What OUTDOOR PLANTS Should We Get? Tioga Gardens - Ep 015

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024

Комментарии • 74

  • @zzqiw
    @zzqiw 3 года назад +56

    It's nice that Sander is now interacting and asking some 'dumb' questions! Feels like he is the representative of us, the 'dumb' viewer haha

    • @anastasiahedstrom6979
      @anastasiahedstrom6979 3 года назад

      Is he her hubby

    • @elmaelmar2761
      @elmaelmar2761 2 года назад +1

      @@anastasiahedstrom6979 I don’t think she is married but I would love to know if she is just business partners with Sanders..

  • @veronicagood6
    @veronicagood6 3 года назад +28

    The voice Summer does when she talks to plants and animals is my favorite thing 😂

  • @brianandtamiolson2330
    @brianandtamiolson2330 3 года назад +16

    What a nice tour. I think Sander is adorable. The relationship between you two is very refreshing.

  • @franz4486
    @franz4486 3 года назад +23

    Sander turning the camera and looking at us felt like he broke the 4th wall. Like he wasn't supposed to do that. LOL

  • @alid4789
    @alid4789 3 года назад +16

    Shoutout to Sander for asking my questions for me! Love this tour. Trees are so calming 😌

  • @musicalmarion
    @musicalmarion 3 года назад +7

    "Why is this tree red and this one green?" 😅
    Great video and a lovely tour, thank you Summer!

  • @Yoliplanting
    @Yoliplanting 3 года назад +13

    Me: Oh wow how beautiful all this color!
    Summer: Nice, not my taste.
    🤣🤣🤣

  • @arttreestick7434
    @arttreestick7434 2 года назад

    Roses are also eaten by squirrels, they love the rose-hips. It was fun watching some newbies smelling all the rose-buds last year. So cute!🥰🐿️🥀🌹

  • @bluektq
    @bluektq 3 года назад +8

    Sander should interact more on the future videos, just like in this video! 👍🏻

  • @JonGilGonefishing
    @JonGilGonefishing 3 года назад +1

    I love watching someone in their element. When she speaks it’s worth everyone shutting up.

  • @thenickneagle
    @thenickneagle 3 года назад +3

    Can't wait to see how you deck out the property, going to be so exciting!

  • @Apero1Spritz
    @Apero1Spritz 3 года назад +3

    I live in a place where everything stays green pretty much throughout the year and it is interesting to see how the seasons change in the videos.

  • @suburbanhomestead
    @suburbanhomestead 3 года назад +2

    This reminded me to try to grow lupines. I wonder if groundhogs eat them though, as they do hollyhocks

  • @curtholgate1097
    @curtholgate1097 3 года назад +3

    I love their silly voices they do. really entertaining

  • @ameliagraham92
    @ameliagraham92 3 года назад +1

    Loved this video. The comradery between you and Sander as you explored the nursery and grounds was fun. I did experience some season confusion when you showed the red bud, because mine is red right now, but then I reminded myself that you often "bank" videos for release later. Since the Mums weren't blooming yet I am thinking this was last August? Well thanks for the tour. We have been on our 6 acres for almost 2 months now and are excited to see what's budding and blooming. We cant wait to do more with the landscape. Best of luck to you all.

  • @richpanguito5659
    @richpanguito5659 3 года назад +2

    Your content is always relaxing and beautiful.💚

  • @sedumzz3289
    @sedumzz3289 3 года назад +1

    I don't have cannas because of the japanese beetles. My home has a lot of them, and when I was little I planted one. I freaked out because there were SO MANY of them breeding.
    I highly reccomend Baptisia. Not only does it help fix the soil (You can plant more nitrogen-loving plants with it). It also has relatively large seedpods which are fun to look at during winter. Sometimes bugs will live inside them!!
    If you want a rock garden, I also reccomend sempervivum. They are very beautiful and form large or small colonies and are pretty much Echeveria but really really hardy. There are many different leaf shapes and colors. They are monocarpic though, and their flowers are pretty showy. They bloom usually after four years.
    Depending on your zone, you can also try Phedimus ( 16:24 ), specifically P. spurius, as it is not as hardy as other sedums or phedimus. P. spurius will die back violently in zone 6b/7a (where I am, virginia). The stem should stay alive and red buds will form and it should recover. (Split from sedum, along with hylotelephenium (the stuff that goes dormant and dies back every year, such as the plant at 16:28 ), or petrosedum (pointy leaves, such as what was previously sedum angelina).
    Saxifrages are also good, for hanging baskets or crevice gardens. They pair well with Armeria maritima, specifically 'rubrifolia'.
    I hope you find this helpful, I can't wait to see what you do with your gardens!!

  • @jerrysgarden6579
    @jerrysgarden6579 3 года назад +1

    Ohh fantastic tour, so informative too 😍👍 humping Japanese Beatles made me laugh 😂

  • @suburbanhomestead
    @suburbanhomestead 3 года назад +1

    I suppose you prefer more of a reticulated “impressionistic” color field instead of the monoblocks in garden. I also think that’s more interesting. You would probably like the Mary Livingstone Ripley Garden next to the hirshhorn museum in dc. It is a small alley garden, but they do great plant combos there. It is my favorite spot In August-September

  • @morningsideplants4752
    @morningsideplants4752 3 года назад +1

    Love this soo much. We put paw paw, redbud, & Japanese Maple all in our tiny front yard last summer ❤️♥️❤️

  • @barbll000
    @barbll000 2 года назад

    I love touring garden centers. The Eastern Red Bud is my favourite tree, next to the super maple. By the way, those pea-like seed pods are edible. My tree originally came as a seedling from my neighbour and I have given many seedlings away as well. It's very easy to start from seed.

  • @anastasiahedstrom6979
    @anastasiahedstrom6979 3 года назад

    Excited for what is yet to come

  • @thunder402
    @thunder402 3 года назад +1

    Totally enjoyed seeing all the plants and you describing them. Thank you for taking time walking around. A beautiful place. Can not wait to start planting all the things.

  • @templeartsbonsai
    @templeartsbonsai 3 года назад +1

    Thanks guys, really enjoyed the video.
    The Sciadopitys verticallata is a new one on me, I will be looking out for those. Also, I have been propagating the Salix Integra Hakuro Nishiki myself this Spring..lovely tree.
    Loving the channel/project !

  • @JohnDoe_88
    @JohnDoe_88 3 года назад

    I got tons of trees and bushes this year... All a collection of different edibles. I put down a full row of sweet cherries to be ornamental. Fruiting plants can absolutely be ornamental on the landscape as well

  • @davidhimself9556
    @davidhimself9556 3 года назад +1

    I REALLY want a bigger garden!

  • @myapopova
    @myapopova 3 года назад

    Lol our tastes are very similar. Thanks for the tips on aesthetics of planting, they will come in handy for me this spring/summer! :)

  • @botanyboy5454
    @botanyboy5454 3 года назад

    This for me was fun to watch you browse ? I was once in the Garden Center Business 10 years Live Nursery Specialist Big Box store, 2 years Perennial Manager IGC and 2 years Nursery Manager IGC. When you spoke of the oak I loved it and wondered if you ever heard of Doug Tallamy? Then the Butterfly bush debate ! Go native alternatives ! Butterfly bush spreads like a weed ! Next, you mentioned perennial don't forget what plant pyrethrin comes from so you can make your own bug spray ? Roses, choose the species for as a substitute to vitamin c in oranges maybe. Last thought when choosing cultivars of natives. Do they offer the same nutrient density as the species ? Sort of analogous to the poor nutrient density of produce at a grocery store ? These are just all pondering thoughts for a discussion. Personally, Natives are the "right" thing to do ! I don't like mums either. They remind me of an old lady with curlers on the head. Kinda like Vicki Lawrence from Mama's family lol

  • @cherylanderson3340
    @cherylanderson3340 3 года назад

    You have some shrubs I'd love to have & had meant to include - like the Red Twig Dogwood & WInterberry Holly, so sure hope you're keeping them both. I'd also like to recommend a few I had chosen for their reasonable sizes, small berries, & healthy foliage, which i've been enjoying for many years, problem free.
    One is the Ilex Glabra Inkberry Holly, another is the large, arching Cotoneaster - which is covered with tiny spring blooms that the hummingbirds favor. Then too, the deep brownish maroon leaved Diablo Ninebark, ( or any type of Ninebark), & maybe my favorite tree, my Sargent Crabapple. It's still small, @ maybe 10' after over 10 years. It's well shaped, & in spring, it's a profuse bloomer, with very fragrant, pink tinged apple blossoms. It later produces small red, berry sized fruit which the birds pick clean every year.
    My Rhododendron, Azaleas & Mountain Laurel have been beautiful & trouble free for decades now too, & the bees love them all. The one you showed at the garden center referred to on screen as Autumn Joy Sedum was not a sedum, if you look at the foliage & stems again, but the bees seem to like it. I'd get some of those if I can find out what that was - & some of those Viburnum, & at least 3 Hydrangea! Some bloom on new wood, so can be pruned in the spring, while others, which bloom on old wood, must not be cut until after they bloom.. I have a Lacecap & a blue Mophead type.
    Years ago, a friend of a friend offered me some saplings of her Cornus Kousa. I helped her dig them out from a thicket of them along her border. I wish I'd paid attention to this fact that they will create a thicket. So I would like to warn you against buying these trees. Many of my plant selections have been chosen to include feeding bees, butterflies, other beneficials & birds. I'd thought the birds would eat the berries but haven't seen them do, likely b/c they are not natives. I have seen desperately hungry squirrels eating them, even while still green, & even a baby raccoon, climbing up, reaching out & eating the ripened fruit, but most of them end up rotting on the ground.
    As for them being tinged with red, the trees do turn a deep, gorgeous wine red color in the fall. I do like the shrub types better though., & have seen a few of those shrubs in one of our local parks with a pond that encourages wildlife including Herons & the occasional swans, which has only spare, well chosen plantings - no annuals in pots, manicured borders or that sort of thing.
    I've had injuries which prevented me from my beloved favorite thing, gardening, so now I have maybe 50 Kousa saplings to dig up. I can barely stand & still have a torn shoulder, so sure wish I hadn't put them in my garden. They took over & many lovely plants I had there are gone now due to them propagating all over the bed. There are 2 good sized saplings I'm OK with that showed up outside of the beds, as I do like the creamy white bracts that are so profuse on a healthy tree.
    The original mother tree contracted a disease which these trees get these days. It stopped blooming a couple years ago & I'd noticed that the bark was peeling off. At 1st I thought that was just what they do as they age but, combined with the lack of blooms as an indicator of possible problems, in addition to the look of the bark, I looked it up, & learned that the peeling bark is a symptom of this disease. So now I have to buy a pole pruner & a chain saw to take the mother tree down, & then get rid of it somehow.

  • @BoldlyGrowHomestead
    @BoldlyGrowHomestead 3 года назад

    Great video. I always get excited when people mention pawpaws. Will be one of the first things I plant when I get property.

  • @rickyt3961
    @rickyt3961 3 года назад

    great tour! ... maples, the weeping spruce, and grasses are my suggestions 😉 look forward to see how you landscape your property 👍🏾😃

  • @TheTaoofEternalWar
    @TheTaoofEternalWar 3 года назад

    They have really beautiful Summers in upstate New York.

  • @anastasiawak894
    @anastasiawak894 3 года назад

    Good timing for this video, I’m looking for trees for my house. Have some good ideas..now I’m excited for my next nursery trip!

  • @mariaguevara6461
    @mariaguevara6461 3 года назад

    Nice team😉, he is learning quickly!

  • @josieblanco4587
    @josieblanco4587 3 года назад

    Beautiful flowers thanks for update vlog

  • @JonGilGonefishing
    @JonGilGonefishing 3 года назад

    I hope you creat some type of French style garden. Mixture of flowering plants. Very excited for this channel. So inspiring. Living in manhattan this is the transition I want.

  • @cefcat5733
    @cefcat5733 3 года назад

    Oh that's a great garden display! Will you try to stick to plants native to New York for Flockland and why? (besides the obvious reasons of them thriving good there and fitting in with other creatures) Aren't you tempted to get a few exotic looking trees and plants? That was a wonderful outting. Thanks.

  • @janemuuse4001
    @janemuuse4001 3 года назад

    Great video. That’s close to our area. If I can’t go to ny botanical garden in the Bronx, I just go to Tioga garden. Ur so smart with plants identification summer and sander ask good questions. Welcome to the area. Lmk if u need Filipino food, I will cook n deliver free. Great vlog

  • @SHARONSHORTOrchidsandGarden
    @SHARONSHORTOrchidsandGarden 3 года назад

    That was really, really cool!! Thanks,

  • @benlcr7784
    @benlcr7784 3 года назад

    Oooo iv seen that in summer raynes channel... its gorgeous

  • @mainemisrin
    @mainemisrin 3 года назад

    I need dat Sander’s glasses!!!!!!

  • @CR-di1lg
    @CR-di1lg 2 года назад

    With a big project like you are getting into I would do all I could to choose plants that do not need watering or a least consider how you would avoid having to water too much also with so much lack of shade you have.

  • @aaronrdomanais
    @aaronrdomanais 3 года назад

    Summer, I want another book please lol Nobody could introduce me to these better than you do

  • @kathlynblack3517
    @kathlynblack3517 2 года назад

    You can take those Chrysanthemums and divide them and put them in the ground. If not trimmed, they will begin to flop over and grow along the ground. The leaves will be bigger also, if untrimmed. The mounds you see at the store, have been meticulously trimmed back, hair cut after hair cut, to tighten the mounds, reduce the size of the leaves, and produce a tight mound of solid blooms. I guess it's an old tradition of keeping them in control. I let mine go, in my garden. I don't trim them back. Their stems have become wavy and sprawl across the bed, under and around the other flowers and plants. They produce big dark green leaves in rosettes facing up, along the stems. They are actually becoming a good ground cover.

  • @cherylanderson3340
    @cherylanderson3340 3 года назад

    Oh wow - that's a Monarch Butterfly on that Buddleia! They're endangered as I'm sure you know.

  • @michaelworley7517
    @michaelworley7517 3 года назад

    Hey love the teal color themed but also consider building a treehouse over just a house that tears down the forest. Trees should be building blocks no tearing blocks. It can be funky and swirlyio just needs a bit of adjusting imagination and blueprinting and there we go and inventive you might get more followers because your not just helping humanity but your helping the World. We are not only making channels grow but It inspire others to experiment and RUclips Channels will grow when we choose to help the world 2 ways in one stone. Building a tree house and putting gardens in it. It can maybe make new species

  • @jeanneamato8278
    @jeanneamato8278 3 года назад +3

    I’ve noticed that deer tend to go more for cultivated varieties and leave natives alone.

  • @Neilhuny
    @Neilhuny 3 года назад

    Trust Summer to find mini Aliens to play with AND that match her nail varnish! 9:04 #KeepingItReal
    Plus, her immense knowledge never fails to impress me

  • @jaketheperson8495
    @jaketheperson8495 3 года назад

    You can add
    Bouganvilleas
    Mulberries
    Nordfolk Pines
    I dont know any winter-surviving trees.😅

  • @jaketheperson8495
    @jaketheperson8495 3 года назад

    I have so much suggestions!!

  • @42apprentice
    @42apprentice 3 года назад

    I wondered if the recent visits to the edible garden had changed your mind about the merits of allowing some miscanthus grass to survive, given the role they play for him in sheltering wild birds etc?

  • @robertpetkus948
    @robertpetkus948 3 года назад

    Will your property be a money generator? Watching a different video of yours (NY dome nursery) screamed (to me) sell him plants you raise on property and grow the exotics / house plants he's referring to in your green house or home.

  • @archasvityagi9997
    @archasvityagi9997 3 года назад

    Anthers are interesting in Monarda

  • @sendawa_channel
    @sendawa_channel 3 года назад

    ❤️❤️

  • @gcxred4kat9
    @gcxred4kat9 3 года назад

    Go native!!! Butterfly bush is invasive. Plant milkweed!

  • @tannenbaumgirl3100
    @tannenbaumgirl3100 3 года назад

    Look on the tags to what planting zone those umbrella pines are rated....just because they grow in Japan doesn't mean they will grow in your zone. I think they are rated for zone 6 and warmer... do not trust the nursery, they will sell it even if it doesn't fit your zone. Type your zip code into the USDA map to verify.

  • @Erki750
    @Erki750 3 года назад

    💚

  • @কংকণবুঢ়াগোহাঁই

    いい

  • @thepotanist1879
    @thepotanist1879 3 года назад

    isn't it crazy how we can grow salvia with no problem but the second its cannabis its a problem. Insane!

  • @rondihoover5605
    @rondihoover5605 3 года назад

    Where are you? How can all that be blooming already?

  • @archasvityagi9997
    @archasvityagi9997 3 года назад

    Hi, why a hybrid not considered as a species

  • @CariMachet
    @CariMachet 2 года назад

    Paw paw pollination is done by flies

  • @jpallen719
    @jpallen719 3 года назад

    Deer will decimate giant greens, but overall pretty hearty and disease resistant.

  • @barryauguste9734
    @barryauguste9734 2 года назад

    Rhodedendrums are non-native plants too - why are you choosing them?
    Brought back from asia for victorian gardens and with no natural predators, they are literally wiping out the native species back in England. Large-scale removal of rhodadendrums by the authorities has been on-going for over a decade now.

  • @glumGlumm
    @glumGlumm 3 года назад

    Adding that video filter kind off turn off.i skip almost at the end to see if you change the filter but it looks like you didn’t.

  • @bettea360
    @bettea360 3 года назад

    Please plant natives 🙏

  • @josieblanco4587
    @josieblanco4587 3 года назад

    Look like guava leaf

  • @Pops1970
    @Pops1970 3 года назад

    Just an FYI...it is illegal to drive with earbuds in every state in the Union. Just sayin