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Garden Photo of the Day

Garden Photo of the Day


At the top of my spring shopping list

comments (5) April 5th, 2011 in blogs

mgervais Michelle Gervais, Associate Editor
20 users recommend

Click here to enlarge this photo. Click the image to enlarge.

Click here to enlarge this photo.

Photo: Michelle Gervais

I spotted this colewort at White Flower Farm's display gardens in Litchfield, Connecticut, a couple of years ago and fell madly in love. Colewort (Crambe cordifolia, USDA Hardiness Zones 6-9) grows up to 8 feet tall and 5 feet wide and flaunts billowing clouds of small white flowers starting in late spring. The AHS encyclopedia says that the large leaves die down in mid- to late summer, which makes me wonder what I'll do with that blank space in my small garden come August. Any suggestions?

Welcome to the Fine Gardening GARDEN PHOTO OF THE DAY blog! Every weekday we post a new photo of a great garden, a spectacular plant, a stunning plant combination, or any number of other subjects. Think of it as your morning jolt of green.

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Comments (5)

JardinDelSol writes: Michelle, Pennisetum Purple Prince (or the smaller Princess) would be perfect! It begins very small but grows very quickly once the hot weather start. By the time the crambe fades, the pennisetum begins to explode in size. I think both White Flower Farms and Santarosagardens.com have it. In your frost zone, it would be an annual. Take some photos when you grow the crambe! Posted: 9:05 am on April 7th
sheilaschultz writes: I've never seen this plant before, looks like a lot of fun! The smokebush idea sounds pretty interesting! Posted: 3:08 pm on April 5th
CountryCousin writes: On a garden tour a few years ago, I saw a Crambe in full bloom, planted in front of a purple smokebush (Cotinus coggygria), which was also in full 'smoke'. The effect was breath-taking. And - though I didn't know Crambe foliage dies down, as I've seen it in gardens late in the summer (zone 4)- if it did die down, you'd still have the wonderful, dark purple foliage of the smokebush to fill your eye. Posted: 8:20 am on April 5th
Wife_Mother_Gardener writes: I have just purchased seeds to start C. cordifolia this year. Anyone have sowing advice?

Beautiful plant. Posted: 7:24 am on April 5th
arboretum writes: cannas, miscanthus, rudbeckia herbstsonne; all get tall and showy in Aug.
best,
mindy
www.cottonarboretum.com/ Posted: 3:17 am on April 5th
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