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Garden Heaven 
Summer’s end is just not as buoyant as its beginning , but this stunning autumn has had many joys:
 
 Like this Acidanthera (or call it Gladioli callianthus Murielae if
 you must) hovering over the new-for-me Cochicum ‘Zephyr’
  a sensitive bicolor from the center out (from Odyssey Bulbs)
  And don’t forget, you can cut Colchicum for a vase and they last forever – well, for a week anyway  or you can just let them flop, that’s nice too  Among the dried and crinkled leftovers of the garden – amazing it survived without sacred rainwater
 for almost FIVE weeks  --
 there was/is some beautiful
 variegation, now at its most distinctive:
 
 Caladium ‘Moonlight’ under Abutilon ‘Savitsky’s Beauty’
  and the Abutilon under the Aralia  The third flush of Pulmonaria ‘Samurai’ (cut back hard after flowering in spring and again in July)
    The surprise of the late-summer flowerers: Caryopteris...
 this one with nice lime-green foliage that keeps its color
  and this white leafed one reaching across a path to the Chinese dogwood    And then there's this graceful spathe of Colocasia  the blues and greens of end-summer: 
 Great Euphorbias in their glory:
 (Fen’s Ruby, the ferny and myrsinites, the layered)
 over the chartreusiness of gets-better-and-better
 Sedum ‘Angelina'
  the moss greening up again and the Farfugium argenta bluer than ever
 (Boxtree Farms - TEN! years its been in that pot)
  the outstanding thick green leaves 
of the giant Mayapple (podophbyllum pleianthium, I think) against the 
painted ferns and lamium  and even though I usually disdain PINK, the autumn PINKS are more than welcome when they look like this: Can't deny Hydrangea Pinky Winky,
 even with its terrible name
    WOW!  Allium pulchellum and an undeniably pink Calla
 The pulchellums take a few years to get going – like sun – and bloom in August
 Great, aren't they?
 
 And an even bigger WOW
 The Aralia elata ‘Silver Umbrellas’
  To me, that's a heavenly garden dream come true... puffier, more billowing clouds than ever
 (I think because
 it was courageously cut  back
 in early spring)
 Bob Wilson said it made his trip from The Watermill Center
 to see my garden worthwhile -
 mind you, we are talking summer traffic here
 
 So,  one can more easily take the little ups and downs, i.e.
 
 Can you believe a gorgeous tall Golden
 Deodar Cedar died?
 Here is one last  bough ...
 I brought it out of the shade of the old garden and
 into the sun of Davids Lane ten years ago..
 I thought it would last forever
    Our great Hampton tree expert Ray Smith told me - for sure - that I had overplanted the area.
 Too many tress, too little space.
 So my, I thought,  perfectly coordinated small trees
 next to the pool grew and grew
 
 However...
 
 Suddenly the place it stood all those years became a
 new little nook and had some light,
 so see a surprise that appeared,
 lots of cyclamen too
  and the stump/trunk turned out to be a perfect pedestal  STUMPERIE Is this one?
 I read that they are on the increase and inspired by the Prince of
 Wales at Highgrove, but there were no images and so, I am imagining 
that this is, albeit the beginning, of a Stumperie
  
The LongHouse Landscape Award Weekend
 
What can I say: it was just divine
 from dinner on Friday evening at
 Alexandra Munroe’s ocean front estate
 to
 Dan Hinkley's funny and wonderful talk at Hoie Hall,
 which happens to be the Parrish House of our
 beautiful St. Luke's
  Landscape Award Photos by  Paul Aizaga  Martha and our Father Denis  Lys Marigold and Dan Hinkley 
 through
 the fabulous luncheon at
 LongHouse on the lawn with
 the Buckminster Fuller dome,
 where we honored
 Dan Hinkley and Elizabeth Scholtz
 (you know who he is, she was the
 driving force of the great Brooklyn Botanic Garden)
    The tables are set at LongHouse  Jamaica Kinkaid  Matko Tomicic  Our Jack Larsen speaking just the right words  Dan Hinckley and Martha Stewart  to the closing event on Sunday at Bill Smith and Dennis Schrader’s Great Garden.
  Because they are LandCraft, they have the hottest plants in the coolest place
 and that is no exageration.
 Their garden is magic.
  Dan Hinkley plants in Dennis & Bill's garden 
 It is unnecessary for me to show you continuing reams
 of photos, but I'll share a few:
 
 Me with Dennis Schrader under his newly constructed “Ruin”, which, is of course, filled with fabulous old finds
  Me giving welcome at the Awards Luncheon  Me and my godson Jordan  in Alexandra’s Kitchen garden-- 
 If you are panting to see more, it's easy.
 Martha Stewart took a million good pictures of
 every segment of every event
 and they are all on her blog
 which you can see right HERE
  
Small Miracles of Summer PAST:
 
well, this is a big one:
 April Gornick’s great  photos of the eclipse:
    April Gornick Photos
She really took these, they are not some internet trick  my concrete ball in the moss garden is no competition for that, but it reminds me how indebted we are to nature  
A Surprising Plant Buy:
 
DAYLILIES
 In my decades of gardening – these are the first –
 and I swear the first – I have ever bought;
 but somehow I had
 an urge for them.
 Seeing some purple-hued beauties in other gardens (hardly like daylilies at all) and knowing they fill a gap
 and get better with time,
 I thought I’d give them a try – we'll see if they are still around this time next year
 (or will I pull them out like I invaribly do with perennials
 I  think I have to have:  this summer it was Platycodon
 that had to go.
 Anyway – I ordered some purple ones and a few with that always great combo of white/cream and a burgundy center from Oakes Daylilies,
 after some research they seemed the
 best, and was shocked to receive huge gnarls of roots,
 especially since all the ones I ordered were in the
 Under $10 category,
 plus a handwritten note which always gets me,
 as well as three bonuses
  so a big kudo to Oakes   
So much for daylilies, 
These are REAL Zantedeschia aethiopica
 and they survived "that winter"
 
 ..they must be deep down in the ground by now – maybe 4th or 5th 
year – and appreciative of the several layers of burlap blanket that 
allowed them to withstand a bitter winter
  A magnificent Pineapple lily 'Sparkling Burgundy'
  Another one  ...from LandCraft, of course 
 
REAL  LILIUM 
In the last issue of Dirtier,  a few months ago I admit,
 I promised you lilies and here are a few of the best:
 
 At least the best of those  left after the rabbits chomped many of
 them to the ground (but it has been nice having  the rabbits back this 
season, though the foxes are nice too)
  Casablancas hidden in just the right spot  an Orienpet, cross between an Oriental and a Trumpet, I like these better than either
 
 and my favorite double Tiger lily blooming in quite
 severe shade...
 they proliferate like crazy in the sun
   But then...one’s attention is 
diverted by the ever-divine, long-present Angelica ---  I said to my 
young, and at 17 hopefully impressionable, godson ...
 this is the sexiest flower
  Probably inappropriate because he looked at me like I was crazy.
 I always thought Angelica gigas a biennial that spread
 good seed; but have recently learned they may be three-year biennials
 (then why don’t they call it a triennnial???)
 
 Anyway...this doesn’t come from Hortus,
 but I like the way it sounds
 “Angelica archangelica
 The floriferous namesake of St. Michael the Archangel, who is 
supposed to have revealed its power to battle the plague, Angelica 
archangelica’s luxuriant, tropical-looking foliage makes a dramatic 
entrance each spring as leaves unfurl to a length of 2 to 3 ft. Flower 
buds of mauve, strikingly set against its deeply divided bright green 
verdure, herald the imposing lime-tinted white flowers surmounting 
thick, erect stalks. This Angelica’s aromatic young shoots have long 
been used as a flavoring in sweet confections.
 Blooms August–September.
 Size: 5' high x 4'–5' wide; hardy to zone 4."
 
 
 And this magnicicent jack-in-the-pulpit
 with the 'drip tips' was
 amazing at about 4'
  the Black Mondo Grass among the chartreuse Lysimachia nummularia is just perfect  while these blacks among the Sedum ‘Angelina’ are splendid
  This is obviously my color combination of choice, but one can get hung up on the subtler of things:
 
 like this bi-colored Arum leaf given to me by Ken Druse  that has taken 3 years to produce ...
 and so I really appreciate it
  and this funny little thing – that 
little red knot is all it actually does...for the longest time I thought
 it was the plant called Paris, so I was enchanted... but now i've found  it is actually
 Hydrastis canadense
  still cute, though 
 and the painted ferns that are  literally  the abiding thread of this garden
  some are whiter ('Ghost'), some are redder They're all beautiful
 know i like them so much because they shower me with blessings:
 this profusion around my work corner
 (heavily shaded under Lys’ grape arbor)
 have appeared by magic.
 I have never planted even one of them.
 
 You can never have enough
       
HELLO SPRINGTIME 
So put a little burlap scarf around your favorite prone-to-tenderness plants...I find it makes an amazing difference
  this is just the first layer 
 Will it be a freezing winter again?  Who knows...
 
 ORDER  BULBS right away if you haven't
 ...the crickets have not stopped chirping, but I have started planting anyway
 
 The very best bulbs do come from Brent and Becky,
 but many have sold out already, so I would get right on your computer while some  beauties are still in stock.
 
 And I don’t only herald them because they have the best bulbs, but they are very generous to boot with both
 St. Luke’s Church and with LongHouse.
 
 So – hurry up and order
 
 I hope you didn’t miss Susan Wood's
 intimate and beautiful images of John and Yoko
 as exhibited on the walls of the centuries-old main barn at Mulford Farm in East Hampton.
 The pairing of place and people is really tender.
 
  LongHouse is still open on Saturday afternoon until the Saturday following Thanksgiving 
 and the dogs, after a few scares, are fine
    Flora with her favorite Do you Love Me monkey 
 
 Lys’ fig tree is bountiful in October!
  Life is beautiful  All is well and we are off to Paris......
 
 Joyeux automne to all
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