At least I won't have to water

We had a massive thunderstorm yesterday -- according to the Weather Network, Scarborough received 90 mm of rain! Since only 3-5 mm had been predicted, this was a substantial upgrade. We badly needed it, but parts of the garden are looking a little beat up. This sweet potato vine for instance:


Poor thing! And it was doing so well.


I think it got ripped up by water pouring off a neighbour's eavestrough. It wasn't necessarily clogged -- there was just so much water that it had nowhere to go.

The last shall be first

The container gardening course is over and the heat is on, literally. We have a projected high of 36 C today. The downside to container gardening - the only one, as far as I can tell - is the need for constant watering. The fact that my containers are in part-shade helps a bit. Most of my plants seem quite happy in our current blistering, drought-like conditions. Some of them droop mid-day but perk up again later.

My least favourite container has become my most. The half-barrel I planted somewhat dutifully, because it was there, has turned out to be the container I am happiest with. I love to look at it.


When I first planted it, it looked like this:


(And before that, like this:)


So you can see it's filled in quite a bit. I switched out the towering Miscanthus giganteus for purpurescens. It won't grow as tall but promises a beautiful purple colour come fall.

I've come to see why people love tuberous begonia -- it continues to pump out the most spectacular flashy red flowers. I don't pick off the male flowers like some people do -- if it's in bloom, it's all good to me. I'm not sure it shows in the pictures, but the plants seem to spiral downwards in a clockwise direction, from the tallest (the grasses) to the shortest (the potato vine).

Also, the colours complement the container I planted when our class went on a field trip to Bill's Garden Centre. I can assure you this happened entirely by accident.


I love the orange-pink undersides of the coleus leaves.