Blooms Of June 2025


 

Leucanthemums looking good 

 

Where the Leucanthemums edge paths they are particularly effective, lighting the paths without lights.

Geranium 'Rozanne' and dwarf Lantana make perfect companions, with blue Fescue and Hemerocallis giving foliage contrast:

This variety bought mail order has a slightly different look from a standard dwarf variety.  Each flower has multiple layers of rays, plumping them:

 A taller type has fringed, feathery rays:

New Clematis 'Ramona' has flowered

 'Perle d'Azur is loosing it's battle for dominance to table grape 'Suffolk Red', but what a beautiful loser:

 The Sweet Peas are on their way out for the summer, as  tomatoes arrive.  That's June.

 A little surprise, however: a couple of volunteer seedlings I moved months ago to somewhat shady spots are just now blooming. What fun!

 Peak Trachelospermum, still.  We've had decent June Gloom this year, enough to keep flowers longer.

'Chateau de Versailles' (Hibiscus syriacus 'Minsyble9') impulse-bought last year, still potted (though now in a much bigger pot) is looking good.  It's been in part shade and seems less stressed:
I pinched and pinched the Fuchsias this year, delaying flowers but creating bushier plants.  Now, time for the flowers:
Warmer soil means the Pentas that looked miserable since mid winter look lovely again:
Another joyful plant surprise:  the hybrid Callas came back.  I thought they had died over the winter.  How good it is to be wrong: 
'Golden Celebration':
Dwarf Myrtle, Myrtus communis, blooming for the first time.  Purchased three of them as tiny rooted cuttings.  One survived.  Bumble and Carpenter bees particularly love the flowers:
I keep putting off re-doing the woolly bag planter because the Pelargoniums in it keep flowering.  Great excuse!
All the Cuphea 'Vermillionaire' are outgrowing their spaces and blooming like mad, feeding the hummers:
Agapanthus and Hydrangea

Hemerocallis 'Gold District' and rose
Abutilon and Hydrangea, 'David's Choice' and 'Shooting Stars':
'Indigo Spires':
'Mini Penny':
'Firefighter':
'Francis Meilland':

 'The Ambridge Rose':
 
Lavender 'Provence', another plant very popular with bees:

Iochroma in full height, hummer food:

Out front, 'Tango' Leucospermum has a whole new round of flowers and new growth.  No, I don't know why.

'Yellow Bird' was late this year, unlike most of the rest of the garden, which was a bit early.  Still flowering:

Little Crassula pubescens at 'Yellow Bird's base:
Grevillea 'Superb' is, as usual, superb:
Brilliant crimson Sprekelia dramatic with black Aeoniums:
The big-box home improvement store Leucospermum was late flowering too.  Flowers are old but still look good:
'Molineux' is the Grevillea 'Superb' of Austin roses.  Nearly as quick to repeat as 'Iceberg'.  Third round of flowers since March:
Where did those white Gladiolas come from?  There were purple ones there at one time.  
Centaurea ragusina:
Salvia 'Waverly' with Agapanthus 'Indigo Spires':
Hemerocallis 'Victorian Lace':
Lobelia erinus with Agapanthus 'Atomic Bloom':
The Hydrangea and Hellebore bed in late afternoon sun.  Eventually to be more shaded by the Oak, but not yet:
Geum 'Totally Tangerine' flowered a little better this year, though still not the flower juggernaut it is in colder climates:
Blooms of June 2025

 What's fading or arriving, or continuing, in your garden?

Comments

  1. Your photos are absolutely stunning! Thank you so much for sharing, and I really appreciate that you have named the flowers as well. I live in a 6th floor apartment and do not have a garden, but I do love gardens and am so happy to see this post!

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    1. Happy you found the post of interest--thank you! I enjoyed your blog-- it gives me the sense of reflecting what must be your lovely, optimistic personality.

      We need some optimism here in the US these days, sigh. I know I'm very lucky to have a garden and work to never forget that.

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  2. Thank you for solving a mystery for me. I had planted a clematis months ago and forgot to record it and just realized that it is 'Ramona' after seeing your photo. The Iochroma! I tried that with no success. Do fuchsias do well for you? I would think it would be too warm for them in California.

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    1. 'Ramona' is a pretty one--hoping it does well. Iochroma I would think your winters would be rough for it.

      Fuchsias do great in Sunset 24 here, within a mile or two of the ocean. I'm a little bit too far inland in Sunset 23 for them to be really good. Where I grew up my parents house was in Sunset 24 and we had gorgeous Fuchsias--a major garden memory of my childhood. So I try--without the same success.

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  3. Such abundance, HB! Your experience with the while gladiolas is interesting as I'd swear the same thing happened with the appearance of a single white flower in an area I'd swear only had purple glads previously - and I can't recall ever growing white glads here! My Leucospermums are gradually letting go and, to my disappointment, after a long wait for them to bloom, my sweet peas are suddenly in decline. Temperatures soaring into the mid-80s this weekend haven't helped. In contrast, the Leucanthemums and Agapanthus have responded well to the heat.

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    1. Yes I had purple Glads with little white streaks in them--no idea where those white ones came from. I like the big spike Glads put up. I don't like the forest of little bulb-ettes they tend to produce--hard to get rid of them and they do nothing but look weedy. Maybe I'll try growing them in pots sunk into the ground--I could pull the pot after bloom and get all those little bulb-ettes...

      Sweet peas completely toasted today, it was 88 at least here today. When the sun went behind the hill and put the garden into shade I went out and pulled a bunch. Crispy brown. Missing the June Gloom already!

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  4. That 'Tango' Leucospermum is stunning! It looks like a very lush period in your garden, although your garden is always very impressive. All your combinations of plants are amazing, too, like the Gladiolas with the Daylilies, Roses, Geraniums, and other plants. Very nice!

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    1. I have the May-Gray/June-Gloom spell we've had to thank---it keeps these two months cooler and with higher humidity--makes the plants happy. 'Tango' was looking somewhat sad this past fall--a joy to see it with the new growth, looking healthy again. Nothing I did--'Tango' did it.

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  5. Your garden is looking radiant. So far ahead of where we are. I am not much of a daylily fan but Victorian Lace is stunning. Finally sourced Totally Tangerine geum so looking forward to seeing it bloom. We are in peony and iris season now so very pretty.

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    1. Mixed feelings about daylilys, but they can be good. VL is good.

      I'm not getting lavish bloom from 'Totally Tangerine', though it has improved. I am wondering if a foliage-killing frost gets winter sun to the crown of plant and enables more blooms during the growing season? Was thinking of buzzing off the foliage in January to try to simulate that, to see what happens...

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  6. So beautiful, every where you look. 'Perle d'Azur is a loser at the top of his game! The Tango Leucospermum, I need one.

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    1. I recommend 'Tango'. Longest blooming season of the Leucospermums I've tried.

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  7. So very lush and lovely! Your garden wears June well.

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