Oh Patty, I am speechless! You have once again, taken a blank canvas, and turned it into the most fabulous landscape. Oh how I would love to come sip an iced tea with you in your magical space!
So beautiful! My favorite is your yellow rose and purple salvia in the container. I love purple and yellow together. Thanks for taking us on a tour of your little garden paradise. 💖
I love your cottage garden. And you have such a lovely manner sharing your ideas and insights. Zone 8A here. We have roses, nepeta, iris, dahlias, Honeysuckle, and wildflowers.
Patty your garden is beautiful. So many beautiful flowers. I did subscribe. I thought sure I was subscribed from years ago but it said I wasn’t so I am now for sure. Love and blessings 💜🌼🌺🌸❤️
Lovely! I am hoping my garden will one day look as good. I bought my house last year and this is only our second year in our garden. But it is a marathon and not a race!
Interested in your channel as it is a zone 9 garden as is ours in Australia although we are in different seasons. Autumn for us. Always something else that can be learnt as a gardener. The gaura does need lots of sun 😊 I have purchased coreopsis seeds to try so am looking forward to doing those. Gaura was a new try for me about 4 years ago. I only have about 3 colours but they have been done well. I do need to keep an eye on the watering for them in our summer. The Artichoke is awesome. Worth growing just for their amazing flowers. Echinacea comes in different colours now. They may be an option for a smaller perennial and dahlias if chosen well are always beautiful. The yellow short dahlia I find is the toughest one here. Most of the shorter varieties here return year after year, as long as the tubers don't rot out with to much rainfall in winter.
I planted a few bare root echinacea this year and they have just popped thru the soil. I’m very excited about them. I’m looking into a few new hybrids to try out in my full sun areas. We are considered desert climate here and I need plants that thrive in the intense summer heat.
Your garden is beautiful !!What is growing in my 15 year garden… Zone 9A 😢 already passing fox gloves, delphiniums, alyssum, azaleas 😞, gladiolus, coleus, geraniums, and more. But coming in to full bloom agapanthus, three or four different salvias, pintas, daylilies, coreopsis, Stokes, aster black-eyed Susan, one Don Juan rose, one lady banks climbing, rose, hydrangeas. However, all too soon most of these will be long gone and then I’ll have the dog days of Summer and daily ran and everything rotting.
Your garden sounds glorious! You are about a month ahead of me here. I love when flowers finish and hand the torch to the next set of blooms. And then when August hits I take the month off and start all over in September.
Everything looks so beautiful! I need more foxgloves, they are so cottagey! A yellow flowering perennial that may look good by you birdbath is Proven winners “Amazing Daisies Banana Cream' I’d like to try them this year. They look so pretty. 😊
Daffodils are finished and tulips are starting to bloom in my zone 5b garden. Other perennials are up and growing. We should be able to plant out annuals in a few more weeks. Bonny
Beautiful! I live in NC zone 7. Amazing how different our gardens look now. My big showstoppers are Iris and peonies. I’ve got some shrub roses blooming like crazy now too. Great job! Mine is a 3yr old garden. In the same boat. Some things I love, a few I’m moving. It’s a work of art in progress.
Hello, Try lupin. I’m in zone 10 LA, CA area I’m growing my plant in my shade area. She gets only morning sun, and loves slightly acidic soil. Wishing you all the best. Love your garden. ☺️
I have tried lupine without much success. I love the look of it and have two in a pot that came up from seed this year so my fingers are crossed. I purchased them as starts from the nursery but they never bloom for me. Maybe my timing is just off.
Hi Patty, I’ve been following you for a while and I’m catching up on your 2023 garden. I appreciate your presentation and as much as I love looking at gardens, sometimes I just enjoy listening to you while I’m doing chores :) I’m also doing my first garden this year and you inspire and encourage me to not worry so much and just go for it! I’m going for a cottage/potager style. I’m in a rental so that’s a bit limiting but my landlord is pretty chill and I’m so thankful for that! I’m a little late, but have you considered Baptisia for a tall yellow flower? According to my very non thorough quick google search, it’s hardy to zone 9. I’m in 5 and it grows beautifully here and looks so lovely with roses. It’s on my someday plant list :)
Welcome back! Your words are so encouraging. I have never grown baptisia. I will definitely look it up. Rentals can be tricky but pots and raised beds are temporary.
@@charmingkitchengarden thank you. I’m working on mine but the only thing blooming here is tulips, daffodils and dandelions 😂. It’s still in the 30’s at night and only low 50’s during the day with lots of rain. I’m so excited to get started and see what changes this year. We never know what did well from last year until everything thaws out
@@charmingkitchengarden I love having four seasons and winter is my favorite. I love the tranquility and peace of the winter and snow. Our gardens are just starting here and still getting nights with frosts but beautiful spring days and everything is getting so green and waking up from winter.
At the beginning of the video you showed the plants that were in the shade and you need something that could co exisy with the tree roots. Epimedium your answer. It loves where it is dry and lots of roots.I have it every where.
@@charmingkitchengarden Ooh, I didn’t know you’re in a desert climate! I live in the Netherlands and most of my compatriots are too lazy to garden (or too disconnected from nature), so they use stone in lots of varieties. It’s a shame really, because Holland has a lovely tradition of (kitchen) gardening. I myself started my now garden 2 years ago after moving to a rural area and am still finding my way. It’s a combination of edibles (fruit trees, hazelnuts, berries, grapes, herbs and veg), some shrubs and lots, lots of flowering perennials plus some conifers (creeping or upright) plus a bit of lawn. Everybody loves it, but I never seem to be really satisfied with the results. Which seems fine to me because a garden is an ever growing thing, I love the process of discovering my own garden :).
❤beautiful garden.
Very nice, thank you for making it for everyone to enjoy💖Have a nice day~~
What a pretty garden, thanks for sharing ❤
Everything looks beautiful. Wish I could sit with a cup of tea in your garden 😊
It’s my favorite place to rest.
Thanks for another great garden tour my dear friend. Always love looking at your beautiful garden. Hugs and kisses from grandma, Sandy, and Debbie.
Thank you!
Lovely as usual patty 💕
Oh Patty, I am speechless! You have once again, taken a blank canvas, and turned it into the most fabulous landscape. Oh how I would love to come sip an iced tea with you in your magical space!
Anytime my friend!
Very beautiful garden!
So beautiful! My favorite is your yellow rose and purple salvia in the container. I love purple and yellow together. Thanks for taking us on a tour of your little garden paradise. 💖
I love that color combo as well. I want to repeat it over by the foxglove and iceberg roses.
So pretty
Good morning Patty. What a spectacular garden you've created. Just like you, I simply can't wait for Spring to be fully sprung. 🌼🌹
So pretty and you are very talented. Thank you for sharing. Have a blessed day.
Thank you for such encouraging words!
Nice Garden ❤Warm greetings from Chicago
Lovely garden and video. Thank you
Absolutely lovely. You've created quite a specular garden in your new home. I'd be sitting out there all the time. Perfect place to read each day.❤
Thank you. It’s been a good year for the garden.
Thank you so much. I enjoyed seeing your video.
Just gorgeous!!!!
I love your cottage garden. And you have such a lovely manner sharing your ideas and insights. Zone 8A here. We have roses, nepeta, iris, dahlias, Honeysuckle, and wildflowers.
Thank you. Your garden sounds lovely. Honeysuckle and iris are on my list to add to the garden. When is it safe to dig them up and spread them?
I’m so happy I found a California zone 9b channel. New subscriber in Sacramento. 😊
Welcome. I love finding other Californians gardeners as well!
Patty your garden is beautiful. So many beautiful flowers. I did subscribe. I thought sure I was subscribed from years ago but it said I wasn’t so I am now for sure. Love and blessings 💜🌼🌺🌸❤️
Thank you for subscribing. The garden will be so beautiful this year
This brings me so much enjoyment, Patty! The music is perfect, too! Thank you for sharing!
Thank you Becky for always encouraging me.
Patty your garden is beautiful. Thank you for sharing.❤
Lovely! I am hoping my garden will one day look as good. I bought my house last year and this is only our second year in our garden. But it is a marathon and not a race!
Yes. We are in year two as well and many of my perennials need time to grow bigger. Hang in there.
Thank you so much for the gardening motivation, Patty. I love watching your channel.
Thank you my friend. I am really enjoying sharing it.
Interested in your channel as it is a zone 9 garden as is ours in Australia although we are in different seasons. Autumn for us.
Always something else that can be learnt as a gardener. The gaura does need lots of sun 😊
I have purchased coreopsis seeds to try so am looking forward to doing those. Gaura was a new try for me about 4 years ago. I only have about 3 colours but they have been done well. I do need to keep an eye on the watering for them in our summer.
The Artichoke is awesome. Worth growing just for their amazing flowers.
Echinacea comes in different colours now. They may be an option for a smaller perennial and dahlias if chosen well are always beautiful. The yellow short dahlia I find is the toughest one here.
Most of the shorter varieties here return year after year, as long as the tubers don't rot out with to much rainfall in winter.
I planted a few bare root echinacea this year and they have just popped thru the soil. I’m very excited about them. I’m looking into a few new hybrids to try out in my full sun areas. We are considered desert climate here and I need plants that thrive in the intense summer heat.
Your garden is beautiful !!What is growing in my 15 year garden… Zone 9A 😢 already passing fox gloves, delphiniums, alyssum, azaleas 😞, gladiolus, coleus, geraniums, and more. But coming in to full bloom agapanthus, three or four different salvias, pintas, daylilies, coreopsis, Stokes, aster black-eyed Susan, one Don Juan rose, one lady banks climbing, rose, hydrangeas. However, all too soon most of these will be long gone and then I’ll have the dog days of Summer and daily ran and everything rotting.
Your garden sounds glorious! You are about a month ahead of me here. I love when flowers finish and hand the torch to the next set of blooms. And then when August hits I take the month off and start all over in September.
Everything looks so beautiful! I need more foxgloves, they are so cottagey!
A yellow flowering perennial that may look good by you birdbath is Proven winners “Amazing Daisies Banana Cream' I’d like to try them this year. They look so pretty. 😊
Ha, ha. You can never have too many foxglove. Thanks for the suggestive added that to my list to look for.
Daffodils are finished and tulips are starting to bloom in my zone 5b garden. Other perennials are up and growing. We should be able to plant out annuals in a few more weeks. Bonny
Where do you garden? I miss my daffodils already!
@@charmingkitchengarden I'm in Ontario, Canada. It's been an unusual cool, and rainy spring here this year. We expected to be in the 70's next week.
Such a totally different gardening experience. We went from 95 on Saturday to 65 today. It has been extremely crazy weather.
Same here in upstate New York
Same here in Western Michigan!
Beautiful! I live in NC zone 7. Amazing how different our gardens look now. My big showstoppers are Iris and peonies. I’ve got some shrub roses blooming like crazy now too. Great job! Mine is a 3yr old garden. In the same boat. Some things I love, a few I’m moving. It’s a work of art in progress.
Exactly how I feel about it. I feel so lucky to be able to work in it.
Hello,
Try lupin. I’m in zone 10 LA, CA area I’m growing my plant in my shade area. She gets only morning sun, and loves slightly acidic soil. Wishing you all the best. Love your garden. ☺️
I have tried lupine without much success. I love the look of it and have two in a pot that came up from seed this year so my fingers are crossed. I purchased them as starts from the nursery but they never bloom for me. Maybe my timing is just off.
So happy to have found you. I am in California zone 9b. I am in the desert tho. I have a cottage garden as well. :-) we have a lot of the same plants.
I am in the desert as well. Just learning the new gardening dos and don’t here.
I run a garden club in Landers, CA if you are nearby
Not sure where Landers is. I’m in Riverside county.
Beautiful garden ,new subscriber
Welcome and thank you!
New subscriber! So much inspiration in this gorgeous garden, i loved it!
Welcome. Thank you for the encouraging words. It’s been a good year in the garden.
Hi Patty,
I’ve been following you for a while and I’m catching up on your 2023 garden. I appreciate your presentation and as much as I love looking at gardens, sometimes I just enjoy listening to you while I’m doing chores :)
I’m also doing my first garden this year and you inspire and encourage me to not worry so much and just go for it! I’m going for a cottage/potager style. I’m in a rental so that’s a bit limiting but my landlord is pretty chill and I’m so thankful for that!
I’m a little late, but have you considered Baptisia for a tall yellow flower? According to my very non thorough quick google search, it’s hardy to zone 9. I’m in 5 and it grows beautifully here and looks so lovely with roses. It’s on my someday plant list :)
Welcome back! Your words are so encouraging. I have never grown baptisia. I will definitely look it up. Rentals can be tricky but pots and raised beds are temporary.
New subscriber, absolutely beautiful!
Welcome! It’s going to be a wonderful year in the garden.
@@charmingkitchengarden thank you. I’m working on mine but the only thing blooming here is tulips, daffodils and dandelions 😂. It’s still in the 30’s at night and only low 50’s during the day with lots of rain. I’m so excited to get started and see what changes this year. We never know what did well from last year until everything thaws out
I’ve never garden in those temps. It must be glorious and so appreciated when the sun warms things up and all the flowers bloom.
@@charmingkitchengarden I love having four seasons and winter is my favorite. I love the tranquility and peace of the winter and snow. Our gardens are just starting here and still getting nights with frosts but beautiful spring days and everything is getting so green and waking up from winter.
Maybe could use some strappy foliage such as daylilies or iris or agapanthuses? I’m not sure how they do in your zone. I love mine in zone 8.
Great suggestions. My SIL just divided her agapanthus and offered me some.
The plant you are not sure about i think that is confederate rose, beautiful pink flower you are one of the lucky gardener. Love your video
Thank you no will look that one up!
At the beginning of the video you showed the plants that were in the shade and you need something that could co exisy with the tree roots. Epimedium your answer. It loves where it is dry and lots of roots.I have it every where.
Thank you! I will have to look that one up!
💙
Beautiful garden, I just found your site. Where did you get your cloche? I like the style.
Thank you. The black wire one? It’s a trash can from the dollar tree. 😊
I saw that and my mind was blown I can actually afford cloches now!!!
I'm curious....do you know what flower that is on the other side of the fence?
It’s lantana. It makes a great cover on a hillside yard.
Roses and Candy Tuff Zone7 Georgia
I haven’t grown candy tuft in years. What a pretty plant.
I don't know about America, but in Europe this wouldn't be considered a cottage garden by a long shot.
It is my interpretation of a cottage garden given my desert climate and it brings me joy to share it. What kind of garden to you grow in Europe?
@@charmingkitchengarden Ooh, I didn’t know you’re in a desert climate!
I live in the Netherlands and most of my compatriots are too lazy to garden (or too disconnected from nature), so they use stone in lots of varieties. It’s a shame really, because Holland has a lovely tradition of (kitchen) gardening.
I myself started my now garden 2 years ago after moving to a rural area and am still finding my way. It’s a combination of edibles (fruit trees, hazelnuts, berries, grapes, herbs and veg), some shrubs and lots, lots of flowering perennials plus some conifers (creeping or upright) plus a bit of lawn. Everybody loves it, but I never seem to be really satisfied with the results. Which seems fine to me because a garden is an ever growing thing, I love the process of discovering my own garden :).
I totally agree. Who wants a garden that’s finished. The work of planning and planting is half the fun.
Lovely as usual patty 💕