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Carolina Gardens

Fall for the blues

Blue is a special hue in the garden because, in comparison to other colors, it is a less common sight among blooming plants. And now is a great time to get the blues in the form of spring-flowering bulbs that show off in shades of blue and can be planted during the pleasant days of fall. These bulbs aren’t the typical tulips and daffodils that are being dug in now by the cartloads, but rather they are lesser known beauties that can have a pleasing impact on your garden’s beauty next spring.

For example, many anemones can be planted now that, next spring, will coat flower beds in a sea of blue. Anemone blanda ‘Blue Shades’ is an aptly named cultivar that can thrive in Carolina gardens if given a well-draining planting site in full or partial sun. Another anemone, A. coronaria ‘De Caen Blue’, will stop visitors in their tracks with masses of pretty blue flowers in the early spring. Similar blue hues can also be had with the semi-double ‘Lord Lieutenant’ and an old standard, ‘Mr. Fokker’.

If you want to experience the blues a little earlier in the year, try selections of Iris reticulata, dwarf irises that can send late winter out in a blue blaze. True to its name, the popular cultivar ‘Harmony’ has mid-blue blossoms that complement rather than compete with other plants in most garden settings. Although a bit harder to find, ‘Joyce’, ‘Rhapsody’ and ‘Lady Beatrix Stanley’ are three addition selections that can turn heads in the new growing season with their cheerful blue blooms.

One bulb that can bring belated blues into the garden is Camassia leichtlinii. Try the cultivars ‘Caerulea’ or ‘Blue Danube’, both handsome plants with iris-like foliage that supports star-shaped blooms on 24- to 36-inch stalks in late April to mid-May. For lovers of native plants, Camassia quamash can put on a similar show, but its blue is blended slightly with a pleasing purple.

Garden to do’s

October

November

About the Author

L.A. Jackson is the former editor of Carolina Gardener Magazine. If you would like to ask him a question about your garden, contact L.A. at: lajackson1@gmail.com

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