Stickfigure Gardening with Leonardo de Stickfigure

Stickfigure Gardening with Leonardo de Stickfigure
The Stickfigure Family
Showing posts with label container garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label container garden. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Iris in a Pot

Golden Muffin in Container
Yes you can grow iris in containers.  This one was planted July 2013 and does very well in a pot.  They have to be re potted every other year and 3 good sized rhizomes per container will do.  I choose a container that is close to a 5 gal bucket with good drainage. By July the iris have finished putting on new growth and enter into a semi dormant stage during the dry months.    This dormant period will last until the end of Sep when the fall rains have broke their dormancy and they put on more rhizome growth.  As soon as I planted them I kept them watered until they were well established.  The pot contains plenty of compost and a small amount of 20-10-10 fertilizer...about 1/4 cup. They are left out in the garden all year.  And when they bloom the container can be put anywhere you want.

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Sedum in Winter Condition

Sedum in winter condition.  These are planted in cement blocks and are completely covered by the plant
A cold front moved in today but didn't effect the high temps predicted.  When the wind died down I came out to enjoy the garden.  The sedum I have is a very nice winter plant to have here in Oklahoma.  This plant is from my great grandmother's garden.  She would plant several varieties in upturned cement or terracotta blocks and line her iris bed with them.  Among other plants in these folksy containers were Oxalis,  Blue-eyed Grass, Portulaca , & Grape Hyacinths.  Last year I took cuttings, (with some root still attached), in the spring rather than in the summer so they could take advantage of the wet part of the year to establish themselves.  The flowers are beautiful yellow at the end of tall stalks set up in the spring.  Skippers and other insects love them and my Korean sister-in-law told me they use it as salad food.  In real cold weather the ends of this plant turn reddish purple or just purple.  Other plants do the same in the garden and I've read articles where it is believed that the reddish tint (anthocyanin) is a way of protecting the plant from damaging sunlight and drought during the winter.