cornflowers always beautiful in the end of the season…my favorites for fall
Those are some of our favorites, too! Thanks so much for watching with us 🥰
Big blue lobelia is another great fall blooming plant which i grow
Really enjoyed your video
It really is! We’ll have to look for seeds for next season 💚
LOVE blue lobelia too!
I just got a new greenhouse this year, and it has been amazing. Would love a video on what your greenhouse cleaning routine is.
Great idea!! It’s on our list 💚
The Touchdown Teak Sedum!!!
Thank you for this informative and enjoyable video!
You are so welcome! 💚💚
Beautiful blooming perennials. Your garden is absolutely gorgeous!
Thank you so much! Hope you get great weather this week at yours. :)
Great video,lots of good info.Your gardens are gorgeous❤❤❤❤
Thanks so much 😊💚
Hey guys absolutely love your gardens, you have Inspired me to sow heaps of flowers this year, hi from New Zealand ❤❤
Wonderful! Let us know how it all grows :)
Diese Blütenpracht, auch der August bietet uns Schönes.💚💚💯💯🌻🌻
So thankful! 💚
The late flowering perennials are lovely aren't they? I particularly like Rudbeckias and Heleniums. In fact anything that has a daisy flower. Your new Hydrangeas are looking at home where you've planted them. Love the story about the witch. Glad I didn't live in those times. Imagine being burned at the stake. I'm jumping around if I burn my finger!
I totally agree! It's a really interesting 'festival' or holiday.... not sure exactly how it classifies ;) The Swedes do a big mid-summer celebration... the Danes have their witch burning party. hahaha. On the odd Scandinavians ;)
I am watching and by the time @4:06mins you said June 23 is your bday, is same as my husband and those time are when my roses are in bloom, feels sooo good
Birthday twins :)
@@perennial-gardenI’m June 24! 🦀
@@leapintothewild Great people were born in June :)
Love that Touchdown Teak Sedum!! Been trying to get my hands on one locally. Beautiful plant.
It's gorgeous, right?! Hope you can find it in your area.
Everything is always stunning!!! How’s the weather there? I’m having a hard time having anything excel because it is so hot and humid here in WV. Thanks for the gorgeous tour of your garden ❤
You're so kind! Thank you. Here, we're having a great end of summer... it's around 77-degrees F (25C) these days... that's quite hot for Denmark! Autumn is just around the corner tho... you can already feel the light slipping away as our days start to get shorter.
Beautifull summer colors...love all your plants
Glad you like them! We're so thankful for color all season long :)
Lovely, thank you.
Thank you for watching 💚
This year I am growing heliopsis "bleeding hearts" which is similar to your heliopsis "burning hearts" only it has more red and orange tones. I highly recommend if you can find it. Thanks for sharing your beautiful gardens.
Now that does sound pretty! It's on our wish list now ;) Thank you!
Love all the American species of plants 🌱
So do we 💚
I noticed most of the plants are North American natives! This garden would do well in Albuquerque, New Mexico. 😊
What is your perennial helianthus cultivar? We have a perennial native sunflower, helianthus maximiliani, which can get up to 10 feet high.
@@katemaria1And what’s so cool is that I also grow these in zone 6b, far northeast Tennessee! We are lucky to have a lot of rain, but also strong sun at 2500 ft altitude. (started to say strong “hot” sun but realized where YOU were… 😂 but, then, we regularly have to deal with >90% humidity, so there’s that).
Thanks again another great video
Thank YOU for commenting 💚
Beautiful garden walkabout! Thank you for showcasing your favourites! I’m able and do plant a lot of your perennials in my garden too (near Niagara Falls, Canada). Of the hyssop, do you cut it back to the ground each year? I’ve heard you can leave it for birds…but of course it’ll self seed. Mine is as high as my fence (2nd year).
Thank you for watching! We cut ours back in the spring - once we see new growth coming. We don’t mind the self seeding part 💚
Do you hand water everything or do you have drip irrigation? What do you use to amend the soil? Your garden is such an inspiration! I love it!
Great questions :)
We don't water -- only the pots and if anything is newly planted. We're blessed that Denmark is very very very wet and rainy ;) So that takes care of our watering issue. Plus, most of what we grew is perennial... established after several seasons, so the roots are strong and deep.
We fertilize once a year with organic chicken manure -- otherwise it's just the soil we have in the garden. We do spread compost (that we make ourselves) once-twice a year (whenever our little compost bin is full).
Your garden is so beautiful! How old is it?
We moved in in 2018 - so we started then. The middle flower bed is just 1 year old - so is the bed around our dahlias.
The new bed near the deck and around the cherry tree are new this year.
💚
Your garden just amazes me. Thank you for your informative and enjoyable videos. I have tried to get my hands on Burning Hearts for several years now, but haven’t been successful. Do you know if seeds for this plant are available in your area, or are the plants available in your area or did you get yours by cuttings? Thank you.
Lars just told me that we bought our plant first... and have since collected seeds. Maybe that will be easier?... if you look plants instead of seeds. Not sure. If you ever come here... we'll give you seeds. :)
Beautiful! Can you please tell me what are the taller skinny white ones growing through the blanket flowers? (@8.00)🌸😘
Isn’t it pretty? It’s PHYSOSTEGIA VIRGINIANA 💚
Beautiful! Do you do anything special when starting verbena Brampton from seeds? I’ve tried to start some and they didn’t germinate 😢 are they perennial in zone 4 ? Thanks for showing us your wonderful gardens ! 😊
Those seeds do need cold stratification (Cold Treatment). This mimics the natural winter conditions and helps break the seed dormancy. We winter sow ours... or you could place the seeds in a damp paper towel inside a plastic bag and seal the bag and refrigerate it for about 4-6 weeks.
After this period, you can sow the seeds as usual.
Verbena seeds also need light to germinate. Don't cover the seeds with soil; instead, press them gently into the soil surface to ensure they have good contact but remain exposed to light.
Hope that helps -- and you can start some this winter! You can also check around the plant, it self sows quite easily... you might have little seedlings around it already :) You can pot these on or move them in the garden.
@@perennial-garden thank you 😊
Any time 🥰💚
❤
💚💚💚
I have pollinator gardens in zone 3 Canada. Except for one, I have all these plants in my gardens. I was wondering if you grew the Milkweed plant?
Great minds think alike! We have milkweed that we’ve grown from bare root, but it’s not flowering yet. Should be in September for us here 💚
@@perennial-garden I love your videos. Thanks so much for sharing your lovely garden with us.
@@carolynhannah8757 You are so welcome! Thank you for commenting :)
I dont know if you remember me but im the one who asked about what soil combination and how deep to dig for new soil to use to my dry part of garden
We do! How did that work out?
How do you water your garden? From Diane in Buffalo NY
We don't water actually. Here in Denmark, we get lots and lots of rain. When we do water (our pots for example) we use rain water that we've collected. We did have to water our new cherry tree when we first planted it in... and we just used the water hose for that. Otherwise, since we work with mostly perennials, once they are established, they don't require much watering... and if they do, it'll rain today or tomorrow or the next day here in Denmark :)
Wish you would talk about what zones,these could be in.
We don’t use USDA zones here like you do in the USA. But this info is easy to find online according to the area you’re in.
Kanskje ikke høststaude, men har dere tips til korte delphinium ( staude) som er egnet til snitt, 70 cm høy, ikke 2m ?
Der er ridderspore pacific m. Fountain lilla rosa’ den bliver maks 70-80 cm høj. Eller dwarf rocket som er en meget lav variant.
we are married for 8yrs now and never ever had rain on June23 since we lived together and moved here in England, never rain at all 😂😂,
That's incredible! In Denmark, if it rains on your birthday, it means that you were not a very nice person that year ;) haha. (In Lars family, they said it meant that you didn't eat your vegetables that year ;) )
Bampton 🤭