woodland gardens

Hemiboea cavaleri

Not so Cavalier

We first posted an image of Hemiboea cavaleriei last year, but wanted to share an update image, now that our clump is more established. What an amazing show for the October and November woodland garden, until a frost arrives. Our plant gets a couple of hours or morning sun, then shade in the afternoon, where

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Euonymus oxyphyllus

A Sharp Heart’s a Bustin

The deciduous Korean spindle tree has been looking quite sharp for the last month. Native to Japan and Korea, Euonymus oxyphyllus is a small tree, usually to only 8′ tall in cultivation, that brightens the fall garden with its showy fruit. Reportedly, it can reach 25′ with great age, but that certainly wouldn’t be in

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Begonia grandis 'Alba'

Grand Begonia

Looking fabulous in the woodland garden as August gives way to September is the Chinese Begonia grandis ‘Alba’. We never have enough plants that will flower in the summer/fall woodland garden, so I can’t imagine a garden without cold hardy begonias. The sprays of white flowers and red backed leaves make B. grandis ‘Alba’ a

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Amorphophallus konjac JLBG22-040

Cognac or Konjac – We’ll take the Latter

For those who have followed us for a while, you know we have a fascination for tuberous aroids, particularly those in the genus, Amorphophallus. We’ve spent quite a bit of time making seed selections as well as hybrids, often using the super winter hardy Amorphophallus as a parent. So far, we have 14 species that

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Lysionotus wilsonii

Lovely Lysionotus

Recently flowering in the woodland garden at JLBG is another hardy gesneriad, the Chinese Lysionotus wilsonii. This gems hails from 2,000-6,000′ elevation in China’s Yunnan and Sichuan province, where it’s found in woodland valleys. That’s near the minimum elevational range at which we’d expect winter hardiness in Zone 7b/8a, so we are thrilled that it

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Polystichum acrostichoides from Louisiana

All I want for Christmas is a new Christmas Fern

I’ve spent the last 60+ years tromping through woodlands across the Eastern US, from Maine to Florida, and west to Texas, and have looked at more Christmas ferns (Polystichum acrostichoides) than you can imagine. Being a diversity freak, I am always looking for odd forms, which are surprisingly rare for this species. I could count

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Polygonatum stenophyllum

Narrow-leaved Solomon’s Seal

We have a ridiculously large collection of Solomon’s Seal species and cultivars from around the world, and flowering now is one of our many favorites, Polygonatum stenophyllum, whose epithet means narrow leaves and hails from Korea into the Russian Far East. This belongs to the group of whorled-leaf species, where the leaves are attached all

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Erythronium mesochorum

Fishing for Trout Lilies

Flowering this week are an array of winter flowering trout lilies of the genus Erythronium, a plant I’ve admired since being a young child, and seeing it grow naturally near our Raleigh, NC home. Erythronium is a genus of only 33 species, spread throughout the Northern Hemisphere. While many of the cold climate species won’t

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