How might it work to try to use something like toothwort (Dentaria diphylla) as a native interstitial groundcover, or would be difficult to use with your push-pull hoe approach?
Roy, thanks for sharing, as always. If you'd run a class or share more on guiding young people to start their own garden design business, I am all ears!!
Locally, the College of DuPage and Gateway Technical offer horticultural classes of all kinds. Where ever you're located, check with local community colleges and trade schools for introductory classes!
Thank you, Roy, for sharing this information! I'm still relatively new to gardening, so I'm constantly learning. It's reassuring to know that even experienced gardeners can't predict how plants will grow, which motivates me to experiment and learn from my gardening experiences.
Roy, thank you! I have learned a great deal from you in recent years. When you introduce Mary then the camera pans left to Aaron, there is a mass planting of a plant which is a tan/beige color and appears to be about 2 feet tall and kind of feathery. Please identify. BTW, I first became aware of you when you were involved with the Oudolf Detroit Garden. I live in SE Michigan and visited Northwind last summer while exploring the Driftless area of WI.
Beautiful. I couldn’t agree more, we gardeners need to spread the word and joy to many. I bought some two inch Blue Fortunes this Spring and they are such strong, gorgeous pollinator magnets now. I’m still waiting on my Deschampsia to mature like the ones here. Nice job..
Really lovely! Thanks for sharing. I’m about to plant largish groups of Dryopteris marginalis carex and an epimedium in my woodland shade. I sure wish I had all that full sun to plant. I do use “montrose white”calamintha in my sunny beds. Phlox mixes so nicely with it in groups.
@@RoyDiblik If you’re ever in the Chapel Hill Raleigh Durham NC area you should try to visit Montrose Gardens. Nancy Goodwin is a national treasure. Her winter rivers of a galanthus are a pretty special.
Beautiful! Love all the layers to this! Can we see some transitional gardens from sun to shade
Hi Roy,
If you have entrepreneurship classes, I would love to be a part of that.
me too!
limonium latifolium? Can the seed heads stay through the winter? Like clouds. Beautiful
they eventually succumb to snow fall because they can be fragile but definitely beautiful while they last!
@@RoyDiblik thank you so much!
How might it work to try to use something like toothwort (Dentaria diphylla) as a native interstitial groundcover, or would be difficult to use with your push-pull hoe approach?
beautiful garden roy, love all of the deschampsia and calamintha running through with pops of color from the alliums! so pretty
thank you!
Roy, thanks for sharing, as always. If you'd run a class or share more on guiding young people to start their own garden design business, I am all ears!!
Locally, the College of DuPage and Gateway Technical offer horticultural classes of all kinds. Where ever you're located, check with local community colleges and trade schools for introductory classes!
Thank you, Roy, for sharing this information! I'm still relatively new to gardening, so I'm constantly learning. It's reassuring to know that even experienced gardeners can't predict how plants will grow, which motivates me to experiment and learn from my gardening experiences.
Never stop learning! thanks for watching!
Roy, thank you! I have learned a great deal from you in recent years. When you introduce Mary then the camera pans left to Aaron, there is a mass planting of a plant which is a tan/beige color and appears to be about 2 feet tall and kind of feathery. Please identify. BTW, I first became aware of you when you were involved with the Oudolf Detroit Garden. I live in SE Michigan and visited Northwind last summer while exploring the Driftless area of WI.
Deschampsia Gold Tau
Thanks Roy! Nice to see a follow up on this property. Question. Is that deschampsia goldtau where you added the limonium?
Yes, it is
Beautiful. I couldn’t agree more, we gardeners need to spread the word and joy to many. I bought some two inch Blue Fortunes this Spring and they are such strong, gorgeous pollinator magnets now. I’m still waiting on my Deschampsia to mature like the ones here. Nice job..
Thanks for sharing!!
Thanks for sharing! Gives me confidence to know even experts make mistakes and need to edit.
thanks for watching!
Really lovely! Thanks for sharing. I’m about to plant largish groups of Dryopteris marginalis carex and an epimedium in my woodland shade. I sure wish I had all that full sun to plant. I do use “montrose white”calamintha in my sunny beds. Phlox mixes so nicely with it in groups.
Wonderful! thanks for watching!
@@RoyDiblik If you’re ever in the Chapel Hill Raleigh Durham NC area you should try to visit Montrose Gardens. Nancy Goodwin is a national treasure. Her winter rivers of a galanthus are a pretty special.