PLANT OF THE WEEK #22: Rosemary 'Tuscan Blue'

Have you ever thought about how few shrubs there are that carry within their structure any strength of form?  A number have a predictable shape, but form – which says more about the visible ‘forc ...

Thirty years to the day

It’s thirty years today since I was first published, in The Age, Melbourne.  It felt totally tectonic.  I was convinced that my life would never be the same from that moment on.  And it turns out ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #21: Persicaria affinis

I stood there gazing at the Purple-leafed birch grove freshly planted not 12 months after Black Saturday had levelled my garden. Planted in burnt, organic poor, compacted soils in a gravel garden, the ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #20: Viburnum tinus

Maybe it’s time for a truly low-glam plant.  Every garden needs modest, background plants to create the stage on which the ‘A-listers’ can really shine.   They’re as important as the ‘extr ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #19: Kniphofia sarmentosa

While the sun has just broken through the cloud this afternoon, most of today has been cold, wet and gloomy.  The garden is looking sparse, partly because it’s winter and partly because I’ve just ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #18: Clematis napaulensis

For years I’ve complained that June is by far the most boring month in my garden, and that nothing – absolutely nothing – actually looks like it’s enjoying June by starting to flower in this b ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #17: Sedum 'Autumn Joy'

I’m guilty. I had my head turned and couldn’t resist. I spurned my first love and chose another. Now I realise my mistake and am desperate to make up for it. Sedum ‘Autumn Joy’, I want you bac ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #16: Helleborus x hybridus

At this florally quiet time of year (in the far southern states, at least), there’s an extraordinary opportunity for a plant to really shine, with little or no competition – to be a big fish in a ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #15: Poa labillardieri

Having laden this Plant of the Week feature of The Gardenist with plants about which the authors could all enthuse unequivocally, I thought it was time to include a plant about which I’m in two (or ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #14: Hydrangea quercifolia

I’m wracking my brains, trying to remember my first encounter with Hydrangea quercifolia.  Most of us grew up with hydrangeas – the ‘mop-top’ sort –  in our Mum’s gardens, or our Nana’ ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #13: Miscanthus transmorrisonensis

Yep, it’s a bit of a mouthful of a name, but it’s very satisfying (and invariably impressive) to say once you’ve nailed it. In singing the praises of Miscanthus transmorrisonensis, it’s necess ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #12: Bupleurum fruticosum

In my previous contribution to Plant of the Week, I wrote about Pachystegia insignis, the Marlborough rock daisy. I opined the fact that, although it is a first class garden plant, it is a rather unat ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #11: Rosa 'Mutabilis'

At least part of the appeal, for me, of Rosa x odorata ‘Mutabilis’ is its name.  I don’t understand why some words resonate more than others – who does? – but there’s something about that ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #10: Tetrapanax papyrifer

I really love this plant. It is at the top of The List (with half a dozen others – not that they know, of course). I’ve loved it for as long as I can remember.  It grew in Mum and Dad’s private ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #9: Eschscholzia californica

One of my favourite games to play in surveying a sumptuously planted border or naturalistic-style garden is ‘spot the annual’.  Long ago in gardening lore, annual and perennial borders were very ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #8: Calamagrostis 'Karl Foerster'

Calamagrostis ‘Karl Foerster’ may not win the prize as my favourite grass, but it certainly wins the prize for being the grass with the most distinct form, and, therefore, possibly the most useful ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #7: Epilobium (Zauschneria) ‘Catalina’

The context for this choice is that I’ve become a bit obsessed about gardens that don’t need irrigation – ‘Rainfed’ gardens, if I can borrow a term from broad-acre cropping.  Up here in Kyn ...

PLANT OF THE WEEK #6: Cotinus 'Grace'

It takes a lot to make me love a shrub. I fully acknowledge and am grateful for the critical role shrubs play in the anatomy of a good garden, but I rarely really love them. Cotinus ‘Grace’, howev ...