Thank you! Nice! I’m excited for you :) You’re in a warmer zone than me so I’m sure you’ll get to see many beautiful blooms for a good while longer. Enjoy!
Hi Lina, I'm also living in western WA. I'm in the process of moving to a new property and looking forward to starting a garden/permaculture orchard. Thanks for sharing and giving me ideas on what grows well here in the State.
Hello fellow Washingtonian! I love the idea of a permaculture orchard! I have 3 fruit trees in my garden now - 2 apples and a peach and I’m planning on growing more perennial vegetables in raised beds in the future. We’re lucky to live in a zone that can grow a wide range of things so I have no doubt that your new garden will turn out to be a huge success. Best of luck and please come back to let me know how it goes 🌿🌸🌱🌳
@@Linasgardens Thank you! My goal is to create cottage orchard look, so lots of flowers. I love the look of your Japanese willow shrubs. Definitely will be adding that to the design. In the orchard I'm looking to grow unique fruit trees that does well here. Lots of Paw Paw and Persimmon trees, Figs, Asian pears, etc. All kinds of unique berry shrubs that you can't easily buy from the store, like Honeyberry (Haskcap), Seaberry, Goumi berry, etc.
Hello! I'm in the same area as you, and your videos have been a huge inspiration for some new projects I'm planning! I'm a total novice, and so having someone walk through their project and talk about their plants with the really good balance of detail and advice (for people like me) is awesome. With that said :D I thought I came to this particular video for the flowers, but I am staring at that little guy at 3:21 in awe. Could you write the name of that plant?
Hi! Thank you and welcome to the world of plants 🌿🌸🌱 Makes me happy to know my videos are appreciated and I’m glad you’re getting some ideas for your own garden! I’m not sure if I’m referring to the right plant but at 3.21 is a ground cover called ‘pink pewter’ dead spotted nettle which is an evergreen plant here. Right behind it is a cute little shrub called ‘silver dollar’ hebe, only 3 by 3 feet at maturity and is also evergreen in our zone so if you love the looks of these guys I would highly recommend! Imagine growing them en masse… must be stunning to look at. Best of luck with your garden! Please let me know how it goes ☺️
Hi Sammy! I haven’t yet. They’re now about 4-5 feet tall including the container height which is about how tall I’d like them to stay, maybe 6 feet max. This spring I’m going to start pruning them for the first time. I’m a bit nervous 😬 I have a lot of reading and youtube watching to do! Any advice?
I wanted to ask you when you planted your roses from David Austin did you put any bio tone ? I have bought a few roses and for some reason they are not thriving I have bought a few roses and for some reason the same way I receive them that’s the same way they stay for a long while until maybe maybe u see a little bit of growth but not big ? Do u have a video when u planted your?
Hi, thank you for your question. Are your roses planted in the ground? The root of any plant can take a while to establish under ground especially in the first year. Some plants are more notorious than others, like my hydrangeas for example, there was little to no growth in the first 2 years and it wasn’t until the third year that they started blooming. Roses are usually quicker and more vigorous in terms of growth but yours may just be taking their time. How long has it been? No, I don’t use bio tone when I planted these. I did amend my soil quite a bit though because I have heavy clay with lots of big rocks. If I remembered, I’d sprinkle micorrhizal fungi around the roots. It helps them get the nutrients they need from the soil. But I don’t always remember and that’s totally fine. Micorrhizal fungi will naturally form over time. But the most important thing for me is the well-draining quality of the soil because that will make or break a plant. How is your soil? Speaking from experience - overwatering, over fertilizing, and waterlogged soil will almost always kill a plant. First tell tale sign is yellowing leaves. I almost lost a rose that way. I did make a video of how I saved it in time if you’re interested. You’ll also see the progress of my roses planted from bare roots. Here’s the link below th-cam.com/video/2RoflQ_utGA/w-d-xo.html In the first minute, I showed how I amended the soil and sprinkled the fungi in at planting… and you’ll see that even after doing all that it still didn’t help because soil was still waterlogged. I hope this helps you somewhat. But again, if you don’t see any yellow leaves, I wouldn’t worry too much about it. Your roses might be taking their time to establish super strong roots down below 😊 Good luck!
Also, fertilization will help with blooms. I usually fertilize mine twice in spring. First before they start their first flush, then again right after first flush is done. and I leave them to do their thing for the rest of the season.
Your backyard still beautiful in Late October dear❤
I absolutely love your garden. I just started my first fall garden and so excited about it. Zone9a
Thank you! Nice! I’m excited for you :) You’re in a warmer zone than me so I’m sure you’ll get to see many beautiful blooms for a good while longer. Enjoy!
Beautiful garden 🏵️
Thank you 😊
Love your videos!
Thank you 😊
Hi Lina, I'm also living in western WA. I'm in the process of moving to a new property and looking forward to starting a garden/permaculture orchard. Thanks for
sharing and giving me ideas on what grows well here in the State.
Hello fellow Washingtonian! I love the idea of a permaculture orchard! I have 3 fruit trees in my garden now - 2 apples and a peach and I’m planning on growing more perennial vegetables in raised beds in the future.
We’re lucky to live in a zone that can grow a wide range of things so I have no doubt that your new garden will turn out to be a huge success. Best of luck and please come back to let me know how it goes 🌿🌸🌱🌳
@@Linasgardens Thank you! My goal is to create cottage orchard look, so lots of flowers. I love the look of your Japanese willow shrubs. Definitely will be adding that to the design. In the orchard I'm looking to grow unique fruit trees that does well here. Lots of Paw Paw and Persimmon trees, Figs, Asian pears, etc. All kinds of unique berry shrubs that you can't easily buy from the store, like Honeyberry (Haskcap), Seaberry, Goumi berry, etc.
Hello! I'm in the same area as you, and your videos have been a huge inspiration for some new projects I'm planning! I'm a total novice, and so having someone walk through their project and talk about their plants with the really good balance of detail and advice (for people like me) is awesome.
With that said :D I thought I came to this particular video for the flowers, but I am staring at that little guy at 3:21 in awe. Could you write the name of that plant?
Hi! Thank you and welcome to the world of plants 🌿🌸🌱 Makes me happy to know my videos are appreciated and I’m glad you’re getting some ideas for your own garden!
I’m not sure if I’m referring to the right plant but at 3.21 is a ground cover called ‘pink pewter’ dead spotted nettle which is an evergreen plant here. Right behind it is a cute little shrub called ‘silver dollar’ hebe, only 3 by 3 feet at maturity and is also evergreen in our zone so if you love the looks of these guys I would highly recommend! Imagine growing them en masse… must be stunning to look at.
Best of luck with your garden! Please let me know how it goes ☺️
Hi Lina. Do you prune your Camilla Japonica’s that are in the containers? Lovely garden as usual.
Hi Sammy! I haven’t yet. They’re now about 4-5 feet tall including the container height which is about how tall I’d like them to stay, maybe 6 feet max. This spring I’m going to start pruning them for the first time. I’m a bit nervous 😬 I have a lot of reading and youtube watching to do! Any advice?
I wanted to ask you when you planted your roses from David Austin did you put any bio tone ? I have bought a few roses and for some reason they are not thriving
I have bought a few roses and for some reason the same way I receive them that’s the same way they stay for a long while until maybe maybe u see a little bit of growth but not big ? Do u have a video when u planted your?
Hi, thank you for your question. Are your roses planted in the ground? The root of any plant can take a while to establish under ground especially in the first year. Some plants are more notorious than others, like my hydrangeas for example, there was little to no growth in the first 2 years and it wasn’t until the third year that they started blooming.
Roses are usually quicker and more vigorous in terms of growth but yours may just be taking their time. How long has it been?
No, I don’t use bio tone when I planted these. I did amend my soil quite a bit though because I have heavy clay with lots of big rocks. If I remembered, I’d sprinkle micorrhizal fungi around the roots. It helps them get the nutrients they need from the soil. But I don’t always remember and that’s totally fine. Micorrhizal fungi will naturally form over time. But the most important thing for me is the well-draining quality of the soil because that will make or break a plant. How is your soil? Speaking from experience - overwatering, over fertilizing, and waterlogged soil will almost always kill a plant. First tell tale sign is yellowing leaves. I almost lost a rose that way. I did make a video of how I saved it in time if you’re interested. You’ll also see the progress of my roses planted from bare roots. Here’s the link below
th-cam.com/video/2RoflQ_utGA/w-d-xo.html
In the first minute, I showed how I amended the soil and sprinkled the fungi in at planting… and you’ll see that even after doing all that it still didn’t help because soil was still waterlogged.
I hope this helps you somewhat.
But again, if you don’t see any yellow leaves, I wouldn’t worry too much about it. Your roses might be taking their time to establish super strong roots down below 😊 Good luck!
@@Linasgardens thank.you I will see ur video
Also, fertilization will help with blooms. I usually fertilize mine twice in spring. First before they start their first flush, then again right after first flush is done. and I leave them to do their thing for the rest of the season.
@@Linasgardens sounds good hopefully next season u can do a video on feeding the roses thank u for the good information.🌹