Monday, July 23, 2012

Morning Walk

Monday, July 23, 2012

Just returned from a morning walk with Karl the Wonder Dog. It's 59° and quiet, save for the warblers and vireos of the forest who sing kind pleasantries as others begin to awake. I hope sometime to find a skilled bird enthusiast who can share with me the identities of these elusive little birds. They are songiferous!

Karl does not see well and has always had a problem with one eye. This morning he caught a patch of black down the road almost 200 yards that I missed at first. He came to attention, tail raised, feet firmly planted. I held tight and made out a bear cub crossing the road. We waited and waited for the sow and perhaps a brother or sister cub but the one we spotted must have been the last to cross. Black berries and black caps are ripening now and perhaps they were heading for the edge of the road to find breakfast. I like cream on my berries but they use their tongues to curl them off the bushes.

The Queen Anne's Lace pictured above are noticeable everywhere now. I enjoy seeing them begin to unfurl. A month ago people began to comment on how many Queen Anne's Lace they were seeing along the roads but really they were seeing that insidious weed, wild chervil which is spreading all over the east just like filipendula and Joe Pye weed. The white flower of Queen Anne's Lace is not close to the chervil but people and kids don't seem to know that. Some have a very bad reaction, something similar to poison ivy, when they pick chervil thinking it is the Queen. I suspect that warmer climates and fewer killing temperatures during the winters have lead to these invasives growing everywhere. I don't like them but many are already beyond control. I always hoped some day to teach myself welding so I could pick up a type of sculpture I began back in university days. I always wanted to recreate a Queen Anne's Lace flower in steel before it unfurled but perhaps the dream will only continue. Right now they are nice to look at. A cousin of the carrot but not something to eat.

For now it's simply another cup of coffee as I grab the money box and head to the nursery. I'll check the level of the Winooski River first to insure that the foot valve for the pump is still adequately under water and then I will get the hoses ready for this morning's watering. It takes three hours to get the pots done. The daylilies are looking beautiful and the 400 we planted during the past month need a drink too.

If you get a chance today, stop and visit us and see the daylilies. They are in peak bloom and nice to see. The Northeast Kingdom has lots of activities in the summer and a trip north from here is worth it. Gail and I will be at the farm all day and would enjoy seeing you!

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
And always here to help you with design ideas and to help grow your green thumb!

Friday, July 20, 2012

Cobblestones

Friday, July 20, 2012

Darker than a pocket right now even though there are a few stars out. Karl the Wonder Dog does not please at 3:30 in the morning and he heard something that didn't make him or me happy. I fumbled around in the dark finding my shoes until I stubbed my toe and put on a light. That only raised a nasty comment from the darkness. There was something big outside but I couldn't see what it was. It sounded more like a bear than a coyote but in the darkness, who knows. Now I'm tired and grouchy but here's a little unrelated story anyway. Picture is up top.

Many towns and cities in Vermont have reached their limits on water and sewer systems. I always marvel at the story behind Rutland, Vermont where the chief engineer completed the city's projects and then went away to fight in the Civil War. That means very old systems exist and replacement is long overdue.

Nearby Barre, Vermont, a granite capital of the world, started a renewal project last year and it is supposed to be finished this fall. Replacing all the water and sewer lines is a big project and to date I haven't heard of any special "finds" such as have occurred in Burlington where north end digs have come up with cemeteries of War of 1812 vintage. If the diggers in Barre have found anything, they have been quiet.

What has been of interest to the project and to gardeners and landscapers is the old streets, buried under layers of asphalt. The original roads were first just packed dirt but in Barre they were later laid with granite cobblestones, a stone in abundance. Someone in Barre government noted the magnitude of the truckloads of cobblestones and they set up a dumping site off Falwell Street where locals could go and load up cobblestones for free. This was a gardeners dream--of sorts.

Access requires that you are a Barre resident and that you go to the engineering office in the basement of City Hall for an application. It's a one page, simple little form that says you can get up to 500 cobblestones for your personal use and that you are a resident of the city.

These cobblestones vary in size but probably average out to being 6"-7" wide and thick and 10"-12" long. They have a smooth side and a rough side and some have cement still stuck on in places. The more difficult part is that the stones are in a pile of dirt and you kind of have to work through the pile and pick out the unbroken ones. Every day or so the city runs a bucket loader down the pile and more stones are more easily accessed. I have been going regularly with friend Michelle as she will build a patio and perhaps a garden wall in the back of her new house. But the real deal here is that free is nice but heavy is what the project is really about. Granite averages more than 165 pounds per cubic foot and good granite is on the 195 pound side of the equation. That means that stones add up. We use my truck but even that has limits that are reached quickly. Those who come in little cars arrive with smiles and leave with their front tires just touching the ground. Not a good idea but these cobblestones are so nice that every gardener can imagine garden walkways and raised beds in keeping with the local architecture.

Michelle's plan was to get stones while they are free and get on with the building when other more important parts of her home rehab are completed. If you wanted similar stones like the ones sold at the big box stores for landscape projects, you'd be paying almost $4 a piece. That means that 500 stones is worth a bundle and that part of the numbers make the work seem like the bargain that it is. The pile continues to shrink and who knows how many stones were trucked away to a landfill instead of being offered up for the citizens. Recently I have heard that non residents have been granted permits too so as to get rid of the current pile. If you are in the area and interested, just check. Michelle needs a few more and the lugging part of the project should be over this weekend. I can't wait until she starts the real project as I know it will look really nice. Maybe you have a similar project that needs some cobblestones too.

Writing from the mountain above Peacham Pond where it's really quiet and I am thinking seriously about sneaking back into bed. Have a nice day and come visit us at Vermont Flower Farm where the daylilies are in peak bloom.

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
And always here to help you grow your green thumb!

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Helping Friends

 Thursday, July 19, 2012

A quiet morning here on the mountain. 47° now with sun pushing above the tamaracks and the fir balsams. The road crew is heading down the road again,  making a bigger mess of the road and making me wonder what school of destruction they went to. While supposedly cleaning the ditches for the first time in 22 years, they have created an 8 foot bank that has now prohibited my access to a piece of our land and I am furious over the way they just showed up and started without any notice. The town selectmen don't seem to care what the road boss does and they just keep giving him raises and bonuses. I don't get it.

Gardening continues at Vermont Flower Farm and yesterday's change in weather was a nice reprieve from the oppressing heat and humidity that Vermont has experienced. A man and his family and RV ran out of gas in front of the farm yesterday and I tried to help him with enough gas to get to Plainfield. He had left Bar Harbor, Maine and my favorite Cadillac Mountain yesterday morning and planned on being back in Virginia and sweltering heat by tonight. 7 mpg for the rig he was driving was difficult to figure I guess.

I am always helping friends and the included pictures are of a friend's motorcycle that has to be sold. Maybe one of you can help. This is a 2009 Kawasaki Vulcan, E-500 in mint condition. It only has 876.2 miles (no typo, real miles) and has always been covered and garaged. It's a cruising kind of bike, not one of those rice rocket things kids love but I know it won't run out of speed. It's going for $3300 but if you see this note and buy it, take it away for $3100 and ten daylilies of your choice on me. I'll even add a big  Wayside Greenlamp, pictured here too as a bonus plant.

The bike is on the lawn at the flower farm, 2263 US Route 2 in Marshfield.  It would look real nice in your garage. Stop by or call me at 802-426-3506 or nights at 802-426-3505.





Writing from the mountain above Peacham Pond where Karl the Wonder Dog is scratching my foot and signaling a need for a second morning walk. It will be a short one as I have to check the need and get to the flower farm for an 8 AM visitor. Come visit too if you have time today.

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
Always here to help you grow your green thumb!

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Daylily Surprises

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Heading for 6:30 AM and the temperature is beginning to rise. 50° right now and rising to about 90° before the day is out. I have already penciled in Artesano's Ice Cream in my mind as a "must-do" evening trip down to Groton. Thoughts of a cool ride through the state forest and a nice ice cream cone will help get me through the day.

Daylilies are popping out at Vermont Flower Farm but the flowers are noticeably smaller due to lack of rain. Worker bee Michael continues to divide and plant daylilies for us and I continue to use the tractor to till over old gardens for new plantings. In some places the clay soil just turns to dust.

Red Volunteer, pictured up top, is not the three feet it often is because of water shortage. Just the same, it's putting out some blooms that make some gardeners grab a couple pots. In another year the root systems on this one will be very strong and the large flowers will signal attention from visitors. Chicago Star and Chicago Sunrise have that similar "wave the flag" trait too.

I like purples even though insects do too. Strutters Ball pictured here is a favorite but I have no problem with Wayside King Royale which I have planted in a 30 plant mass down by the hosta display garden. If you haven't seen the hosta garden yet, seeing Wayside King Royale is an excuse to make the walk down the hill. If the heat gets to you, holler up and I'll come get you in the golf cart.

Gail likes Amazon Parrot (below) which just came out. I better find out where she planted it as I know it was relocated a couple years ago. It's been six years since I first planted the field and the original alphabet has been superseded annually and now we are running on 6 alphabets and a bunch of other configurations of English ordering. I better make a map soon!



South Seas is the last picture for this morning. I call it coral colored but others have their own ideas. Let me know yours. This is a great daylily and in a few years when it really clumps up you'll be pleased by the the number of companion plants you can surround it with.

If you're out and about like Facebook friend Steve from down Cornwall/Middlebury way was yesterday, stop and say hello. It's always nice to meet new gardeners and find out how their gardens are doing.

Better pack up and get going here. Lots to do this morning as Michael went camping last night and is taking the day off. Just me and Gail and 90°. Come visit anyway!

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
Always here to help you grow your green thumb! Open 9-5 every day.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Hosta Planning

Tuesday, July 10, 2012


A beautiful day here on the mountain. Karl the Wonder Dog was out early for his first walk and he was obviously as perturbed as me by last night's coyote conference in the adjacent fields. Not too long after midnight the coyotes came into the back field and they circled the house many times before I finally got to sleep around 3. Our neighbors have two cats and this time of year people visit Peacham Pond and bring cats which sometimes run away. Coyotes love cats and small dogs and I don't mean in a friendship sort of way.

The sun is rising nicely and although we're only at 47° right now, I know it will be another beautiful day. Gail already headed for the flower farm to get things set up and I am not too far behind. Michael will appear around 9 and friend Michelle G is helping today with some of the weeding and planting. Gail has to leave a little early so she can get to Montpelier to view a daylily grower that has a number of fine plants for sale. I'll be picking up loose ends in between daytime hours.

The hosta pictured above is Sun and Substance. It used to be the biggest hosta out there and its sports such as Parhelion and Sum it Up and Sum of All were similarly large. A few years back Brian and Virginia Skaggs introduced Empress Wu named after the only female emperor in China. (Think I have that right) This one is a monster and really gets big!

Anyway my point of showing this picture is I had planted this hosta by the entrance at the flower farm hoping that over time it would mature and be a show stopper, encouraging sales of all hostas. Gail never told me she really didn't like it there and one day this spring as I arrived, I noticed a big hole and an absent hosta. It had already been nailed by heavy frost a couple times and didn't look that good but I knew it was well rooted and would come back at some point. It did! In a pot.

Gail had Michael dig it and pot it up and without many leaves it was easy to handle. Not too many weeks later with good feeding and lots of water, the hosta grew and then Gail had another issue. Who will move it out of the way for me? Sorry Charley, that baby is not moving this year. When it was in the pot it didn't occupy much room but as it exceed five feet in diameter, just getting close enough to the pot was a chore.

When planting hostas, try to give credit to the mature size of what you plant. I grant you that if you properly place hostas to begin with, your initial planting may look very strange with 2-3-4 foot spacing, sometimes more, between plants. If you don't plan, the hostas will look very crowded and will present a challenge over time as you need to tend to them and make other changes. During the initial years I suggest interplantings of annuals or the small, fast growing hostas that can easily be moved in a few years when the larger ones mature. Planning is worth the trouble and I really think if we could teach more about planning in America, all planning not just garden planning, things would work a tad better long term.

Here's a photo of part of our display garden to show some plants that are on their way to maturity. It's handy to be able to move around the plants and for me, be able to get to the flowers at hybridizing time. Hope the idea works for you too!

Writing from the mountain above Peacham Pond where cars and trucks are coming and going and the loons on the reservoir are calling. Mrs. Loon on the Marshfield Reservoir has two kids so if you are down that way in a canoe or kayak, give them some distance.


George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
At VFF we are always happy to help you grow your green thumb!



Saturday, July 07, 2012

Bloom Explosion

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Saturday morning already and the predicted rain has just begun. Karl the Wonder Dog just returned from his morning walk but right now he is hiding under my desk. We both heard a clap of thunder and Karl doesn't do well with the unexpected. I have been thinking of buying him a thunder jacket to try as they seem to get great reviews. Does anyone have comments on one for their dog?

The flower farm has shown a little more business this week but it's waiting for summer traffic which just has not started yet in Vermont. I have visited a couple larger garden centers and was one of the few visitors so I know it's not just Vermont Flower Farm that is waiting for customers. Vermont's economy is not what officials tell us it is.

Daylilies are beginning to bloom and they serve as a visitor magnet as many have not seen the available colors. The early blooming yellows and oranges have be joined by every color but blue and pots are getting loaded into cars at a rate that is making me a little happier.

Red Rum up top has taken a few years to get settled into our gardens and now it's producing well. It is not a bright red like some people like but the shade works well with many complimentary colors, especially the blues and pale yellows. The profusion of bloom makes folks smile too.

Stamile's older release of Omomuki is not just another yellow (just below here) It has great substance and it blooms on thick scapes over a long time. I love the edge and the fact that in heavy summer rains it holds tight and does not fade. It also does not brown up on the edges if it gets bruised by heavy rain like Imperial Lemon sometimes does.


People either love reds or they hate them and they are quite vocal about their persuasion. Red Volunteer is perfect for the "lovers". This is a taller daylily on thick scapes and it produces blooms for a long period. It is a vigorous grower and I have found myself doing exercises before dividing clumps after a few years growth. If you grow one, you'll know what I mean.

Wayside King Royale is a purple with yellow throat that is a "must have" as far as I am concerned. I planted 30 of them in a group down in front of the hosta display garden and when they bloom, the show from Route 2 and from our parking lot is noticeable for sure. The bloom period is long and you don't like to see it end. We have this daylily in pots and also dig from the gardens if you are interested.


If you're out and about today, stop and see the daylilies beginning to bloom. There are umbrellas available if it's raining but remember that we close everything down and retreat inside the office if there is thunder in the air. Respect yourself and don't ask if you can walk the fields in a thunderstorm. Some people ask and I make a very "just-ate-a lemon-face" when I have to say "No!!!!" Common sense is always available at Vermont Flower Farm and it comes for free....kinda like our sign, a crafted gift from friends Dianna and Tracey---"Free Weeds"

Writing from the mountain above Peacham Pond where light rain continues as a little chipmunk drinks sugar water from the honey bees feeder and washes its feet together while looking straight at me.

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm Open 9-5 every day until Labor Day
On Facebook at Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also at George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
And at the farm where we are always available to help you grow your green thumb!

Monday, July 02, 2012

Bitten By The Fence

Monday, July 2, 2012


Birds are already singing to me this morning through a fog that floats along the meadow border and cozy ups to the wood line. The view is less than clear through my tired eyes but there is something tranquilizing about the way the fog moves. It reminds me of the Maine coast, my favorite place other than Vermont.

I was away from the flower farm this weekend as I had committed to helping a friend paint her house in Barre. You have to understand that my dad was a great painter and wall paperer but when people asked if I would follow in his steps, I always looked the other way. I greatly dislike paint brushes but the weekend's excitement involved using an airless sprayer to apply paint to a hundred year old house with dry cedar shakes. I'll leave that story there and just say that my painting days are officially over but the house is painted and just needs a couple-three days to clean up the mess, over spray here and there, that kind of thing. It really does look good and neighbors have been very kind with compliments, horn toots and thumbs-up congratulations for trying to fix up this old house.

The flowers at the farm are coloring up nicely and the daylilies should be impressive from along Route 2 in another week or so. The bloom time for some seems very confused with some later bloomers already putting up loads of flower scapes. In contrast, some are behind but some are right on target. Beloved Country pictured above, is an example of a timely daylily at our place.

This morning I thought I would take a couple pictures of Beloved Country which grows in a row outside my office window. It was supposed to be transplanted to the flower farm but after a couple years now it appears to have been forgotten as it competes with high grass and a terrible weed named colts foot. I grabbed the Olympus and headed out, already late from spending too long on Karl's walk.

As I approached the row, I found a few blooms that looked like a picture but as I bent over for a close-up, my derriere came in contact with the electric fence which protects the honey bees from bears and other critters. Let's just say that expletives were plentiful. Reluctantly I returned at a different angle and snapped a couple more shots. Here's another one.

Beloved Country is right on target based on Gail's records. For the last two years it has opened on June 29th and it has not disappointed us. Bloom time doesn't matter to many but to those people thinking in terms of a special event, a birthday, or remembering the loss of a friend, the date is important. Weather changes over the past few years have made some flowers change their bloom time but Beloved Country has held firm. Keep it in mind if you need something that is 34" tall and has slender bloom scapes that wave in the breeze. We like it--bet you will too.

Gotta get moving here. I have committed to spending the day with Alex and we are going to begin in Hanover and West Lebanon, NH. Gail and worker bee Michael will be at the flower farm so if you're driving by, stop and say hello.

Writing from the mountain above Peacham Pond where honey bee flights have commenced in great magnitude and the now-absent fog has left a series of spider weds and cobwebs everywhere. Slender strings of web with drips of dew suggesting another hot day! Be well, be cool!

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
And remember: We always help you grow your green thumb!




Friday, June 29, 2012

Daylily Confusion

Friday, June 29, 2012

Just back in with Karl the Wonder Dog for the second time. He was not pleased with the pouring rain the first trip out and is even more irritated with me now as I cut his walk short after half a mile. I have things to do and he just wanted to sniff some more.

Last night's rains have helped the gardens a lot but I expect as the temperatures rise to 90° by tomorrow, the humidity will keep people away from the flower farm. I wish more people would come to join me in my 2012 daylily confusion caused by a mild winter and an early spring. The hot weather during the past couple weeks followed by four days of heavy rain has produced loads of daylily scapes and buds beginning to open early on many plants. We expect the species to come early anyway and Lemon Lollypop is a daylily we sell for school gardens because it blooms long before kids actually get out of school for the summer. But there is Miss Amelia, Bela Lugosi, Charles Johnston (up top here), Golden Chimes, Stella, Nile Crane, Ruby Spider, Jersey Spider, Jen Melon, Beloved Country and many more all opening now. Red Flag and Red Ribbons are putting up nice scapes and many of the daylilies in the open field seem to be ready to bloom in another week. By mid week and July 4th the main field should be colorful but with high heat I'm not sure how long the flowers that typically bloom early will last. I need to get some good pictures today to chronical this year's bloom.

If you're looking for me this weekend it will be a hit or miss thing but Gail and friends will be at the flower farm answering questions and digging and selling plants. I'll be helping friend Michelle spray paint her house in Barre. I am not enamored by the thought of spraying a hundred year old cedar shingle house but it has to happen and the sprayer rental commences at 4 this afternoon. My first stop this morning is the paint store to pick up 8 more gallons of paint and from there I begin taping windows and doors and scraping rouge edges. I'd rather be standing in the hosta display garden all day talking with customers and recommending ways to grow good hostas. Social responsibility prevails!


Writing from the mountain above Peacham Pond where my last task of the morning before heading out is to refill the sugar water feeder for the honey bees. A chipmunk apparently never read the 1970's book Sugar Blues and was busy yesterday drinking his/her fill of water, washing footsies and then drinking more. I could not believe such a little animal could drink so much. Keep yourself well hydrated today as the serious heat begins!


George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
Always here to help you grow your green thumb!


Thursday, June 28, 2012

Rose Campion

Thursday, June 28, 2012

5:30 AM and Karl the Wonder Dog has just returned from his morning walk. He was reluctant to return to the house with me but I think wet fur and a tired sniffer encouraged his return. We both sort of expected to see some big critters of the woods this morning after three days of solid rain but so far the wild animals are slow to get moving. I have never used an alarm clock and they don't either.

The wind is light but strong enough to turn some leaves over. The recent heat and then heavy rains made the trees and shrubs grow quickly and branches hang across woods paths and roads. Occasionally Karl stopped abruptly, his less than perfect eye sight challenging the movement of what he saw and what was actually there.

In the flower farm garden along the Winooski River, the Rose Campion, Lychnis coronaria, (pictured above) started blooming a couple days ago and is drawing attention from those who are not familiar with it. Originally from Europe and documented in Thomas Jefferson's gardens in the 1700's, this silver stemmed and leaved biennial comes in fuchsia, white and pink flowers. We only have grown the fuchsia colored variety and the color surely is an attention getter. I picked a nice bouquet the other day adding Veronica 'Eveline', Penstemon 'Dark Towers', a couple yarrows and a pale yellow wildflower I think is named Cinquefoil. It turned out to be a nice bouquet to look at but fragrance was absent and the penstemon have a "fragrance" that makes a wandering nose pull up short.

I am really proud of the way the hosta display garden (example just below) is maturing despite the fact that a year ago, half of it went down the river in the May floods. I have been busy replanting immature hostas to replace those I lost so half the garden will take another 3-4-5 years to match what is there now. If you can find some time to visit Vermont Flower Farm, ask for directions down the hill to the garden and we'll point the way. If you have mobility issues, give us a "please help" and one of us will give you a ride down in the golf cart. It's really a neat looking garden and I'm really pleased with what the floods spared. The onslaught of weeds that came with the floods is a different story and one of us has to go through the garden each week to hoe out weeds. At least we were spared Japanese knotweed like many riverside gardeners are contending with this year.

The weatherman promises sunshine by noon so I am packing the truck and heading out in a few minutes. Stop and see us if you can.


From the mountain above Peacham Pond where dark sky suggests more rain before the front comes through. The birds are beginning to sing to me and a woodpecker beats on a close-by sugar maple offering a cadence that almost says "get to work, get to work". I'm going, I'm going!

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
Always here to help you grow your green thumb!

Monday, June 25, 2012

Real Good Hellebores

Monday, June 25, 2012

A most welcomed rain began last night and continues intermittently this morning. It's an even 55° outside now, windless and quiet and the critters of the woods and skies are quiet too, apparently waiting for the storm to pass. We have been asking for rain for weeks now and although we still didn't get what we really need, the amount that has fallen so far has made farmers happy that the parched fields left from recent "first cuttings" have had a drink. Gail says the weather reports look like continued rain for three days. We'll see.

The picture up top here is of some hellebores I purchased from Barry Glick, Sunshine Farm and Gardens several years ago. Although they are going to seed right now, they were beautiful this spring and because of such limited snow cover this past winter, they bloomed earlier and longer than usual. Barry has been hybridzing this plant for many years and his website is worth a look-see for many reasons. He has a special going on now and I am thinking about purchasing another 150 plants to spread among the shade garden at the flower farm. Hellebores do great with sun but I have places were the sun pokes through the maples and box elders and that's where I am thinking for more spring and early summer color.

If you grow different hellebores, send along a note or some pictures so more gardeners can see what a nice plant this is. A bouquet of mixed colors is beautiful and brightens the house for some time.

Time to pack some lunch and head to the farm. Need to start by giving the zinnias a final weeding. Not fun work but it has to happen. If you are out and about today, stop and say hello. Gail and Michael will be there all day today. I'll be in and out.

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
Always here to help you grow your green thumb!


Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Dividing Daylilies


Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Almost 5:30 AM here on the mountain. It's 62°, windless, 98% humidity with a barometric pressure of 29.59. Vermont is preparing for one of the hottest days on record and The Vermont Gardener is getting ready to head to the flower farm to water the shade houses before it gets any warmer. This is a four hour job if Gail can help and it's something that has to happen. We like to get it done before we open for business but sometimes we get involved in other tasks as well. This morning I have to get some shrubs moved to where worker bee Michael will get them planted as accents to the hosta display garden.

Just up top here is a picture of how we display daylilies at the flower farm as they come into bloom and are ready for sale. We sell potted plants and also dig plants from our growing fields so seeing the actual flower assists with sales. This picture is from last year and daylilies are still a couple weeks out before these colors will prevail. Many daylilies are putting up nice scapes and they would do better with a little rain. By mid July the display gardens will be in bloom and scenes like the next one will be available.



This week we have been digging and dividing daylilies. This is a "must do' sport when you grow and sell daylilies and it really doesn't matter when you do it. Obviously to dig a plant that is just putting up flower scapes means some of those scapes will be lost during the process but by and large we are successful dividing and replanting at any time of the season from early spring on through the time in October when the soil temperature drops below 50°.

We are always amazed at how many people cannot make themselves divide a daylily and many cringe when they see how we do it. We dig up the entire plant with a spade fork or shovel and then use a garden hose to pressure wash as much dirt off the root ball as possible. They we pry apart the roots and separate plants by 1-2-3 fans depending on what we are looking for. If we are dividing a plant for lining out for future sales, we divide down to single fans and then plant them fairly close together in a long row. If we are potting for future sales that we divide to the level appropriate to the pot size. We might put 2 fans in a four quart pot that we want ready for sale in two years knowing that by then it will be 4-5 fans or we might start with 3-4 fans potted and ready for late summer, early fall sales this year.

I tell people to be ruthless with their dividing work because some people really do need a jump start to get on with the process. I have also seen gardeners that even with a thorough orientation and practice in one of our fields tell me they just can't do it as they think they are hurting the plant. So be it, that's why we are here I guess!

Here's a picture of a Darryl Apps daylily name Over There. It's a nice red and like most of his productions, it grows very well. This three fan plant would make any gardener happy next year with plenty of scapes and a nice memory of purchasing it at Vermont Flower Farm.

Guess I better get going here. I can hear loons calling on Peacham Pond and two tractor trailers just went by loaded with wood chips destined for the electric plant in East Ryegate. Some loggers are like The Vermont Gardner--have to get going early! Come visit!!

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
Here to help you grow your green thumb!

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Favorite Old Daylilies

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

A rainy day here on the mountain. I have been fighting with Blogger for half an hour trying to get this blog out and the new format is having a few problems today. Not the only thing with problems. Gail just returned to the house after a walk with Karl the Wonder Dog and her hair looks like she just attended some ceremonial event where confetti was freely tossed. Her hair was covered with spent blossoms from the Miss Kim lilac by the walkway and it probably took me ten minutes to pick out the flowers. Now the kitchen floor is dotted with lavender colors and I have been chastised once again for not trimming down the lilac two years ago. I love starting a day with "warm" comments. Oh well.

As the daylilies begin to show color at the flower farm, web orders come in and we begin digging from the fields as people passing by on Route 2 see something they want in their gardens. Many gardeners enjoy the old fashioned daylilies. These are not anything special color-wise and many are shades of yellow or orange which are the two original species colors from a couple hundred years ago. Many have nice fragrances and some bloom in the evening, not the morning at sunrise. Up top is Hesperus and next down here is Hyperion.


Many of the older daylilies are very strong growers and they provide a jump start to early summer garden blooms. Dumortieri pictured below, is a vigorous grower and with its bronze back it provides real nice contrast. This clump is pictured from the display garden where it is backed up to a granite boulder.


I have always loved Citrina, pictured next. It is a night bloomer, fragrant, 5 feet tall over time, and is now used by more and more hybridizers because of these traits. It is a lighter yellow with a slight ripple to the petals. Very nice!


Bitsy, just above here, is an early bloomer that goes on and on. The dark stems are very nice and it works well in late spring arrangements with Trollius, perennial Bachelor Buttons, peonies, bleeding heart and a couple field-friendly lupines. The daylily blooms might have to be pulled from the arrangement after the second day but their presence is welcome for a while.

Apricot, just below, was the first daylily ever registered back in 1883. It is a neat daylily, a sparkling orange, and upfacing. The upfacing part requires a little more thought--as if you are planting Asiatic lilies, but it sure is nice, very hardy and it has a nice deep green foliage.

Golden Chimes is another small flowered daylily with a bronze back and dark stem. Like Bitsy, it works well in arrangements and this one has a long, dark stem.

I have to get going here as we have crates and crates of daylilies ready to get divided and planted or mailed. The loons are calling from Peacham Pond and remind me I'd rather be on a pond some place right now but work beckons. Despite the rain, stop by the flower farm and say hello if you have a chance today.

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
And ready every day to help you grow your green thumb!

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Verbena Bonariensis

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Almost 8 PM and it's been a long day at the flower farm. I started the day at 6:30 finishing up leftover tasks from yesterday and ended tonight watering hostas and digging holes for more shade plants in the lower garden. A week less than a year ago, I had just planted about 150 new hostas in the display garden and the floods came along and I lost everything that was newly planted. There is a chance the same thing could happen again but the weather pattern looks a little different this year than last. 

This morning I planted 48 Verbena bonariensis for use as cut flowers in August. I really like this plant but buy in seedlings because it is not that easy to get started. The growers at Clausen's in Colchester have this down pat and  it's a lot easier to trust the job to someone who knows how to do it. I figure it must be a little tricky even for them as the price per plant is higher than for most annuals.

By August this plant is four feet tall in our gardens and loaded with long stemmed flowers. It can actually take quite a severe frost and the leaves don't seem to darken until it really gets nailed. In many states it has been classified as invasive although I have not seen that problem here. There is some seed germination but so little that I am surprised when I find seedlings around the nursery.

I have a lot going on tomorrow and will end the day with a visit from the Granite City Garden Club. They will bring a picnic and tour the grounds. Gail and I will be there so if you're out and about and want to listen in, stop by about 6 PM. Until then, happy gardening!!

Writing from the mountain above Peacham Pond where my honey bees are still going in and out. I can see that I'll have to replenish their sugar water in the morning.

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
Always here to help you grow your green thumb!

Sunday, June 03, 2012

Honey Bees Buzz With Happiness

 Saturday, June 2, 2012

4:30 PM and raining cats and dogs as I sit in the shed at the flower farm watching cars stream by and waiting for the close of business. I relieved Gail a couple hours ago so she could get home to supper duties and she had only had three customers all day. Only "real" gardeners stop and break out the umbrellas when it's raining this hard.

Today's heavy rain seemed coincidental as I headed out with bee keeper friend Michelle at 6:15 AM to travel to Westfield, Vermont to Northwoods Apiaries to pick up a hive of honey bees. Oddly it was a year ago this week that I bought my first-ever hive of bees and within 24 hours they were covered by 6-7-8 feet of flood waters in what turned out to be the first of three floods and the biggest disaster ever to hit Vermont. I recovered that hive and the bees lasted until late summer when wax worms that infiltrated the hive during the floods devastated them. Until that point, that hive represented an exercise in strength and persistence that few believed.

I have to admit that I had second thoughts about spending more money on bees but last year's experience was an interesting journey into a natural science I had left back in my youth. A local man named Harold who people called the "bee man" was often called upon to retrieve errant swarms and afterwards he'd always share bee stories with me. I marveled at his little body as he climbed trees and marveled still more at his attire of a dirty old t-shirt and no protective gear at all. I have no idea how many times he was stung but it never bothered him.



I hadn't been to Westfield in some time and our morning trip to Hardwick and then up to Irasburg, over to Lowell and then up to Loop Road, Westfield was fun. One farmer was turning out a herd of freshly milked Holsteins into a new field and Michelle and I commented on how well kept the cows were. Sadly, a vet was working on one cow in the barnyard and this served as a reminded that parts of farming are not happy.

Josh White is the owner of the apiary and a simple hand painted sign at the end of his driveway said it all. "BEES". A small but growing line already existed when we arrived and we fell into queue to converse about our experiences and wait our turn. John moved the forklift back and forth just before our turn as he needed more boxed bees,
Last year Michelle and I travelled to Singing Cedars Apiaries in Benson , Vermont for an entirely different experience. There you popped open brood boxes and checked for bees, the queen, nucs and the like. With Josh,  the work was all done and the 5 frames including a nicely marked queen were ready to go. We were loaded up and on our way home with 4-5000 bees sitting between us on the front seat of the truck, our bee suits still behind the seat, never even put into action in contrast to last year's foray.

Making the transfer from a cardboard box to our hive sounds easy and it is but for some reason these bees got a little testy. When I took the box out of the truck, the box was warm because the bees were a little wound up and humming a tune I was not familiar with. I told Michelle I absolutely had to put on my suit but she said all she needed was a bonnet. She's one of these special bee people who never has a problem.


As I popped the top on the cardboard box, bees exited in mass and I was immediately stung 4 times on gloveless hands. I never wear gloves but these bees were testing me. Even Michelle decided that a pair of gloves made sense until we made the transfers. Things went smoothly from there although I picked up a couple more stings through my pants and she got nailed on the back and on one leg. Within an hour my arthritic hands felt a lot better so I guess the interaction was worth it.

The queen looked fine and had been laying like crazy so more and more bees will be hatching soon. I should have asked what type bees these were as they are slightly larger than the Russian mix I purchased last year.


There are some interesting differences in the behavior of this hive compared to last year's hive but that is common among bees. I still don't know what stirred up such a quiet hive but it could have been the screw gun noise as I made a couple last minute changes to the base I had constructed for the hive. The hive is inside an electric fence but adjacent to the house where I can keep track of it by looking out my office window. A single male phoebe is also spending lots of time there picking up dead bees from the transfer.

I will keep an eye on these bees for a few days now to be sure they have enough food and water as it will rain more this week and food sources are minimal right now. There is a nice bank of blackberries near the hive but I figure the flowers may be spent by the time the rains cease in another day.



If you haven't gotten into bee keeping before, it can be another one of those bottomless pit things but there is a joy involved. Last year I was surprised how watching the direction of the workers leave the hive made me more cognizant of the flower types in bloom at different times of the summer. Gail has offered some encouragement as she knows I am really interested in bees but knowing as she does about the bear population here at the house--three sows and six cubs, she is not as optimistic as I am that the electric fence will do it's job and the hive will be standing come late fall when it's time to prepare it for winter. Regardless of those thoughts, I'm smiling today!

Writing from the nursery office where a flock of adult common mergansers just traveled down the Winooski River. Maybe tomorrow will bring better weather and more customers. Sun will encourage the bees to acclimate to their new surroundings.

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
Stop by VFF and we'll help you grow your green thumb!

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Bird Friends


Birds Friends
Thursday, May 31, 2012


5:36 AM and just in with Karl the Wonder Dog. He acted like he needed some help from that guy on the new Dog in the City show that started last night on television. Karl refused every command and made it clear that there were too many nice smells this morning. There was 1.5" of rain in the bucket by the back door and he was trying to tell me that since the rain has stopped, every manner of wild animal is out and about and he wanted to check out the neighborhood. I suspect within about ten minutes he'll have awoken Gail and she'll be out letting him meander where he wishes as I prepare to head to the flower farm.

Many gardeners enjoy bird watching and I have always tried to pay attention to birds in and around our gardens and woodlands. With the kind of weather we have received in recent years, birds arrive that sometimes don't seem to fit with our local birds. I remember one year when a a very strong storm from the south ran through Vermont and the day after it finished we had an Indigo Bunting, a Scarlet Tanager and a Rose Breasted Grosbeak in the garden in the same tree at the same time. Colorful but uncommon for  sure. The following day we had a Towhee under the sugar maple scratching leaves. This past week our local library has sponsored a bird walk and local naturalist Brian Pfeiffer continues to offer some specialized tours too. These events are always fun to attend and help understand birds better.

Time flies like birds and almost two weeks ago I was packing for a trip to Maine. One of my firsts stops en route to Acadia was the Penobscot Narrows Bridge Observatory outside of Bucksport. The observatory rises 437 feet above the Penobscot River making it the tallest bridge observatory in America. I had been by a couple times before but one time it was foggy and another time I was a couple hours early and it was not yet opened. This time I planned for the visit.

As I exited the car and headed down to the elevator, I heard a loud, shrill, threatening bird voice coming up behind me from the mountain behind. As I looked up, a peregrine falcon was cruising like a guided missile at +100 mph towards a nesting box on the old bridge. that runs parallel to the new one. The bird was telling everyone that it was breakfast time for the kids in the box and it landed on a dime with a skill that is too hard to describe. When I got to the observatory entrance I asked the ranger for info and he told me the nesting box had been placed on the old bridge 25 years ago but it wasn't until two years ago that the peregrines took up nesting there. I know I'll keep an eye on it every spring as I pass through as it's really something to see. My little camera doesn't do the bird justice but here's my best effort. The local cliffs over by Marshfield Pond off the Lanesboro Road here in town was one of the original peregrine restocking points in 1979 and every week we see peregrines in this area. Some days in winter they are around the bird feeders and....well....that is a different nature story.

If you visit Maine and are in the Bucksport/Prospect area, stop at the observatory and see if there is any action. The entrance fee includes entrance to Ft Knox too. Here's a Maine tourism video to give a quick overview. 

If you have any good pictures of peregrines, please send them along. My trip to Maine was too quick--almost peregrine-like, but I loved every minute of it as I always do. For now, I have to get heading to the flower farm. The sun is bright and flowers await. Lilacs are blooming and their fragrance is a lure to tiger swallowtail butterflies.

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
On Facebook at Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also at the George Africa page.
On Twitter at vtflowerfarm
And always at Vermont Flower Farm where we're there to help you grow your green thumb!!






Monday, May 28, 2012

The Green Garden

Monday, May 28, 2012


My kind of morning here on the mountain above Peacham Pond. It is clear except for some very high level, broken mackerel sky and it's windless. The quiet of the morning is interrupted here and there by the songs of tiny, secret, warblers and vireos with nice voices and an ability to stay hidden. There is no concert here but one voice after another calling and replying in pleasant sounds that want me to find the source but I never can. I need some time and a very good pair of binoculars for tired older eyes--mine.

The Vermont Gardener spends winters reading and writing and sometimes there is something that really catches his attention. Two months ago now I received a copy of a very special book that deserves attention. I have pictured it above for reference. It's Ellen Sousa's The Green Gardener. The subtitle offers a good indication of the paths it follows. "A New England Guide to Planning, Planting and Maintaining the Eco-Friendly Habitat Garden". If that doesn't jump start you enough to purchase a copy, I think the Forward by William Cullina will help. Mr Cullina is the Executive Director of my very favorite Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens in Boothbay, Maine.He is known to me as an expert in the wild flowers I love so dearly. When you get a few minutes, check out his site and go from there. From one gardener to another, believe me, Ellen's book is a worthy journey into garden planning and planting in a manner that remembers habitats the way I think they should be remembered.

When I first heard about Ellen's book I knew it was the kind of book I kept telling myself had to be written. There are bazillions of gardening books out there and many sell because they have fine pictures of perfectly manicured gardens that some people pay to have recreated and others dream about or put into a twenty year plan of development, one or two plants at a  time. The Green Gardener is so different however, because it commands us to look at everything that resides in and about our gardens and passes through at different times of the year. It emphasizes the relationships of wildlife to our plantings and speaks confidently about the virtues of relationships some have forgotten. I like that thinking a lot.

Last week I spent some time in Maine at Cadillac Mountain in Acadia National Park, and two very special gardens in adjacent Northeast Harbor, the Asticou Azalea Garden and Thuya Garden. I also visited Coastal Maine Botanical Garden as I have perhaps 6-7 times now. These garden tours were a living reflection on what The Green Gardener offers as guides for keeping nature in all garden planning schemes.

Ellen Sousa is a master of photography and she knows how to incorporate just the right picture with just the right description of eco-friendly habitat gardening. I could easily write a book of gardening short stories to coincide with each of her pictures as they are so very powerful. They run like ocean currents with the adjoining flora and leave the reader this a list of "must dos" for their own garden development.

Last week as I sat on Sand Beach and then on Cadillac Mountain in Acadia I thought through The Green Gardener time and again. I kept making mental notes of things I had read and garden elements I saw along the way that came close to Ellen's design ideas. When I finished at the botanical gardens I was possessed to get back home and tell others they have to order up The Green Gardener. As I sit here this morning, the tiger swallowtail butterflies Ellen pictures on alliums are heading in droves to our just-opening James MacFarlane lilacs, bumblebees are pollinating the blueberries,  a phoebe is finishing a nest, Mr. Tom turkey just strode by Mrs Turkey's nest along the woodland perimeter, and spent dandelions wait for a morning breeze, their numbers reminding of soil that needs attention, not weeds that need herbicide. 

Regardless of whether your gardens are well established or still on the drawing board, I know you will find Ellen's Sousa's The Green Gardener a friendly read that will leave you with a list of things to do as well as many, many good conversations with fellow gardeners. I know it has made me look at things differently and helped with lots of new ideas. One more cup of coffee and I have to head to the flower farm where before the day ends, I'll share some new ideas with some new visitors.  Good reading to all!!



Writing from the mountain above Peacham Pond where the Vermont Gardener is getting back into writing as days get longer and flowers boost enthusiasm. If you have read The Green Gardener or another gardening book you would like to recommend, please leave a comment here. 

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
Stop by and let us help you grow your green thumb!!!

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Where's the Vermont Gardener?


Thursday, May 24, 2012


A gray sky, 51°, windless morning here on the mountain above Peacham Pond. Karl the Wonder Dog has been out for his morning walk and although he pulled hard on the leash to walk deeper into the woods, he finally got the message that home was where he had to head. I have a ton of things going on today and the dog walking chore will become responsibility for Alex for the remainder of  today.

I have always had this really bad feeling about people who start blogs and then let them lapse. Sometimes people ask me to add a link to my blog and when I go to see theirs I see that nothing has been written for 5-6-7 months, sometimes longer. I always have this devotion to readers and feel obligated  to write about gardening and Vermont and keep people interested. This morning when I finally went to click on Blogger and begin writing,  I had to think for a minute about my password. I told myself that 5 AM was the problem but when I got to the blog I could see that my absence was all too long. I apologize folks, for this is not the way to run a blog, a business or a friendship. So what has been wrong with The Vermont Gardener?

No matter how old you are, getting older makes it a little more difficult to juggle responsibilities. Owning an agricultural business adds to it, as does being responsible for a 19 year old on the autism spectrum and a 93 year old uncle who doesn't remember much more than his name. The list goes on. and we do too. This winter we helped a good friend on her first house buying process and have been helping with renovation work. Gail has had a difficult spring learning that arthritis strikes at inopportune times. The auto start on the truck went crazy and burned out the ignition and had to be towed around Montpelier to find a mechanic that understood Chevy wiring systems. The pump house at the nursery had to be moved up the riverbank and a new pump installed to compensate for last summer's flood damage and this summer's watering needs. The 1982 Troy Built Horse rototiller blew a wheel seal in the middle of spring clean up. In between all this there was more wood to cut and split and work to finish on the writers cottage which started last fall and is finally moving to completion. When Gail ran out of things to do she worked at the Food Shelf. and I guess I just made lists of things I need to do.

A week ago I said to Gail that I needed a break to boost my spirits and prepare myself for a summer of 7 days a week nursery work. I made some reservations, packed a bag and headed to Maine, my favorite non-Vermont place. Like Hemingway, I find solace in the sound of the ocean and I needed that peace for a while. My journey was short but it did what it was supposed to do and I am ready to roll again. In days I'll write about visiting the +400 foot observatory over the Penobscot River,  watching Mrs Peregrine Falcon hit a nesting box at +100 mph with food for her young, sitting on Sand Beach at Acadia National Park, listening to the roar of the waves crashing into Thunder Hole, climbing Cadillac Mountain, visiting my favorite Asticou Azalea Gardens and Thuya Gardens at Northeast Harbor, seeing bald eagles, moose, and an elusive yellow throat,  touring the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens for the umpteenth time and .watching tides come and go at the Reid State Park. People rejuvenate themselves in different ways and this is what I did.  

So once again, I am sorry I have neglected The Vermont Gardener blog for a bit but I'll get back here on a regular basis. In the garden the Hemerocallis dumortieri have tall scapes that should begin to open by Monday or Tuesday. Primula are in bloom, hostas are getting fat and leafy, lilacs popped yesterday, dandelions are too frequent, primulas are beautiful.....the list goes on and on. The various white, pink and yellow lady slippers have replaced the passing Trillium erectum, grandiflorum, undulatum and lutuem in our gardens and the adjacent woods. Mrs Bear #1 has 1 cub. Mrs Bear #2 has two cubs and Mrs Bear #3 has 3 cubs and they have all stopped by for a visit at the house. Maybe if you get a chance, you can stop by Vermont Flower Farm and say hello too!

Writing from the mountain above Peacham Pond where the loons are quiet with nesting responsibilities and a doe deer feeds at the edge of the lower field, pregnant with one or more kids who should be born in a couple weeks. Life is good, busy but good. Come visit! Bring gardening questions and smiles

George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
On Facebook as Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens and also as George Africa
On Twitter as vtflowerfarm
Let us help you grow your green thumb!