BLOOM THYME FRIDAY: Did someone say Coffee, Chocolate and Comfort?

Mocha Mousse, a warming, brown hue imbued with richness. It nurtures us with its suggestion of the delectable qualities of chocolate and coffee, answering our desire for comfort. – From Pantone website.

2025 Pantone of the year

Each year Pantone sets the color stage for design whether inside or out. Last year was Peach Fizz and I was a big fan of that especially outside with all the roses with peach hues –especially my newly released rose — Petite Peach. More about her here.

For this year it’s all about… Coffee. Chocolate. Comfort. I’m in.

More about the color of the year HERE.

All this talk about mocha mousse had me thinking about the rose Koko Loco (hybridized by Christian Bedard of Weeks Roses) that has been trending for several years. What a perfect time to jump into that trend with a rose in the same palette. So I ordered one from High Country Roses (LINK

I don’t know how I have resisted this rose for so long. Beautiful!

Description on High Country’s website.
Koko Loco: The cocoa is creamy like latte. But the latte goes loco to finish all lavender! You just can’t imagine a milky chocolate-colored bud would mature to be a solid soft lavender blossom. Early to bloom, every lovely bud spirals open with impeccable show form. The flowers last long on the plant and in the vase. Beyond its novelty, there lies a great plant….rounded, handsome & bushy…chock full of clean green leaves.

For more info on growth habit, etc or to see if she’s still in stock, read more HERE.

GARDEN TRENDS

Another early season treat is to see the House Beautiful garden trend list and here it is…

  • Chocolate Brown Tones 
  • Cottagecore 
  • Front Gardens (love it)
  • Waterwise gardening
  • Out with bedding traditional plants
  • Cutting Gardens: bring the outdoors in (YES)
  • Future floristry
  • Light-touch gardening
  • Brownfield gardening
  • Sustainable power tools
  • Greenhouse living
  • Seedling success: growing plants from seed is back in the spotlight (Yippee)
  • Bulbs in pots (I’m not the best at this.)
  • Homegrown produce
  • Edible landscaping

For explanations of each of these categories check out their article HERE.

SPRING ROSE CARE

I’ve recently had several questions about spring rose care and simple rose pruning tips. While it is certainly not one size fits all, here are my general tips. (For reference: I’m in Zone 6a.) Again these are basic tips on what I do.

WHEN: My rule of thumb for when to prune roses is when the Forsythia Blooms. The blooming Forsythia tells us that the ground temp has warmed to about 50 degrees. Here we can have temps that dip a bit but we usually do well with the Forsythia rule.

HOW: I cut out any dead, damaged or disease-looking canes, any canes that are crossing the center or rubbing against other canes. For height pruning … I prune the shrub about 1/3 of it’s size. You will also want to remove the leaves still clinging to the shurb and any that have fallen on the ground. 📸 GLAMOUR SHOT:  To get her ready for glamour shots to come, after I prune I take a step back and look at the overall appearance, and using my creative license I make tweaks to get her looking just right. 😉

EXCEPTIONS

GROUND COVER ROSES:

For ground cover roses I don’t worry too much about all those pruning details. I just shape it up and take it down a bit for size control. As you experience a season of growth, you’ll know how to prune it to get the shape you want. I have 8 Sweet Drift Roses (groundcovers) making a border. While they appear to have a tangled growth, when they bloom they are show stoppers.

CLIMBING ROSES:

Totally different pruning method. I think the best way to learn about this is to SEE it done. Garden Answer and Heirloom Roses have great videos on pruning climbing roses. Orange text denotes links!

OLD GARDEN ROSE, RAMBLERS (and other one-time bloomers):

No spring pruning! As with other blooming shrubs the rule is PRUNE AFTER BLOOM. Pruning in the spring will eliminate your spring blooms! If you want to shape up your plant do it immediately after blooming. NOTE: OGRs need little to no pruning. Just take out dead and diseased canes. Or the ones that are catching on your husband’s shirt as he mows the grass. Don’t ask me how I know. 🤦🏼‍♀️

NOTE: Don’t be afraid! It isn’t rocket science. I’ve made a million “mistakes’ and the roses always forgive and bloom in spite of the gardener. I remember the first time I saw Steve Hutton, then President of Star Roses, take electric hedge trimmers to Knock Out roses. Now you see many gardeners do that with more than just Knock Outs. I’m not saying I would do it, but I guess you could.

FERTILIZER: At the time of pruning, I fertilize per package recommendations. (RoseTone or Scott’s Rose and Bloom: Both are available at our Lowes and sometimes Walmart). The fertilizer doesn’t kick in until temps raise a bit more but it is convenient for me to do it at this time. 

DORMANT SPRAY: Before leaves start developing we use a dormant spray. Through the years we have used several products. (Lime Sulfur, Captain Jack and Bonide products.) Jason from Fraser Valley Rose Farm has an excellent video on using dormant sprays that includes what to use and why you should proceed with caution when doing so.
VIDEO LINK

MULCH: I add 3-4″ of mulch to help with water retention, weed supression and for beauty… mulch makes everything look so fresh and tidy. I know the roses appreciate it as they move to their time to shine!

If you have other specific questions leave me a comment or email me, I am happy to help!

UNINVITED GUESTS

We’ve had some uninvited guests… one tried to get his annual eye exam. Wrong “office” buddy.

ROSE CHAT

Rose Chat 2025 has begun!

THE HERBAL PROPERTIES OF ROSES
Jason Croutch, Fraser Valley Rose Farm

For thousands of years roses have been used for so much more than an ornamental plant. Join us as we take a look at the additional benefits of growing the Queen of Flowers.

NEXT UP is Leon Ginenthal to chat about SOIL & PLANT HEALTH – this one will be posted on Sunday, February 23. 

WINTER SOWING

Winter sowing is now complete with 22 jugs! In many of the jugs I did sections to be able to plant more than one variety. I certainly don’t need a “jug full” of everythng I wanted to try this year! 😳

  • Love in a Mist: Mulberry Rose
  • Blue & White Alyssum
  • Calendula: Bronzed Beauty
  • Onion: Yellow of Parma
  • Strawflower: Red, Rose and White
  • Larkspur: Katy’s Picot
  • Gomphrena: Audray Purple-Red , Raspberry Cream, Lavender Lady and Las Vegas White 
  • Marigolds: Sugar & Spice, Queen Sophia & Savannah
  • Rudbeckia: Sahara & Caramel Mix
  • Statice: Seeker Pastel Blue
  • Coneflowers: White and Mellow Yellow
  • Snapdragons: Apple Blossom, Royal Bride and Costa Velvet
  • Sweet Pea: Jewels of Albion
  • Rose Seeds: Tuscany Supurb
  • Bachelor Buttons: Cyanus Double
  • Canterbury Bells: Calyan Mix
  • Nasturtiums: Cherry Rose Jewel and Tip Top Pink Blush
  • Dara: Mixed
  • Columbine: Barlow’s Double Mix
  • Ageratum: Blue Horizon
  • Verbascum: Shades of Summer
  • Phlox: Sugar Stars
  • Lady’s Mantel

Spring winter sowing

I will begin “winter sowing” again in April to plant Zinnias, Cosmos, Tomatoes and Basil! It worked so well last year!

WHILE WE WAIT

As finish up this post today we are having a wintery mix – rain, ice, snow. Single digit temps. Yuk.  BUT to those of you with colder winters, look at these pictures… they were taken the 3rd week of March last year! Our beauties are coming back!

Ignoring the weather outside, with every seed I sow I am giddy with anticipation of the miraculous new life that is to come. As gardeners we get to experience miracles most every day.

To everything there is a season but often it seems Winter tends to be a boundary pusher — we just have to keep the faith in the garden and out.

Until next time, have fun in your garden.

BLOOM THYME FRIDAY: Peaches and Cream

First up… Happy New Year! Don’t you just love a fresh start! A clean slate to fill up! Time to start planning our next garden season in earnest!

PICTURE TIME!
I am so glad we have pictures! Especially in winter! While I pour over the pictures of last year, the memories of the varmints gets fainter and fainter. But not so faint that I didn’t ask Santa for a super duper sprayer. I plan to be excessively spraying of all those smelly things that make the varmints feel less at home!

The pictures prove it! We have so many good days. #grateful

JUST PEACHY!

Have you seen Pantone color of the year for 2024? It’s a beauty! Peach Fuzz… 

From Pantone…

PANTONE 13-1023 Peach Fuzz captures our desire to nurture ourselves and others. It’s a velvety gentle peach tone whose all-embracing spirit enriches mind, body, and soul. 

Read more from Pantone here.

I am in love with this color – especially in the garden! One of the reasons I love Mother of Pearl roses so much is that she goes peachy. Many call her pink/salmon but she’s definitely more peach than pink in my garden.

Here is Mother of Pearl with my very favorite peach rose  — Petite Peach 🍑…

REMINDER

Petite Peach 🍑 and so many other beauties will be available again at High Country Roses starting January 10! Don’t delay!  HighCountryRoses.com

CREAMINESS

It seems that I’m also falling in love with all the creamy colored roses this year. If the pictures don’t get you, the names just might. Here’s my creamy list…

CREAM VERANDA

Floribunda (Tim Hermann Kordes, Germany, 1997)

Beautiful picture from Heirloom Roses website!

A beautifully romantic rose with old fashioned quartered blooms in delicate shades of apricot. Flowers are lightly perfumed on a disease resistant, compact shrub. Performs well in hot climates. This variety is ideal for use in patio containers or can be used in landscapes where a low growing compact plant is desired.

TOP CREAM 

Hybrid Tea (Alain Meilland, France, 2021)

Beautfiul pic from High Country Roses (link) Website.

The large, old-fashioned blooms of this special rose harken back to an old cottage garden.  Flowers are extremely fragrant with notes of anise and earthy pear.  Its abundant petals are creamy white with an occasional light blush.  It exhibits excellent disease resistance and is a wonderful rose for cut floral arrangements. 

CHANTILLY CREAM

Hybrid Tea (Christian Bédard, United States, 2021)

Beautiful pic from High Country Roses (link) Website.

A classic hybrid tea featuring large (4″-5″), very full blooms and a strong citrus aroma.  Light yellow blended flowers are delicate yet stand up to the heat of summer without missing a beat.  Very strong resistance to such diseases as rose rush, downy mildew and powdery mildew.

Creama (Reminiscent Series)

Shrub / released by Proven Winners

Beautiful pic from Proven Winners (Link) website.

Not quite white and not quite yellow, Reminiscent® Crema shrub rose combines the best of all worlds with blooms the hue of fresh buttermilk. Each big, full bloom boasts a very high petal count and a delightful fragrance. The perfect choice for adding classic beauty to the landscape or flower garden! Clean, vigorous growth and foliage, with no deadheading required for continuous bloom. Disease Resistant / Long Blooming  / Heat Tolerant / Size: 2.5 X 2

Aren’t these just amazing!! Are you growing any of these? I’d love to hear how they are doing for you.

ROSE CHAT

The 2024 Rose Chat Season starts in February. We have some wonderfully rosy friends joining in! 

First up will be the amazing Gaye Hammond chatting about The History of Roses: America’s True Native Plant. Of course, Gaye will teach us but she will also entertain us! I can’t wait! Read more about Gaye here.

Winter is a good time to catch on chats you might have missed during the busy season! Here are four great chats! But there are so many more!!

GARDEN DESIGN TIPS & TRICKS: Michael Marriott and Paul Zimmerman
These two are the best in the business and generously gave us so many tips! Perfect for garden planning season!
(LISTEN HERE)

GRACE ROSE FARM: Gracie Poulson
Learn about the beautiful work of this farm and hear about oh so many beautiful roses!
(LISTEN HERE.)

MY TRIP TO ENGLAND
Kimberley Dean (The Rose Geek)
Kimberley shares how this trip changed her and her garden!
(LISTEN HERE)

GARDENS OF THE NORTHEAST:  Stephen Scanniello
Stephen uses his razor sharp wit and his incredible rose knowledge to tell the “story” behind the story and this podcast is full of them!!
(LISTEN HERE)

POTTING SHED PUTTERINGS

This week I potted up my White Geraniums (Maverick). My garden journal tells me that I planted the tiny seeds on December 13 and they germinated in three days!! Now 3 weeks later they are showing off those lovely leaves! Three of them grew so large in the broadcast seed tray that I potted them up to 4″ pots. They have a long away to go! I sure hope they do well!

I bought my seeds at Park Seed. I received 10 seeds and I have 10 plants!

FROM PARK…

Maverick is an annual geranium, which is to say not a true geranium at all, but a pelargonium. 

They are a southern gardener’s salvation, thriving even in the sopping-wet humidity and searing heat of our summers. Other container plants look wilted even the same day you water them, but never Maverick. It’s compact, well-branched, large-flowered, and thoroughly agreeable to weather extremes. We wouldn’t want anything less for our terracotta pots and white window boxes.

Maverick is a very compact plant, reaching just 14 to 16 inches high (in full bloom) and nearly as wide. The foliage is large, softly lobed and creased, and bright green. It forms bushy rosettes beneath the flowering stems, which hold their giant spheres of blooms several inches above the rest of the plant.

I absolutely love, love, love annual geraniums (pelargoniums) and I think Thyme Out (my outdoor potting area) is just the place to have several white Mavericks!

One more thing…

Ever wonder about the origins of the geranium/pelargonium debate? Through the years I have heard many things. So, I asked the internet this week why pelargoniums are called geraniums and here’s what I found…

The name Pelargonium was first proposed by Johann Jacob Dillenius, a German botanist, in 1732 who described and illustrated seven species of geraniums from South Africa that are now classified as Pelargonium. Although it was Johannes Burman, who formally introduced the name pelargonium in 1738.

It was a simple mistake. Linnaeus thought the plants were close enough relatives to put both types in the genus Geranium. But Charles L’Héritier saw things differently and separated them into two genera in 1789. The change was widely accepted even back then and still holds today.

⭐️ And… we are still talking about it today. Right or wrong, some things just stick! Regardless of what we call them… they give us quintessential cottage garden beauty.

UP NEXT

The next fun winter projects around here will be planting Lisianthus and Winter Sowing. The extended forecast looks like we are going to have a bit of winter after all. What are you up to?

Until next time…

To make a great garden, one must have a great idea or a great opportunity.

Sir George Sitwell
Essay on the Making of Gardens (1909)