Category Archives: garden plant lists

featured plants

Summer’s Shasta Daisy

shasta daisy - flower grouping
photos by SVSeekins

The Daisy is such a likable flower.  She’s happy, pretty & uncomplicated.

She reminds me of the character Betty, of the duo Betty & Veronica, in the Archie comic books.  I’ve always preferred Betty.

My first Shasta Daisy came from my good friend & mentor, KC.  She gardened on an acreage in Sooke, where deer were common all year & black bear came around in the autumn to feast in the apple trees.

KC assured me the Shasta Daisy could stand up to anything.  Even drought.  Now, that’s my kind of plant!  Something that blooms without any attention from me.

Shasta Daisy - row along south wall
photo by SVSeekins

Along the hot, windy, south side of our home, we now grow a row of tenacious Shasta Daisies.  They add colour with minimal effort.  I haven’t watered the bed at all this year – not even once.  Scout’s honour!

In the shrub border, that gets a good weekly drink, the Shasta clumps bloom well above 4 feet.  Happily, KC gave me a head’s up about that, too.  Because the Shasta Daisy is tough as nails, she can be a bit of a bully when given any encouragement at all.

I’ve followed KC’s advice & kept the Shasta clumps in big pots, then sunk the pots into the flower beds.  The Shasta easily gets enough water, and the pots keep them contained.

Shasta Daisy - happy blooms
photo by SVSeekins

Some folk say the Shasta blooms are kind of stinky.  After 5 years of growing this long row of Shasta Daisies, last July was the first time I ever noticed any smell – –  and I have to say, the scent really doesn’t offend me.  The clouds of white & yellow flowers through July & August easily make up for an unusual fragrance.

KC recommended deadheading at the end of the bloom cycle. That’s not too big a chore, so each September, I shear the tops.

I figure it’s not a good idea to put all those seed pods into our compost heap. Instead, they go into the garbage can I use for weeds.  Whenever that can is full, it goes to the municipal yard where their compost reaches heats strong enough to neutralize the seed.

The best part is that Shasta Daisy is perennial.  She rests quietly over the winter, wakes up in the spring, and parties again all summer.  🙂

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© copyright 2012 SVSeekins

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June’s Berries

strawberries in hand
photo by SVSeekins

For me strawberry season is that magical time between the fresh energy of spring & the lazy warmth of summer.  It’s my happy place.

When else would I actually pay to perform manual labor in a dusty field?

a berry bonanza
photo by SVSeekins

Even that strip of sunburned back (where my t-shirt pulls out of my jeans because of bending for berries) is an acceptable part of the experience.

It’s all because not much else is better than the sweet taste of a strawberry picked in the sunshine.

Strawberries have been my favorite fruit since I was a little kid.

Dan's Farm has a U-Pick strawberry field
photo by SVSeekins

This year I enjoyed a morning in a local u-pick strawberry field with my friend  June.

June is a picking expert.  For a couple of years, on her little farm, strawberries were her business.

Even though they’re perennial, strawberries have a peak production life.  That makes it worthwhile for growers to replace older plants with new ones to increase yields. That’s where June’s business came in.  Her farm grew strawberry plants, not for the berries, but for the ‘runners’, or baby strawberry plants.  Her customers were the farmers that grew strawberries for the berries.

strawberry field
photo by SVSeekins

Unfortunately the busy time for her was early in the cold wet spring.  Digging baby plants out of muck in March is a far cry from picking berries in the sunshine of June.  Understandably farm helpers weren’t super excited to work in the rain.  June put in some pretty long hours harvesting runners.  She wasn’t ready to stick to that workload for too many years.

Instead June decided not to sell the strawberry plants in her fields.   With the plan of harvesting the berries in the warmth of June, she’d at least mitigate some of the original expenses of the business.

June picking strawberries
photo by SVSeekins

Believe it or not, there aren’t that many folk excited about daily field labor even in the warmer weather.

When big orders from community clubs hosting strawberry tea parties came June’s way, she was often the only one out in the field.  She became a pretty fast picker.

I’d have thought that by the time the berry production petered-out & June plowed over the field, she’d be well and truly DONE with strawberries.

Happily she still enjoys the delicious fruit & was as excited as I was to spend a sunny morning  picking our fill in a strawberry field at Dan’s Farm.

Next up – raspberries!

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© copyright 2012 SVSeekins

California Poppy

California Poppy - many blooms, garden Victoria BC
photo by SVSeekins

I like the saturated orange of the California Poppy bloom.  It’s bright and happy.

Even more, I like that the plant survives well on roadsides & rocky areas.  A plant that doesn’t need nurturing – bonus!

California Poppy at Snake Rock, garden Victoria BC
photo by SVSeekins

This little patch of poppies lives just down the street at Snake Rock.  It blooms in mid-spring & continues well into the dry summer.

Of course, the thought occurred to me, “We NEED that in our garden!” Can’t you imagine how lovely a wave of bright orange would be in the shrub border?

California poppy - seed pod, garden Victoria BC
photo by SVSeekins

Even C is encouraging.  He really likes the bright orange blooms, too. So, for the past 5 years, I’ve gathered seed from the roadside, then spread it through our gardens.

There’s been the occasional reward, but mostly I’ve had little success.

The California Poppy has a long tap-root, so where ever it pops up, that’s where it has to stay.  It does not like being moved.  And it doesn’t seem to like being watered either.   Nor fed.  Nor coddled in any way.

The shrub border had a fair amount of fertilizer, mulch & water over the past few years, as the plants were all so new & getting established.  Maybe that’s been too much attention for the poppy.

The most successful patch is on our rocky hillside.  It’s a well-drained site and bakes in the sun.  The California Poppy will grow in the soil, but seems even happier in the gravel of the pathway!  Go figure.

California Poppy in gravel path, garden Victoria BC
photo by SVSeekins

So far, I’m resisting the urge to weed it out of the path.  I’ve decided that it’s ‘whimsical’ growing there.

I’m happy about growing a local wildflower.  I’m also delighted that the deer, who spend their afternoons on our little mountain, leave the California Poppy alone.

My plan is to keep spreading seed in the rest of the garden & be happy with whatever we get.  That’s the true definition of ‘low maintenance,’ isn’t it?

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© copyright 2012 SVSeekins

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