Join me as I give you an April tour of a shade garden, rose garden, a vegetable garden and other flower beds located on the east and north sides of my rural New Hampshire zone 5b garden. Part 1 of this series include garden spaces located on the south side of my house. Right now, I have Hellebores budded up and Glory of the Snow / Chionodoxa / chionodoxa luciliae, Crocuses, Striped Squill / Puschkinia and Alpine Squill / Scilla bifolia blooming. I flashback to what those garden spaces looked like 20 years ago and how they evolved and transformed over the years. Landscape design and garden transformation is a very big part of gardening. I also go over some of my plans for changing up these spaces.

Other plants also mentioned in this video include daffodils, peonies, hydrangeas, daylilies, lungwort / pulmonaria, hosta, jacob’s ladder / polemonium, asparagus, green beans, peas, cucumbers, roses, heuchera, tiarella, chamomile, etc.

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5 Comments

  1. Good morning it’s white here my other sister decided with the snow that I needed to drive her to work. Came home and started moving things into the greenhouse, weather is supposed to be better starting this afternoon. Had to come in and put on dry shoes and Sox. Back out in a little bit and up potting my pepper plants. This week’s work will be to up pot tomatoes and plant potatoes. Put in walkway edging and more mulch yesterday along the bed into the house with the hosta and forget the name but they are in the flowering onion family that I planted last fall.

  2. I bet all of those peonies look great in bloom, love the story behind them
    Can that asparagus patch be moved, or is it better to leave it alone?

  3. So glad i am not the only one looking in askance at a plant, wondering what it is and what's it doing there.
    If your feverfew acts anything like mine (Ohio, 6a) you will have feverfew EVERYWHERE – it is a prolific self seeder!

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