I appreciate how you share your knowledge and inspire others to take on their gardening projects. Keep up the fantastic work, and I look forward to your future videos!
Good morning, thank you for an update on your front yard. Moving liriope grass was a great idea ! Sometimes small changes can have big landscape impact. As always, I was enjoying watching your video ❤
I love your super elegant simple ideas, so practical for my novice huge hard to tame garden. It feels doable and accessible yet the result is amazing. 💚💚💚 Im starting a conifer garden and ill try this.
Kimmy give anything a try ! Plants are resilient! It’s just finding the light ,soil, moisture that they love so they will thrive . I’ve moved plants at least three times before I give them away sometimes they just don’t want to be in my garden 😏. Your words very kind😊
Good morning! Quote of the video: “How many cats do we have???” 😂 LOL! Great front yard improvement with the beautiful liriope (pronounced lor - EYE - uh - pee here😊) - gosh your compost looks wonderful - we also have a “mullet” yard - business in the front, party in the back as my husband like to say 😃
Love”mullet” yard. My mispronunciation of the plant I hope is understandable I just have trouble seeing liriop and saying lot-eye-uh-pee😉🧐🙄 . Yes the compost pile has always been with me in every garden space where I’ve moved it’s a growing up in the country kinda thing. Glad you’ve been watching.
@@gardeningonthewestforkwith8994 yes I love your garden and your channel - you and Reg are a great team 😊! Btw I think a lot of plant pronunciations are regional - “weigela” for instance 🤷♀️?
@@urchinsushi2041 actually it’s me no excuse I pronounce as I see the letters I have asked Alexa many time how to pronounce this simple word along with others that I put emphasis on wrong syllables.
Looks really nice. Yrs ago I read a letter to the editor in Country Living mag. Someone said they moved into their brand new home in a brand new development. Said they had friends and family popping by all the time, there was a knock at the door, opened it to a deer eating the wreath on the door.
No way well my neighbors all have videos of this one eating in their yards cute as can be but darn we all are trying to garden. They keep it interesting and I do enjoy seeing them such gentle animals.
@@gardeningonthewestforkwith8994 I have thousands of field acres behind me, used to have herds of deer back there. I haven’t seen any in many yrs. I’m thinking all my cats are keeping the bunnies away.
I must have different daylillies than you do, because our deer (7-10 that hang around our property) eat lots of my plants, but never touch the daylillies (small mercies)... but I have to say that I think the liriope are great in a foundation planting... I have about 20 planted across the front of my ranch house and they never fail to look great... and anytime that I want "something" to go "somewhere" - shade or sun - I can dig a piece of the liriope and it transplants beautifully... thanks for another great show...
🤦♀️seriously your deer won’t eat daylillies? How about your hosta? Good plant that liriope easy care and yes sun or shade and I agree a foundation plant . It’s only taken me 30 years to figure this out😜☺️.
Hi there Your liriope are exceptional. I have no luck with them. Do they require a special soil? Have you tried growing sage or rosemary herbs near your entrances? The deer might find the smells repellent. Or maybe just chew on them as an aperitif😂
Sharon yes to scented herbs and flowers they dislike for sure in the back yard but this is solution for the front plus a deer repellent spray. My herbs never chewed on🤞
This is liriope muscari a verigated grass with a blue flower clump forming commonly called lily turf yes there is a variety that runs by tubers spicata very invasive. I may have confused many people muscari Armeniacum is grape hyacinth which I have these too🤦♀️Latin names confuse me I’ll be more specific thanks for pointing this out. Perhsps I’ll mention this in next video to clear up the names.
I appreciate how you share your knowledge and inspire others to take on their gardening projects. Keep up the fantastic work, and I look forward to your future videos!
Gosh you have such encouraging words . Your friends must live time together with you☺️
Good morning, thank you for an update on your front yard. Moving liriope grass was a great idea ! Sometimes small changes can have big landscape impact. As always, I was enjoying watching your video ❤
You were the inspiration behind the change . As you see just a very small simplistic space.
Hi. Teresa your amazing, best thing ever is to shop your garden first. Cheers Bronwyn 🇦🇺
Bronwyn I’m just very frugal(or cheap 🤔) 😉
I love your super elegant simple ideas, so practical for my novice huge hard to tame garden. It feels doable and accessible yet the result is amazing. 💚💚💚 Im starting a conifer garden and ill try this.
Kimmy give anything a try ! Plants are resilient! It’s just finding the light ,soil, moisture that they love so they will thrive . I’ve moved plants at least three times before I give them away sometimes they just don’t want to be in my garden 😏. Your words very kind😊
Good morning! Quote of the video: “How many cats do we have???” 😂 LOL! Great front yard improvement with the beautiful liriope (pronounced lor - EYE - uh - pee here😊) - gosh your compost looks wonderful - we also have a “mullet” yard - business in the front, party in the back as my husband like to say 😃
Love”mullet” yard. My mispronunciation of the plant I hope is understandable I just have trouble seeing liriop and saying lot-eye-uh-pee😉🧐🙄
. Yes the compost pile has always been with me in every garden space where I’ve moved it’s a growing up in the country kinda thing.
Glad you’ve been watching.
@@gardeningonthewestforkwith8994 yes I love your garden and your channel - you and Reg are a great team 😊! Btw I think a lot of plant pronunciations are regional - “weigela” for instance 🤷♀️?
@@urchinsushi2041 actually it’s me no excuse I pronounce as I see the letters I have asked Alexa many time how to pronounce this simple word along with others that I put emphasis on wrong syllables.
Looks really nice. Yrs ago I read a letter to the editor in Country Living mag. Someone said they moved into their brand new home in a brand new development. Said they had friends and family popping by all the time, there was a knock at the door, opened it to a deer eating the wreath on the door.
No way well my neighbors all have videos of this one eating in their yards cute as can be but darn we all are trying to garden. They keep it interesting and I do enjoy seeing them such gentle animals.
@@gardeningonthewestforkwith8994
I have thousands of field acres behind me, used to have herds of deer back there. I haven’t seen any in many yrs. I’m thinking all my cats are keeping the bunnies away.
@@itsmewende wende you have some great cats for bunnie patrol mine are good for moles voles and mice nothing much bigger😏
@@gardeningonthewestforkwith8994
I do have 6, I think the bunnies just think...thanks but no thanks.
I must have different daylillies than you do, because our deer (7-10 that hang around our property) eat lots of my plants, but never touch the daylillies (small mercies)... but I have to say that I think the liriope are great in a foundation planting... I have about 20 planted across the front of my ranch house and they never fail to look great... and anytime that I want "something" to go "somewhere" - shade or sun - I can dig a piece of the liriope and it transplants beautifully... thanks for another great show...
🤦♀️seriously your deer won’t eat daylillies? How about your hosta?
Good plant that liriope easy care and yes sun or shade and I agree a foundation plant . It’s only taken me 30 years to figure this out😜☺️.
@@gardeningonthewestforkwith8994 lol, yes, the deer love the hosta!.. I've had to move it really close to the house or they eat it to the ground...
My daughter has deer come through her yard and they leave her day lilies alone
@@amyhoff1501 maybe its the only flower in bloom right now that meets their palate’s desires?🤔😂
@@gardeningonthewestforkwith8994 well, Teresa, I think you just have high class deer... 🦌🦌🦌
Hi there
Your liriope are exceptional. I have no luck with them. Do they require a special soil? Have you tried growing sage or rosemary herbs near your entrances? The deer might find the smells repellent. Or maybe just chew on them as an aperitif😂
Sharon yes to scented herbs and flowers they dislike for sure in the back yard but this is solution for the front plus a deer repellent spray.
My herbs never chewed on🤞
Liriopi and muscari aren't the same. Is that an autocorrect error. Muscari = grape hyacinth. Lariope is a grass that spreads by runners.
This is liriope muscari a verigated grass with a blue flower clump forming commonly called lily turf yes there is a variety that runs by tubers spicata very invasive. I may have confused many people muscari Armeniacum is grape hyacinth which I have these too🤦♀️Latin names confuse me I’ll be more specific thanks for pointing this out. Perhsps I’ll mention this in next video to clear up the names.