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perennial borders

One of the myths of gardening is that once you planted a perennial border it is set in stone and it will come back, year after year, exactly the same. That is not true at all, I look through pictures of my garden through the last few seasons and it is almost unrecognizable from one year to the next.

Just because a plant is labeled perennial it doesn’t mean it will be there forever. Some, like delphiniums and columbines, will only live four or five years, even in ideal conditions, while others, like hostas, garden phlox, hellebores and cone flowers will be with you for decades.

It is true that the main features, the ‘bones’ of the garden, stay the same, maybe an old rose bush, a couple of feature plants or a resilient ground cover, but every year a different bunch dominates the landscape, for reasons known only to them: one year is the violets, one year is nothing but bugle weed and blue eyed Mary, one year is hostas. Last fall the toad lily outperformed the sedums, and that’s a tall order.

You are looking at a picture from the year of grape hyacinths; there have been a few years, actually, I don’t know what happened to them, I assume they died of old age.

I love grape hyacinths and I replaced the defunct batch, but the new ones don’t seem to thrive, at least they didn’t last year. I’m hopeful they’ll pick up again if the weather suits their tastes this spring, I really miss them.

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