Category Archives: garden visits

exploring other gardens

In The Fuchsia Garden

hardy fuchsia at the Horticultural Centre of the Pacific, September , garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

One of my favorite places is the Horticultural Centre of the Pacific.  A gardener’s garden.  I learn something each visit.

MS - Hardy Fuchsia in bloom , garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

This time it’s putting a specific name to the hardy fuchsia growing in our own garden:
Fuchsia magellanica var. gracilis.

At least I’m pretty certain that’s what our hardy fuchsia is…

hardy fuchsia at the Horticultural Centre of the Pacific, September , garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins
hardy fuchsia at the Horticultural Centre of the Pacific, September , garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Walking through HCP’s Fuchsia garden boggles my mind.  Apparently there are many more varieties of hardy fuchsia than I imagined.

hardy fuchsia at the Horticultural Centre of the Pacific, September , garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

There are tall hedging shrubs and shorter mid-border shrubs…

Others that are so small they’re classified as perennials instead of shrubs…

hardy fuchsia at the Horticultural Centre of the Pacific, September , garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Most have flowers with red sepals and purple petals in the centers…

hardy fuchsia at the Horticultural Centre of the Pacific, September , garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

But others are pink… or white… or even orangey…

Most leaves are forest-green,
but others are lime-green,
or variegated-green.  These really show up against a bit of shade.

hardy fuchsia at the Horticultural Centre of the Pacific, September , garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

There are so many species, sub species & hybrids!

hardy fuchsia at the Horticultural Centre of the Pacific, September , garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Now that I look more closely, I’m thinking my garden’s hardy fuchsia might be a F. coccinea instead…
maybe?

Either way, I’m stoked to grow a plant that looks so exotic. Check out the variety of Fuchsia that are winter hardy for gardens in the Pacific Northwest (Canada & USA) :
The North West Fuchsia Society

Perhaps there’ll be a few varieties at HCP’s annual Fall Sale coming up on October 1.

FYI – these photos show only some of the hardy fuchsia varieties growing in the gardens at HCP

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Red Hot Pokers – Kniphofia

red hot pokers, kniphofia garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Red Hot Pokers are goofy plants.

Folks either love ’em or hate ‘en.

Me?
I love ’em.

Here’s why:

  •  The ‘red hot’ blooms remind me of Halloween candy corn from when I was a kid.

    gravel screenings on our garden path, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
    photo by SVSeekins
  • Kniphofia grow happily on our rocky outcrop in very little soil…
    with very little moisture…
    So they’re super drought tolerant AND low maintenance, too.  Win, win!
  • They’ve transplanted easily into partial-shade borders.  I like plants that are easy to grow.

    red hot pokers, kniphofia garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
    photo by SVSeekins
  • Hummingbirds & bees LOVE LOVE LOVE the blooms.
  • The deer – – not so much.  Our local deer just ignore the Kniphofia     🙂
  • Red Hot Pokers, aka Torch Lilies, are pretty much evergreen in Victoria – –  unless it snows.
    In which case they immediately turn to slime…
    Then come up fresh & green again when the weather calms down.  That works just fine for me.

    red hot pokers, kniphofia garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
    photo by SVSeekins

The Red Hots I’m most familiar with  – – those with the graduated red + orange + yellow on one poker – –   bloom in our garden in May.

Last July I saw some blooming in  the Government House Gardens.  I immediately searched out a few summer bloomers for our place.

red hot pokers, kniphofia garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

These varieties, likely Knifophia uvaria ‘echo mango’ and ‘echo rojo’ are  dwarf and have much narrower leaves. They’re designed to re-bloom throughout the growing season.

They also stayed green through the winter,  although they looked a little more dried & messy compared to the May bloomers.  Happily they bounced back in the spring sunshine.  Now they’re blooming !

The deer have nibbled a couple tender flower spikes, but I’m hoping that’s just curiosity, and they’ll leave the dwarf plants alone from now on.  Finger’s crossed.

red hot pokers, kniphofia garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

To my amazement Abkhazi Garden had some Red Hot Pokers blooming near their front gate in December!
Who knew?

Isn’t that a Must Have?

Anyone know where I can source some of those??

lilac, red hot pokers, irs, lupin Lupinus, with the ceanothus just about to come into bloom too, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

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Spring Wildflower Walk 2

We left home in the camper van, and less than 30 minutes later we were pulling into our campsite. Gotta like having great parks so close to Victoria.   🙂  After a quick lunch we head to the trails.

western red columbine, Aquilegia formosa, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins
western red columbine, Aquilegia formosa, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

The early show of lilies is past, allowing other flowers to take front stage.  Western red columbine rivals any of the earlier shooting stars or fawn lilies.

Columbine is one of the native wildflowers that fits comfortably into a home garden.  I’m pleased that one has bloomed in our yard.  I’m counting on it to self-seed and grow into a patch.  Hummingbirds pretty much feel the same way.  They regularly check out the happy colors.  Butterflies too.    Oh yeah, deer like it as well– especially the blooms.  Growing Aquilegia formosa in a protected space is best.

DSCN3728DSCN3727Starflower is a much less conspicuous wildflower.  They carpet the ground in mossy dappled shade.  The flower is simple and tiny.

It kinda reminds me of the trillium because sometimes the flower is white, and other times it’s pink.

The flower stem is so fine, the blossom seems to float above the plant, hence the name starflower.  Kinda cool, eh?

DSCN3734Nearby is another tiny flower.  It’s a rose for sure, but so much smaller than the wild rose that’s Alberta’s provincial flower.   Granted, I’m not in Alberta anymore… but in BC’s coastal rainforest, plants tend to grow unusually big.  (ie. massive trees)  Well, it turns out the diminutive baldhip rose (rosa gymnocarpa) is native.  It also has teeny-tiny thorns along mature stems.  C warns they’re not to be trifled with.  The thorns are so small there’s no getting them out once they get in.  Can you imagine slipping then grabbing a branch to steady yourself?

garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins
garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins
garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins
garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

The foamflower  (Tiarella  trifoliata)  is right at home on an old, rotting log not far from the stream-bank.

The frothy cluster of white flowers shoot above the foliage like the foam from an ocean wave surging off a rocky coast.
Poetically named, don’t you think?

This is one of a few native plants that seem very similar to me, therefore making ID a bit tricky.

The fringecup (tellima grandiflora) is another.
Both:

  • grow in the moist part-shade of thickets near stream-banks,
  • have knee-high, erect stems
  • display their bloom above the foliage,
  • produce many delicate, white flowers.
  • are perennial
  • grow from shallowly rooted rhizomes

But when I study each carefully:

  • the leaves of foamflower are pointy & grouped in 3’s;
    while the fringecup leaves are rounded – – more heart-shaped.
  • Ffoamflowers dangle away from the stem;
    while the fringecup flowers sit much closer to the stem.
  • The petals of the foamflower are spread open;
    while the fringecup are tightly curled and are cup-shaped.
  • Both have white flowers,
    but the fringecup’s shift to pinks as they age.

Both also grow successfully in our garden.  And happily, the deer have left them alone 🙂

DSCN3818A colony of maidenhair fern (Adiantum pedatum ) grows not far from the fringecup.  They also like the moist forest setting – but they like it really moist.  They’re practically bathing in the mist of the waterfall.  ‘Adiantum’ is Latin for ‘unwetted’.  The foliage sheds rain.

garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Yes, I realize they’re not wildflowers, but they’re so pretty, I figure they still count.

They’re also super-easy to identify:

  • They have black stipes (aka stems).
  • A semi-circular tier of fronds sway in the tiniest breeze above that 1-2 ft. tall stipe.

These 2 facts alone make maidenhairs different from the majority of ferns I encounter out hiking.  I’m enchanted by this place!

garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

I have to apologize to my friend KL for once mocking her family vacations at Goldstream Park.  I thought it un-adventurous to camp less than 10 km from home.  Now I understand better & appreciate their choice.

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