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40 Comments

  1. Wow, the south garden is looking so full and beautiful! How lovely to be able to tour in the evenings and take the time to soak up the fruits of all your hard work 😍

  2. Great planting. Those roses look fantastic. Look at all the blooms on one stem. Wow. Would love to see the wheat come up should be interesting. Love verbena so pretty. So many holes to dig and so hard to dig. My word.😂. Thanks for sharing this with us. 💯💯💯🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦

  3. Another lovely video. I grew this blue wheat a few years ago. It is beautiful in arrangements and crafts. My came out more of a steel blue than the bright blue on the package. We are a cooler climate than where you are. I don't know my soil ph.

  4. I am really curious as to what variety of Holly Hock that is that doesn't fall over in the wind. Mine are always such a mess if I don't support them.

  5. Is there a difference between that superbena and a bush type superbena?

    Or will those turn into a large bush if left alone in the right climate?

    Im zone 10a and we have large shrubs of them.

  6. What variety of hollyhock is that towards end of video? 🤩
    Excited for the blue wheat 🌾
    And the roses, although I’m partial to the apricot roses.

  7. Vernonia (Iron Weed) is native to North America but only to central and eastern parts. Not at all native to the west. So it will be outside of its normal range. I suppose it may explain why Laura never heard about it. I recommend visiting native plant prairies/restorations instead of English-style gardens to learn about American plants. And there are native roses too!

  8. I’ve heard y’all talk about gypsum helping with hard pan. Have you ever considered adding it into the hole along with the biotone before placing the plant in there? Seems like it would help where it’s exceptionally hard digging. The gardens are looking so full! Thanks for sharing!!!

  9. Ironweed, the native version is very common in the midwest along wetter areas but clearly will grow in much drier as well. The common variety is easily 5 to 6 feet high and it seeds to cover big areas. I put some out back, along with joe pyeweed in a bed that can in rainy times be
    soggy and in drier times be bone dry. Eventually I removed both but both reseeded behind my property. I have pulled and dug more ironweed from
    my bed in subsequent years than joe pye. Wonder how this variety will be for you.

    You sowed blue wheat the same year you sowed the regular that did so well. I too sowed blue wheat that year and I got nothing.

  10. At the 7 minute mark when you are headed onto the stone path, are those Hollywood Junipers flanking the entrance? Whatever they are, they are looking awesome.

  11. Apparently I’m not the only one loving those hollyhocks from the look of the comments 😂. Does anyone know the variety? I tried googling it and they look like Halo Apricot but I wasn’t sure. I’d love to order seeds!

  12. I planted Vernonia Fistulosa, native seedlings last fall and they're supposed to get 6' tall! That princess cultivar looks more manageable for sure!

  13. My grandfather was a farmer. Iron weed was actually an invasive species. It would invade his wheat fields. The stalks were like wood or “iron” and would damage the machinery. My brother and I would get paid to walk the acres of fields and cut them with razor sharp machetes before harvest. This must be a more friendlier variety.

  14. Would love to hear your thoughts on which roses look the best longest on the bush! I have an At Last rose bush, which is productive and deliciously fragrant, but I find the blooms shatter quickly after they open.

  15. Plz tell Aaron, I've seen interesting grass mowing designs on MLB baseball fields. Thx. cgzone8

  16. Are those hollyhocks at the end of the video a perennial or a biennial? I hear most hollyhocks only last a couple years. I want the variety you have up by the fountain under the big honey locust! It seems that hollyhock will survive till the end of time 😅

  17. You know how Laura gets excited when she sees butterflies, bees and hummingbirds? I just imagined flying over Laura & Aaron’s gardens as one of those pollinators and saying “oh, I’ve found my forever home”.❤

  18. You can definitely see the difference in the struggle with the auger from one section to the next. Could you flood that hardpan part with gyspom?

  19. Hi Laura, looking for some advice – I have a white picket fence that houses my garden. I would love a bright, colorful perennial to line the front of the fence. I don’t want anything too tall. I tried PW sweet romance lavender, but accidentally pruned it at the wrong time and lost 75% of them. My local garden center has the flavorette pear rose but I’m afraid they will be too tall. Thoughts suggestions are welcome. Thank you so much. Love your channel and watching you inspires me!

  20. Laura why not just dig out that compacted area and then back fill it with compost?

    We moved into a new lot three years ago. It had been under asphalt for thirty plus years.
    I had five dump trucks full of compost delivered on top of hard pan clay . It’s a foot and half deep and everything grows so well you could not believe it !

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