Walk out and cut some flowers or lots of flowers and make bouquets for all over your home. By doing this you encourage more flowers on your perennials. Just cut today: lavender, white lavender, veronica, grasses, salvia.
We started doing something new at our weekly company meetings at Pleasant Hill Nursery. At each meeting, someone has to bring in a plant from the nursery and educate everyone about that plant. The goal is to help those with less knowledge to become more educated about plants. Truth is, we all learn something.
It was my turn this week and I chose Rosa rugosa. It was one of my mom's many favored plants. Dave remembers her collecting seed and starting her own Rosa rugosas. (I'm grateful he has these memories from her days being around her in the nursery.) I researched this plant and had great fun sharing my new findings with the group. Here's what I learned about
Today is the 28th of April, midway through an unpredictable month of spring coming and then reverting back to winter. We actually had hail today. At the nursery we are creating a crazy quilt of wonder. The quilt is what we call GroundWorks. GroundWorks is front and center in the nursery, it is the ‘see what we have' spot, the place where gardeners and landscapers can walk around and play pick. It is part of my job to create it but the more I try to do it the more it seems like it is a place of everyone's input and creation. We line the aisles with flowering trees, we stitch in smaller evergreens, we patch together the grasses and daylilies. What won't fit here will be lovely there and so on. It sounds like a mess but it carefully and naturally comes together and looks unbelievable. String is laid out so every plant is placed in a very orderly way. As we sell plants others must fill in and it doesn't always go in a planned way. That's what makes it crazy and unpredictable and gorgeous, especially looking out the second story window. A lot of flexibility is required laying out plants, some give and take between the ‘designers', and an observation of what is ‘looking good'. Come look, all the Rhodendrons are just starting to bloom now and soon we will be glowing in living color.
I own a nursery so people are always surprised that I am a near novice when it comes to plants. (Don’t worry, we have plant experts here! My role is marketing and administration.) Through the years I’ve noticed there is much variety in the color and texture of plants but I guess I never really paid attention to the vastness of differences. While plant enthusiasts have always known this, I just didn’t tune into the small color and textural details one notices when you study these plants up close.
However, this has become so much more apparent to me as we’ve begun to build our photo library. Plant photography has become a top priority for us. It is a massive job to build up our photo archive when you consider the sheer number of varieties we grow

For those of you who only shop nurseries in the spring, you are short-changing yourself. It is really ideal to visit nurseries several times throughout the year. If you make an annual pilgrimage in spring, you are only seeing the things that bloom or look their best at that time. If you don't shop nurseries in, say March, you might miss the beautiful blooms of Pieris. The same goes if you don't shop nurseries in June, July or August. Miss this summer window and you miss the color offered by Cistus, Crocosmia, daylilies and Rudbekia. And the list goes on.
Another thought - visiting a nursery like ours (Pleasant Hill Nursery) or any other commercial grower-type nursery in late spring may seem