Welcome!
I’m Dee Nash, a native Oklahoman, and I’ve gardened here since my teens. I know from personal experience how challenging our prairie climate can be.
But my blog isn’t just for Oklahomans. Gardening can be challenging in other climates too. So, I share how to garden wherever you grow.
Enjoy the garden you’ve always wanted!
Featured posts
A bowl of blooming amaryllises and more for Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day
Hello friends! For you this month, I have…
Continue Reading A bowl of blooming amaryllises and more for Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day
Letting the garden grow
As I’ve been garden coaching so many of…
The bones of the garden
The wind is blowing, and leaves are falling.…
Zinnia favorites
It’s probably no surprise I love zinnias. I…
With rain, the garden grows
Overstuffed back garden so happy from the rain. This year, I am reminded that gardening is so much easier when the sun doesn't overwhelm plants suffering from drought. With a little rain, the garden grows in beauty and grace. The last three years Oklahoma suffered with high temperatures and terrible drought, not as terrible as California, but bad enough. Even though we fought the good fight with soaker hoses and drip irrigation on timers, plants remained smaller with some even drying up and going underground at the height of summer--baptisia, anyone?. Even with a lot of extra plants, the garden look less like a jungle and much more like a desert oasis. I'll take a jungle any day. This year, the garden is full to bursting. There's really no more room for any new plants. Hemerocallis 'Spider Miracle' with 'Softee' rose and H. 'A Cut Above' in the background. Garden visitors came last week and one asked...
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Garden Bloggers Bloom Day, June 2014
Campanula punctata 'Alba', white spotted bellflower. I also grow the pink one, 'Cherry Bells', but it isn't blooming yet. I bought these at Bustani Plant Farm. One the great gifts of Carol Michel's long-running meme, Garden Bloggers Bloom Day, is the chronicling of one's own garden throughout the years. I've participated most months since May 15, 2008, when I wrote about my David Austin roses. Since I've done this for so many seasons, I find some things never change. The roses bloom April and May, and the daylilies begin their two-month sprint at the beginning of June. This parade rarely varies. An old newcomer in my garden is Hemerocallis 'Hannah Elise' (Faller 2000) hybridized by my friend, Wanda, for her granddaughter many years ago. It's good to have plants from your friends. As summer moves in with a vengeance, hard-working natives and other perennial plants like Phlox paniculata will take over the show. H. 'Evening...
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Daylily season is in full swing
Hemerocallis 'Ruby Spider' which is one of the prettiest red daylilies in my garden. We've reached my husband's favorite time of the gardening year, and coincidentally, it always occurs right around his birthday. It is daylily season, and we are in full swing. Whenever Bill gets home from work and once we've had dinner, he and I walk the gardens to see the day's blooms. I'm charmed that my big and burly husband loves these flowers so much. He's even driving me to St. Louis so I can go to this year's regional meeting. It's a sweet thing to do. Hemerocallis 'Lace Cookies' My garden's daylily show always begins with Hemerocallis 'Lace Cookies' (Kaskel 1998) or H. 'Inky Fingers' (Stamile 2001.) Hemerocallis 'Inky Fingers' isn't my favorite because there are so few scapes on this plant. I may remove it next year. Soon, other cultivars begin to send up scapes and buds. It's a miracle of nature...
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Reading and weeding on a rain-soaked Monday
I'm trying to show some different views of the garden. These are the two beds facing our street. The large veggie garden is east of these two beds. On the other side of the greenhouse is my potager. The rainy days have made the Johnson grass a nightmare in the second bed. I know pulling it won't completely solve my problem, but I won't have to look at it for this summer. I'll dig down after things die back in fall to completely kill it. Since last Thursday, it's rained every day throughout most of Oklahoma. I took these pictures after this morning's rain. I'm not sure how much rain we've received because I forgot to empty my rain gauge before drops began to fall. According to the Oklahoma Mesonet, Guthrie received 3.28 inches in the last seven days. I know RDR received more, maybe because we're a bit south of the city....
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