Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Head-Turning Design .. Citron and Emerald


A Walkway of Citron and Emerald Green:

Sagina subulata and Sagina subulata 'Aurea' flanked by Verbena bonariensis:
Stonework punctuates the vignette.
It's the rare instance when I'm totally captivated by a design element,
but I took great pleasure in this moss walkway during a recent garden visit
The elegance of the clean-lined scheme turns heads, while the juxtaposition of cushiony mounds of moss beckoned me to remove my shoes and experience the sensation of the patterned planting beneath my feet!
Do you call it Scotch Moss or Irish Moss?
Both common names appear in the realm of gardening and horticulture.
... to read more, visit Alice's Garden Travel Buzz

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Summer's End .. Gorgeous Grasses


Delicate plumes brush against the face along the entry path to Alice's Garden.
Photo © ALICE JOYCE
The showy display of Stipa - a welcome element in September.
Photos © ALICE JOYCE



And on the road... where late-summer gardens are buzzing with the effects of ornamental and native grasses! 

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Texture .. Architecture - Plants as Ornament


Living Green Wall ..Hotel Modera in downtown Portland.   
An element of the hotel building's mid-century modern design: 

The courtyard landscape features soft pillows of golden Scotch Moss - Sagina subulata 'Aurea' ...set into the pavement.





Silky ... The inspiration for Bay Area Tendrils:
Clematis tibetana seedheads in Autumn - Alice's Garden.

Formidable architecture of an Aloe in bloom - Getty Center, Los Angeles.
Bedazzling ... Vertical structure of Himalayan blue bamboo:
Entry Garden Borders - San Francisco Botanical Garden

A Hint of Autumn .. Blooms in my Bay Area Garden


A bee enjoying an Anemone: The large swathe of Japanese Anemones - a melding of 'Pamina' and 'Mont Rose,' burst forth in the bed where roses once grew; too little sunlight now for roses.
Photos © Alice Joyce

Anemone 'Pamina' ... she's quite the lady.


What would I do without Toad Lilies! Especially Tricyrtis lasiocarpa : Yes, it spreads vigorously, but that trouble-free habit is just what's needed now in the spot where it grows along the back fence, beneath the limbs of my neighbor's enormous evergreen.


As I've had to cut back on the time spent on garden maintenance, I appreciate the elegance of this long-stemmed beauty more and more with each passing year.


Scrophularia 'Lemon and Lime' exhibits my favorite hues, brightening a bed that gets less and less light as the daylight hours grow shorter. In the ground Scrophularia languished, but planted now in the moist conditions of a faux terra cotta planter, it flourishes.

The blooms on this member of the mint family are a magnet for bees.
To read more about 'sticky germander' ... the common name,

Friday, September 3, 2010

A Perfect Shade of Apple Green: Bells of Ireland

'Apple Green' Bells of Ireland
This year marks the first time I've had an opportunity to cultivate this charming, old-fashioned annual, grown from a trial packet of seeds from Renee's Garden.
Moluccella laevis ... aka Bells of Ireland.
Many fine bouquets were produced!
The seeds - sown directly in the ground in late-spring - were able to thrive in the full sun of T's community garden plot.
Not surprisingly, my attempts to grow but a few seeds here at home failed, with nary a spot that received enough sunshine for the plants to flourish.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Garden Art That Stirs the Imagination


Turquoise Lotus
(Photo: Courtesy of Little and Lewis)
Click below to be redirected to the art and gardens of Little and Lewis, featured on:

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Alexander the Great! - Little and Lewis Garden Gallery


Little and Lewis Garden Gallery ... gracing the cover of Pacific Horticulture magazine.

Lysimachia punctata 'Alexander'
Here is yet another perennial that I've grown for years, yet it is only coming into flower this summer. I'm aware that 'Alexander' can be invasive in many situations, but in my dry garden setting, with meager hand-watering, it barely survived in the ground.

A couple years ago I lifted and moved him to a large container with a couple other specimens. Here 'Alexander' can get his feet wet: A required condition for good growth. Still, it took time for the plant to settle in, and now, bloom at last!

I've a very nostalgic attachment to this perennial, having been introduced to it in the glorious Bainbridge Island gardens of artist/sculptors/superb plantsmen, Little & Lewis. (Sadly, all my images are 35mm slides that have yet to be digitized, and so can only be shared in garden talks.)

In David and George's incredibly lush landscape, 'Alexander' grew in a pair of handsome urns that 'contained' the plant's exuberance.

Friday, August 6, 2010

Garden Alchemy in a Provencal Setting

Le Jardin de l'Alchimiste
(Above photo courtesy the Garden of the Alchemist)
Revisiting an all-time favorite ... A garden rich with atmosphere,
adjoining a lovely country inn located in the village of Eygalieres,
Update:  Mas de la Brune ~ The garden and inn are no long open, sadly.
I pay homage to the amazing landscape in a long post on:

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Weigela 'My Monet' and Geum 'Werner Arends'

Clash of the Wee Ones ...  A Weigela and a Geum!
My tale of woe is old-hat, remarked on countless times as the amount of sunlight continues to decrease in Alice's Garden. Thus, in early Spring I transplanted a few treasured specimens to spots that receive a bit more sun.

The wee Weigela 'My Monet' found itself lifted and moved across the pebble patio to the bed below the back porch - where the blue wall is a preening presence in various photos.

Now, the brilliant, burnt orange blooms of Geum 'Werner Arends' are now popping up through the Weigela foliage in a clashing color scheme that would, doubtless,
cause the long-departed doyenne of British gardening,
Gertrude Jekyll to shudder in her 'wellies' (rubber boots, that is).

Dare I admit to enjoying the cacophony!

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Bloom's Bodacious Borders at Kendall-Jackson Winery


A few years ago, one of my San Francisco Chronicle 'Garden Walks' columns celebrated the opening of new perennial borders in Wine Country designed by British horticulturist Adrian Bloom.

(Above: Chronicle photo - All other photos: copyright Alice Joyce)
Son of famed plantsman, Alan Bloom,and author of numerous gardening books featuring Foggy Bottom, Adrian Bloom's personal 6-acre garden in Norfolk, Bloom shared his thoughts on the Blooms of Bressingham borders at Kendall-Jackson Winery. Here: a long view of the garden on a recent summer's day, with bees abuzz, flitting among the bountiful blooms.

I'll be returning to the winery's varied landscape in future posts, to visit K-J's vineyard demonstration & culinary gardens, where visitors can relax and enjoy a picnic.
To find the borders, amble from the formal parterre garden fronting the main chateau, and continue around the side of the building. A signpost heralds the Blooms of Bressingham garden, where drifts of plants meld together in what Bloom calls "macro and micro views."
Reflecting Bloom's refined gardening style, the garden plan revolves upon artful combinations of conifers, flowering perennials, ornamental grasses and shrubs. The tall, vertical shapes of evergreen Italian cypresses draw the eye, and as Bloom shared, "give you a bit of structure... whichever way you're looking.. on either side of the pathway to take the eye through," calling attention to the surrounding plant combinations.

One of the lessons I took home: "Even small gardens must have a vista."

The Kendall-Jackson Winery chateau and formal gardens
appear upon exiting the parking area.

Back to the Bloom Borders! Plant tableaux come into focus as you walk along the curving central pathway, where groupings are linked by contrasts in foliage and flower color, texture and form: Purple-toned leaves of heucheras and phormiums; blue-violet, long-blooming Geranium 'Rozanne;' mounding Anthemis 'Susanna Mitchell;' bushy Coreopsis 'Limerock Ruby.'

Geranium blooms weave through hydrangeas; salvias and feathery silver-filigree artemisias are backed by dark Cotinus foliage and butterfly-attracting buddleias.

A bee feasting on... Asclepias incarnata?

Flanking a bench, fragrant rosemary, lavender & Verbena bonariensis
envelop the visitor who stops here to bask in the setting.
Kendall Jackson Winery - www.kj.com