I really enjoy hearing about plants that don't get much coverage. They have a very unique appearance. I think you will find that audiences interested in gardening actually like longer videos lol. Guess we're addicts hahaha. So videos can always be longer and this is a wonderful topic. Thank you.
Thanks Risa. It's always a bit of a gamble on TH-cam - the dedicated garden lovers could go all day (so long as you stay on topic), but the some casual viewers won't even click when they see it has a longer view time. I never quite know if I'm hitting the right "sweet spot" to encourage views, although it looks like this one is performing well.
I love the support for small garden centers! My husband and I own a nursery/garden center that specializes in uncommon, organic, heirloom plants. We have many greenhouses in the area owned by Amish families that mass produce and we can’t compete on that scale, so we specialized. I love the unusual and unique! Support small businesses!
You could have made it longer. I"d have watched. I love perennials and now that I am better at seed starting I am trying my hand at starting some from seed this year. I got some nice things from swallowtail including a geum, agastache, and a aquilegia. Hoping I get some nice plants! Great video!
Thanks so much Amber! I know there would have been die-hards to watch as long as I went, but the click-through-rate on TH-cam diminishes a lot at a certain length - sort of a "sticker shock" reaction from potential viewers.
Thanks for the recommendations. I notice you have become more relaxed on camera - love seeing the growth that comes with time, success, and confidence.
Lots of very great plants here! I placed a big order with Jelitto as well and will have a lot of unusual plants available in my nursery for those who are always looking for something new and unique!
Hi Jason Beautiful Flowers and Beautiful Plants Thank You So Much for Sharing Your Beautiful Very Colourful and Very Interesting Video @ Fraser Valley Rose Farm 👍👍🌹🌹❤️❤️
Hi Jason @ Fraser Valley Rose Farm Thank You So Much for the Beautiful Red Heart and Thank You So Much for Enjoying my Messages and Comments @ Fraser Valley Rose Farm 👍👍❤️❤️
I love Plant Delights. Also Nurcar has some excellent plants. Sometimes you want to order fully established plants already since they can take so long to really establish.
Such a great video! While I love purchasing plants (who doesn't??), I also love the satisfaction of growing perennials from seed. I now have a few more interesting varieties to add to my ever expanding list - thank you! 🙂
Absolutely love allium karataviense. Pretty sure it’s the only of the many alliums I grow that actually has nice foliage. I have them dotted around at the front of my garden beds. I also have one that I think is called Ivory Queen which has a lighter coloration.
Thanks Jason for this educational video. There's so much flowers that we can all brighten up the gardens in our part of the world. Much love from Trinidad.💐💞
Thanks Jason. I live where there is not much other than the box stores for plants. So you see the same plants every year. This type vid helps me learn more varieties that I would not see at the box stores. So keep the education coming.
Thank you! Love the geum and aquilegia for their beauty and hardiness. Cosmos are so great for late summer blooms. All these would probably self sow around us in zone 5.
Jelitto is an especially very good option for the Canadian gardener as it offers a very VAST seed selection of hardy perennials, many you won't find elsewhere! A generous seed count and reasonable pricing even with the exchange, I was very pleased with my order! ... yep, and I did get several packs of penstemon! Oh, I'm also a fan of Swallowtail Seeds!
I saw this red giant allium in the vesseys catalog last year and got a real kick out of the description, I really want them! they would look so cute on the front of a boarder
Hahaha, here I am, living on the island Gotland, (comparable US zon 6) and doing a complete garden from a blank slate, and I have dark pink Martagon lillies, geum ‘Thai Mai’, penstemon ‘mystica’, allium ursinium (which grows all over this island, beautiful and wonderful taste). 😁 But I would like to add polemonium ‘stairwell to heaven’. I love all polemonium, early bloomer with blue scented long lived blooms, gets a second flush if you cut back, beautiful fern like foliage and this one is variegated!! I highly recommend it. ❤
One I found in the ditch here in Michigan that I thought was great was Acanthus spinosus or spiny Bear's breeches. It was hard to tell if it was planted or wild
nice list. I had a double Geum, apricot or salmon colored, it likes to reseed but always regressed to it's parent like the single or even the yellow single variety and I may or may nog had pulled up the wrong one trying to eliminate the single ones ...oops. I have cosmos and aquilegia most years, love the tropical colors of zinnias have to make sure they like partial shade or are cat safe too. agastache rugosa, salvias died in the winter and might try the chinese one
Thanks again Jason for another great list! I had a few already that were on your current list and a few from the previous one. You could do a 2nd, 3rd, etc., list 😉 I wouldn't mind having someone bring to my attention plants/flowers I won't find easily. Questions - is Jelitto a wholesale company? Are they based out of Germany because I didn't understand their pricing...
Thanks Leia - they'll sell to individuals no problem - compare the "packet" price (usually enough to grow 50-100 plants) to the gram price to make sure you're getting the best deal. There's a way to toggle the currency from Euro to estimated USD - I think it's on the upper right of the screen.
I love alliums, but unless i get seeds that about 6 months or less, they didn't germinate. Now i try to find grown plants or 'bulb', which really expensive. Do you ever try Cosmos caudata? We use the leaves as salad. Delicious! Thank for giving the scientific names, makes searching for info a breeze.
Thanks. That jives with what I've seen. No problem on seed packets for leeks, chives and onions, presumably because they're relatively fresh - but I've tried several times to seed various ornamental varieties with no luck.
Thanks Jason! Do you have any suggestions of where I could find the Olds College Centennial Rose that we saw in your Remarkable Rose Tour video? I'm located in Wyoming, so it would have to be online. I can't seem to find it available anywhere, not even at Heirloom roses or High Country roses, which are my standbys. I plan to check every Garden Center I come across this spring
Hi Amy. The only nursery I know of that sells 'Olds College' is Bron & Sons, a wholesale supplier in Grand Forks BC. On the bright side, their main business is supplying shrubs into the US. If a local Wyoming nursery buys from them already, maybe they'd be willing to add some Olds College to the order.
Lovely plant selection you shared with us, though I personally am concerned about toxicity towards my pupper, I would like pretty flowers and such in my garden but I am afraid of them being toxic to my furry family member, do you have a list of pet friendly plats?
Thanks Annie. I'm not sure I'm picturing the problem right - too much lush growth is making the stems heavy so they droop or break? One thing I'd consider is nutrition: and excess of nitrogen can bring on excess lush growth.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Hi Jason Thank You So Much for Your Quick Reply and Help I think I was At Fault cause of giving it too much water after feeding the Rose Tree the leaves were dropping off the stems but nothing wrong with the leaves the soil was wet wet so I think I over watered the Rose Tree in the pot cause I left the rose Tree in the saucer in the water after watering it that is how I was shown how to water a rose Tree Thank You So Much Jason I have taken the saucer away and just left the rose Tree in the pot which is looking so much better it has got buds and I hope I can save them Thank You So Much for All the Help Jason @ Fraser Valley Rose Farm 👍👍🌹🌹❤️❤️
Hi Jason Thank You So Much for the Beautiful Red Hearts and Sorry but we have no wifi tonight so quickly just wanted Thank you so much for all your help nd the Beautiful Red Hearts @Fraser Valley Rose Farm 👍👍🌹🌹❤️❤️
It depends on what's available locally. Here I use mainly wood-based products mixed at a local potting soil supplier: th-cam.com/video/2wT6zwhjJtg/w-d-xo.html
Do you have a direct message board so I can show you a picture of my yellow hibiscus that I want to multiply with cuttings. The stem is in the woody category with only green semi soft for 2 inches below the buds . I love the blooms an can not find again in the store . Please help with your best suddgestions . Or maybe you know a credible hibiscus person . Please ?
Hi Thomas. I think the best resource for that kind of question would be the "I Love Plant Propagation" group on Facebook. It was started by Mike Kincaid of Kincaid's Nursery, but there are all sorts of contributors to the forum with diverse experience in propagation.
I am trying to grow cuttings or grafting my yellow hibiscus. Carnation looking flower . Can you tell me a good way to do this with out wasting my time pls
I haven't done a lot of hibiscus (except for the more woody syriacus types, which come easily from semi hardwood). It sounds like yours might be a more tender variety because I haven't seen the shrubby ones in yellow. Online they say the tender hibiscus can be done from tip cuttings with the fresh green growth, either in water or potting mix. About a 6" section with a few leaves left on the tip end. The bottom cut should be just beneath a leaf node. A dip in weak rooting powder (like 0.1% IBA) might help. Maintain humidity with a dome or mist, bright indirect light and room temperature should give you the best chance.
I had to rescue this comment from the TH-cam automatic filters - I guess even saying the word conspiracy is enough to generate a flag. Lol. I'm more or less okay with the visual of it - thumbnails are meant to tease a questions. Just as I did in the previous video, the idea is to get viewer to wonder why they might not see (in this case the podophyllum) at Walmart or Costco. The straightforward answer (for that plant) is that shade-loving spring ephemerals might not be the easiest thing to market in the large quantities per SKU that Costco requires - but of course, the visual's job is to make the viewer ask "What is that thing, and why wouldn't they want to sell it?". Click. I'm okay with begging the question so long as I'm earnest with the answers.
I’m that person when I go to a grocery store I want groceries I don’t want clothes I don’t want flowers. I want groceries. When I go to a hardware store I want hardware supplies, not flowers I go to the garden centres for my garden supplies and I’m not a fan of superstores. Thanks for sharing 👍❤️😊
Good call. For the interests of improving the gardening hobby it's nice to fuel the growth of independent and dedicated garden centers rather than the 3-month-long dabbling of hardware stores and the like.
I really enjoy hearing about plants that don't get much coverage. They have a very unique appearance. I think you will find that audiences interested in gardening actually like longer videos lol. Guess we're addicts hahaha.
So videos can always be longer and this is a wonderful topic. Thank you.
Thanks Risa. It's always a bit of a gamble on TH-cam - the dedicated garden lovers could go all day (so long as you stay on topic), but the some casual viewers won't even click when they see it has a longer view time. I never quite know if I'm hitting the right "sweet spot" to encourage views, although it looks like this one is performing well.
I love the support for small garden centers! My husband and I own a nursery/garden center that specializes in uncommon, organic, heirloom plants. We have many greenhouses in the area owned by Amish families that mass produce and we can’t compete on that scale, so we specialized.
I love the unusual and unique!
Support small businesses!
You could have made it longer. I"d have watched. I love perennials and now that I am better at seed starting I am trying my hand at starting some from seed this year. I got some nice things from swallowtail including a geum, agastache, and a aquilegia. Hoping I get some nice plants! Great video!
Thanks so much Amber! I know there would have been die-hards to watch as long as I went, but the click-through-rate on TH-cam diminishes a lot at a certain length - sort of a "sticker shock" reaction from potential viewers.
I asked Swallowtail in the beginning of 2023 if I could order from Sweden. Unfortunately not, otherwise I could easily have made a $300 order. 😭
I grow a lot of plants podophyllum pleianthum is beuatiful, but podophyllum hexandrum is realy stunning. Dividing is very easy.
I ordered from Swallowtail for the first time and was very pleased with quality and packaging.
No need to be sorry Jason.
Your wealth of knowledge is a fantastic resource, especially for recommendations of unique garden additions.👌
Thanks Jason! This is a fun one! Love hearing about unusual plants! I would watch a part 2 if you have enough for another video
Thanks for the recommendations.
I notice you have become more relaxed on camera - love seeing the growth that comes with time, success, and confidence.
Thanks Norine!
Always enjoy discovering new plants I didn’t know existed. I really liked this video, even took notes lol! Thank you Jason❤
Thanks so much Cindy!
Lots of very great plants here! I placed a big order with Jelitto as well and will have a lot of unusual plants available in my nursery for those who are always looking for something new and unique!
Nicely done! Anything particular you're happy to be offering?
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm So many, but two of my favorites are Digitalis obscura (Sunset Foxglove) and Scrophularia micrantha (Red birds in a Tree)
Hi Jason Beautiful Flowers and Beautiful Plants Thank You So Much for Sharing Your Beautiful Very Colourful and Very Interesting Video @ Fraser Valley Rose Farm 👍👍🌹🌹❤️❤️
Hi Jason @ Fraser Valley Rose Farm Thank You So Much for the Beautiful Red Heart and Thank You So Much for Enjoying my Messages and Comments @ Fraser Valley Rose Farm 👍👍❤️❤️
I love Plant Delights. Also Nurcar has some excellent plants. Sometimes you want to order fully established plants already since they can take so long to really establish.
Thanks for sharing your sources!
That Flock of Flamingos penstemon really looks fantastic! Thanks for the intro, and your sources.
Very much my pleasure!
I have several Martigon lilys in my zone 4 garden. They are show stoppers when in bloom. And the whorls of leaves are Interesting all season.
Thanks Joan - right on, that leaf arrangement is eye catching too!
Such a great video! While I love purchasing plants (who doesn't??), I also love the satisfaction of growing perennials from seed. I now have a few more interesting varieties to add to my ever expanding list - thank you! 🙂
Thank you! I love learning about less common plants!
I am always grateful for individual type/species plant introductions, thank you!
Absolutely love allium karataviense. Pretty sure it’s the only of the many alliums I grow that actually has nice foliage. I have them dotted around at the front of my garden beds. I also have one that I think is called Ivory Queen which has a lighter coloration.
Thanks. How's the flower size on Ivory Queen?
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm can’t remember exactly 🤔 I’ll have to pay more attention this spring
That Cosmo is absolutely stunning, looking forward to seeing it when we get there this year!
Thanks Jason for this educational video. There's so much flowers that we can all brighten up the gardens in our part of the world. Much love from Trinidad.💐💞
Thanks Jason. I live where there is not much other than the box stores for plants. So you see the same plants every year. This type vid helps me learn more varieties that I would not see at the box stores. So keep the education coming.
Thanks so much Dennis!
Thank you! Love the geum and aquilegia for their beauty and hardiness. Cosmos are so great for late summer blooms. All these would probably self sow around us in zone 5.
As always, another great video, introducing some plants I've never heard of, and will investigate. Thank you.
Than you Jasón, I’m going to look many of this plants, here in Switzerland
Leong's in Burnaby had a wide variety of Cosmos last year!
Good to hear. Thanks Peter
So glad I found you your presentation is lovely
Thank you so much
I saw a beautiful display of salvias that someone filmed at Monets garden. I’m definitely planning on upping my salvia game.
Love the new flower's thank you for taking the time to share with us❤
Thank you Jason I’ll be right there to pick up some plants! ❄️💚🙃
Thanks for your videos, God bless you and your business.
I have most of the plants you mentioned. Either from seed or from speciality nursery.
Nicely done. I like to think it's "great minds think alike" rather than "small minds seldom differ".
Great video as always, thanks! You're an excellent speaker of excellent information. I appreciate the Zone 3 mentions.
Love the video. Thanks for sharing your recent favorites. Totally agree with others that this video could be longer and I'd not have minded one bit.
Thanks David
I love the unusual so am on the search now THANKS
Loved the zone 3 options.
So many nice varieties I would like to try! Thank you so much!
So beautiful. I love the colours.
Jelitto is an especially very good option for the Canadian gardener as it offers a very VAST seed selection of hardy perennials, many you won't find elsewhere! A generous seed count and reasonable pricing even with the exchange, I was very pleased with my order! ... yep, and I did get several packs of penstemon! Oh, I'm also a fan of Swallowtail Seeds!
Thanks! Two of my favorites
Always appreciate your informative info. Tks😊
Fun list of plants!! Another great video 😊
Thanks Nicholle.
Some nice flowering plants 😊
I saw this red giant allium in the vesseys catalog last year and got a real kick out of the description, I really want them! they would look so cute on the front of a boarder
Also im excited i got some Apricot Lemonade Cosmos for the garden this year! cant wait to start them :)
Hahaha, here I am, living on the island Gotland, (comparable US zon 6) and doing a complete garden from a blank slate, and I have dark pink Martagon lillies, geum ‘Thai Mai’, penstemon ‘mystica’, allium ursinium (which grows all over this island, beautiful and wonderful taste). 😁
But I would like to add polemonium ‘stairwell to heaven’. I love all polemonium, early bloomer with blue scented long lived blooms, gets a second flush if you cut back, beautiful fern like foliage and this one is variegated!! I highly recommend it. ❤
Thanks Åsa!
My first seed order for 2023 was based ENTIRELY on the availability of #10 Cosmos!
One I found in the ditch here in Michigan that I thought was great was Acanthus spinosus or spiny Bear's breeches. It was hard to tell if it was planted or wild
Great find either way!
This was a great video. I will have to try to find some of these
Thanks Luke
nice list. I had a double Geum, apricot or salmon colored, it likes to reseed but always regressed to it's parent like the single or even the yellow single variety and I may or may nog had pulled up the wrong one trying to eliminate the single ones ...oops. I have cosmos and aquilegia most years, love the tropical colors of zinnias have to make sure they like partial shade or are cat safe too. agastache rugosa, salvias died in the winter and might try the chinese one
Thanks again Jason for another great list! I had a few already that were on your current list and a few from the previous one. You could do a 2nd, 3rd, etc., list 😉 I wouldn't mind having someone bring to my attention plants/flowers I won't find easily. Questions - is Jelitto a wholesale company? Are they based out of Germany because I didn't understand their pricing...
Thanks Leia - they'll sell to individuals no problem - compare the "packet" price (usually enough to grow 50-100 plants) to the gram price to make sure you're getting the best deal. There's a way to toggle the currency from Euro to estimated USD - I think it's on the upper right of the screen.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Thank you Jason for your prompt response 😃
I love alliums, but unless i get seeds that about 6 months or less, they didn't germinate. Now i try to find grown plants or 'bulb', which really expensive. Do you ever try Cosmos caudata? We use the leaves as salad. Delicious! Thank for giving the scientific names, makes searching for info a breeze.
Thanks. That jives with what I've seen. No problem on seed packets for leeks, chives and onions, presumably because they're relatively fresh - but I've tried several times to seed various ornamental varieties with no luck.
Love the video! Do you have something similar for the full shade perennials?
I'll put it on my list. Thanks
Great list…..👍✌️
Any chance for a garden tour this summer?
Yes, I think it can be arranged. Always a work in progress, but you'll see it along the way
Thanks Jason! Do you have any suggestions of where I could find the Olds College Centennial Rose that we saw in your Remarkable Rose Tour video? I'm located in Wyoming, so it would have to be online. I can't seem to find it available anywhere, not even at Heirloom roses or High Country roses, which are my standbys. I plan to check every Garden Center I come across this spring
Hi Amy. The only nursery I know of that sells 'Olds College' is Bron & Sons, a wholesale supplier in Grand Forks BC. On the bright side, their main business is supplying shrubs into the US. If a local Wyoming nursery buys from them already, maybe they'd be willing to add some Olds College to the order.
Thank you!
I need a bigger yard.
Lovely plant selection you shared with us, though I personally am concerned about toxicity towards my pupper, I would like pretty flowers and such in my garden but I am afraid of them being toxic to my furry family member, do you have a list of pet friendly plats?
Thanks. I haven't really researched it as a topic - I'll add it to my list and see if I can make something of it.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm I will certainly be looking out for it, thank you for the consideration!
Hi Jason why do rose leaves just drop the rose stems is there anything can do to stop my rose from spitting out the rose leaves from
Sorry I was cut from saying Thank you so much sharing this beautiful video @ Fraser Valley Rose Farm 👍👍❤️❤️
Thanks Annie. I'm not sure I'm picturing the problem right - too much lush growth is making the stems heavy so they droop or break? One thing I'd consider is nutrition: and excess of nitrogen can bring on excess lush growth.
@@FraserValleyRoseFarm Hi Jason Thank You So Much for Your Quick Reply and Help I think I was At Fault cause of giving it too much water after feeding the Rose Tree the leaves were dropping off the stems but nothing wrong with the leaves the soil was wet wet so I think I over watered the Rose Tree in the pot cause I left the rose Tree in the saucer in the water after watering it that is how I was shown how to water a rose Tree Thank You So Much Jason I have taken the saucer away and just left the rose Tree in the pot which is looking so much better it has got buds and I hope I can save them Thank You So Much for All the Help Jason @ Fraser Valley Rose Farm 👍👍🌹🌹❤️❤️
Hi Jason Thank You So Much for the Beautiful Red Hearts and Sorry but we have no wifi tonight so quickly just wanted Thank you so much for all your help nd the Beautiful Red Hearts @Fraser Valley Rose Farm 👍👍🌹🌹❤️❤️
Hi Everyone @ TH-cam Thank You So Much for the Beautiful Red Hearts and Thank You So Much for enjoying my messages and comments @ TH-cam 🌟👍👍🌹🌹❤️❤️
What should I use to fill 1 gallon pots to grow nursery stock in?
It depends on what's available locally. Here I use mainly wood-based products mixed at a local potting soil supplier: th-cam.com/video/2wT6zwhjJtg/w-d-xo.html
Do you have a direct message board so I can show you a picture of my yellow hibiscus that I want to multiply with cuttings. The stem is in the woody category with only green semi soft for 2 inches below the buds .
I love the blooms an can not find again in the store .
Please help with your best suddgestions . Or maybe you know a credible hibiscus person . Please ?
Hi Thomas. I think the best resource for that kind of question would be the "I Love Plant Propagation" group on Facebook. It was started by Mike Kincaid of Kincaid's Nursery, but there are all sorts of contributors to the forum with diverse experience in propagation.
🙏🏻
Does he ever give answers ?
Chill Thomas. I can't sit on TH-cam all day waiting for questions.
Now I feel stupid because yes he does . My apologizes
Users do not type jellito by accident. It takes you to a dummy site that is not genuine.
I appreciate you taking a bullet for he group Tammy! ;-)
I am trying to grow cuttings or grafting my yellow hibiscus.
Carnation looking flower . Can you tell me a good way to do this with out wasting my time pls
I haven't done a lot of hibiscus (except for the more woody syriacus types, which come easily from semi hardwood). It sounds like yours might be a more tender variety because I haven't seen the shrubby ones in yellow. Online they say the tender hibiscus can be done from tip cuttings with the fresh green growth, either in water or potting mix. About a 6" section with a few leaves left on the tip end. The bottom cut should be just beneath a leaf node. A dip in weak rooting powder (like 0.1% IBA) might help. Maintain humidity with a dome or mist, bright indirect light and room temperature should give you the best chance.
@FraserValleyRoseFarm
Thank you . I will try that . But yes they are woody . They only soft or friendly stem for at most 3 inches
Grew that cosmos. It was kind of a weak plant.
Thanks for sharing your experience. I found it comparable to other Cosmos varieties in my garden, but loved the color palette.
I know you are going for TH-cam visuals, but "DENIED" is a bit strong, don't you think, Jason? Not sure I like the conspiracy whiff.
I had to rescue this comment from the TH-cam automatic filters - I guess even saying the word conspiracy is enough to generate a flag. Lol. I'm more or less okay with the visual of it - thumbnails are meant to tease a questions. Just as I did in the previous video, the idea is to get viewer to wonder why they might not see (in this case the podophyllum) at Walmart or Costco. The straightforward answer (for that plant) is that shade-loving spring ephemerals might not be the easiest thing to market in the large quantities per SKU that Costco requires - but of course, the visual's job is to make the viewer ask "What is that thing, and why wouldn't they want to sell it?". Click. I'm okay with begging the question so long as I'm earnest with the answers.
I’m that person when I go to a grocery store I want groceries I don’t want clothes I don’t want flowers. I want groceries. When I go to a hardware store I want hardware supplies, not flowers I go to the garden centres for my garden supplies and I’m not a fan of superstores. Thanks for sharing 👍❤️😊
Good call. For the interests of improving the gardening hobby it's nice to fuel the growth of independent and dedicated garden centers rather than the 3-month-long dabbling of hardware stores and the like.