Monthly Top 10 Plants at Campiello Maurizio (May 2023)

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Hope you don’t mind that I’m posting these a bit late. I’ve got to catch up on this so I can get to my Top 10 list for June before it’s August and I need to complete one for July too! Oh the crush of time. A few of these plants were gifts from friends and I’m realizing more and more how special that can make something to me. Friendship means the world to me.

One: This was a little gift from Evan. Rhipsalidopsis ‘Lauren’ bloomed for me indoors in May so I took it outdoors for its closeup. I love red so these blooms brightened my day and were long-lasting too. Many smiles were had since it lifted me up each time I spotted it. That’s a funny thing about flowers. They can cost more than a cookie, but I sure don’t get as fat enjoying them.

Two: This one is sadly not our native Cardamine nuttallii, but Cardamine trifolia still performs well enough and does make a nice tight ground cover. Luckily I have the native one as well, but it’s not established enough in the garden yet for me to comment on, but I hope to post more about growing it in the future.

Three: It was a huge surprise to receive this gift from Nathan Champion of Champion Acres Nursery. Years ago we were coworkers and we’ve stayed in contact ever since… (I guess I’m not as bad as some people think lol.) To say this Fuchsia ‘Pour le Menneke’ aka Fuchsia ‘Poermenneke’ is a stunner is an understatement. The blooms last and last, and it’s been making the back garden feel special all summer long—but it started back in May! What a great gift this was and its something garden guests have all enjoyed.

Four: This tree has been posted at least once or twice on my site. Ever since I saw one in a garden, I’d wanted one, and I’ve really enjoyed watching this little one grow. Before I know it, it will be huge. Eventually it will be planted in the ground, but for now, this Acer palmatum ‘Ukigumo’ is happy in its terracotta container in the back garden. I can watch its white leaves glow back there. It really does have that white cloud look to it.

Five: Kind of embarrassing—to say the least—that it took me so long to plant my Lonicera ciliosa vine. I have another and it’s not yet in the ground. Yes, it’s crazy to procrastinate planting these native vines since they are so beautiful!! Being less problematic than our other native honeysuckle (Lonicera hispidula), this one doesn’t get mildew—at least not yet. We shall see.

But those flowers. Wow.

Six: A year or two ago my friends and I potted up a piece of this devil’s club from my family’s property near the coast. Oplopanax horridus is one of those plants I discovered as a kid by absentmindedly grabbing at it to clutch onto as I was trying to exit a creek or stream. Ouch! But it’s a brutal stunner. It’s a painful pretty. Now this one is planted and doing great in the ground in the back garden.

Seven: The fragrance of an Iris florentina is undeniably something special—at least for me. Iris plants in general often annoy me since their blooms are so ephemeral and I have to work hard to keep them healthy and happy in a greenhouse environment, but this, uh… With that hint of a pale blue-grey, this one is a favorite of mine in the garden and I’m happy to have two established patches going.

Eight: The Citrus myrtifolia has been a much loved container plant for years. Fragrant blooms, and the connection to the production of a delicious beverage called chinotto is all I need to add. Now I want some…

Nine: Whenever I see the dangling tassel bits attached to the male flowers on the Thalictrum occidentale plants I giggle. That tiny jostle, it’s so sensitive to a light breeze—oh the magic in the air! (These are wind pollinated to it actually does make sense…

Ten: Last but not least is this heirloom Iris ‘Cheer’. It was a gift from Baldassare, and is an older hybrid which is fragrant and reblooms. Since doing so though I’ve realized there are a fair number of them with a hint of a whiff of something. I guess they all kind of smell a bit like Palmolive to me. I suppose it could be worse…


So that’s it for now! Hope to get more posts rolled out soon. With lots of the garden redo underway, I hope to rest more and have time to type up my thoughts as summer engulfs us.

Working at Secret Garden Growers Nursery (and a few of my favorite plants)

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My job at Secret Garden Growers began back in March of 2019. Since then, I’ve been there part-time year-round for 3+ years. My relationship with the plants began years before that though. I’ve long been purchasing beautiful and well-grown plants from Pat at local sales. I just killed them off and on. Hey, it’s what we do in order to learn and as we keep moving things around.

Some hibiscus “bones” last week. I love watching this view change throughout the year. It’s definitely a four-season garden.

Long before I worked out there in Canby, I looked up the nursery location on a map. I thought it was strange I’d never driven out there because I grew up in Milwaukie and I love to drive around Clackamas County. Back then I lived in my allergy bubble though here at home, and while I DID shop a lot, I tended to buy most of my plants at plant sales. So it took a few years to get me out there.

Boy was it worth it!

I think that was the summer before I started to work there. Evan went with me.

So many beauties just waiting to go home with you.

While my job title there is propagatrix, I pretty much do lots of production work too and keep track of plant health. This means lots of primping to keep things uniform, nice, and clean. We primp those plants so often we get to know them well. Most folks don’t realize it, but so much labor goes into beautifully grown plants in containers. It’s part of what makes the experience so fun, but it’s difficult and tedious work. Luckily I can listen to music and move my hips about or listen to audiobooks. There’s nothing quite like a beautiful flat of plants. Wow! Yummy stuff!

So the rest of this post will just have some pretty photos of some plants that I really like—at least this week. In the captions you’ll find descriptions from the catalog. Just click on the caption and it will take you to the catalog. This is not something I normally do but we have a new site. (Captions are all written by Pat and the photos are mine.)

I cannot promise that these items are even available currently, but I’m happy to show off some of the plants that we grow.

Saxifraga x arendsii ‘Rocco Red’. Not currently available online this is one we have a few of at the nursery.
Eccremocarpus scaber. Looks like we don’t have this color available right now, but we have others.

Hope you enjoyed “shopping” with me. I should have written more about each plant but as they’re added to my garden over time I’ll be better about doing so.

Hope you noticed the gesneriads too. You must have known I’d add them too.