I really appreciate when you call out invasives or make sure to note when something can take over a garden bed. When people plant things without educating themselves or refuse to be educated, it can end up being detrimental to a lot of native species and wildlife and I think it's an important topic of conversation to keep having.
I like the longer form nature of this video with different topics. It's like an American version of gardeners world. Great to watch with my morning coffee.
I had the exact same cart. Best cart EVER...finally busted up after many years of use. For Christmas last yr my husband bought me a replacement one. Not quite the same but close enough.
Getting to see that triple shredded hardwood mulch up close was revelatory. I didn’t fully appreciate how finely ground it was. Very helpful to see what it actually looks like.
I really miss my little low wheelbarrow like yours. It had a good life but I wish they would start making it again. It made doing anything in the garden so much easier
Photinia serrulata was introduced by J. van Lindley's nursery in the early 1920s and 1930s. (from Southern Gardens, Southern Gardening by William Lanier Hunt). Hunt describes it as one of the most handsome broadleaf evergreens in the Southeast. It is, for sure an interesting plant.
Thank you for this, Jim. I have a hard time knowing how to execute tasks around the house and yard, and this helps a great deal. I'm sure 'm not the only one. Thank you sir. What a gorgeous japanese maple! Wowza
I think this may be one of my favorite videos this year. Highlights were all your daffodils! That truly amazing Japanese maple, one of the most beautiful specimens I’ve ever seen. The redbud next to the cherry was great too. I’ve decided I’m going to get some daffodils from colorblends after this. I have late blooming daffodils and they bloom in May.
17:00 lilac wonder tulips come back year after year in my zone 10 garden. Suddenly they’re gone and never come back. I’ve tried planting some again but no sign of growth recently. 😒😒😒 love your neighbors garden videos ❤❤❤
Here in TX 8a we have we have the same plants blooming. One other thing that is beautiful in our garden is the morning sun lighting up the several small weeping Japanese maples that are just leafing out.
Hi Jim, great video! Your yard looks so nice with the new mulch. Have you ever thought about painting the front fence? I think it’d look great white or the color of your new siding.
I own a landscape company in Fairhope Alabama. I was introduced to your channel from your video on Espalier Landscapes. We had the opportunity of bidding on some of their designs. Great work you do, i’m learning everything from you & a couple others. Thanks a ton from Fairhope
Love the progression of this video.. many interesting topics. Beautiful Japanese maple. I’m enjoying seeing the established plants in these older neighborhoods. Raulston Hardy viburnum still looking fantastic here. Double Play Doozie Spireas aren’t blooming yet but their red/green bicolor foliage looks great. When do you usually see new growth on last year’s dahlias?
Jim & Steph! Loved the slow-motion of you, Jim, tossing the mulch. Great video work! Loved the scene where Holly was behind the tulips. Love your neighborhood videos also.
Really enjoyed this video,I always say Fall is my favorite season UNTIL Spring starts.. I love my bulbs 🌷. I too have a little Gorilla cart similar to yours,,it’s my Most used wheelbarrow by far💚💚
I won a Viburnum Winterthur from Pender Nursery at a vendor party one year. It was a sentimental plant that I really enjoyed but the flowers were so fetid that I eventually removed it.
Daffodils are finally blooming along with Bridal Wreath Spirea but the subfreezing temps of the last few nights have finally taken out the last of my Star Magnolia blooms here in Lexington KY. Epimedium, Yoshino cherry, hellebores. On the wild side: Twinleaf, Troutlily and Bloodroot.
That’s exactly what I need to do pot up my dahlia tubers … I got some caladiums too and strawberries 🍓… I hope my dahlias made it outside!!!! I’ve got Iris’s blooming that have not bloomed in 6 years idk what happened lol I’m glad for this pretty mild Winter all my boxwoods are so fluffy I hope this last night of cold everything’s ok it’s like May outside all my plants are leafed out 🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍 I wish I could get a chip drop I need wood paths too
Your neighborhood has so many interesting plants! I agree that this is a good spring for loropetalum -- even my newest one (which had half of its foliage eaten by rabbits in the fall) is blooming!
Sigh….I love a little house ❤ What’s wrong with living in a cozy home? Great oak tree! I have some big old beauties on my ppty (builders left them, hooray!). I fully enjoy watching you work in your gardens….imagining myself getting stuff done out in mine. Jim - HOW are you growing tulips?! I thought voles ate them right up. Everyone I know growing tulips in the Raleigh area grows them as annuals. YOU are a Master. Well done! Thanks for another great video.
I have a beautiful native dogwood that is showing its age and is sending up the sprouts. Is there a good way to propagate it? I tried last year unsuccessfully.
Thanks for sharing the neighborhood trees…makes me feel more confident that when it is a problem all around the town there is really no need to stress as there is not much you can do…fire blight in the chicago area with crab apples and decorative pears is a real issue…Just have to start planning for a new opportunity and maybe get it in the ground soon in anticipation for the sick trees inevitable decline.
I found a great little cart like yours but just the bed tips on hinges, not the whole csrt. Saves my back alot.!!! I got it at Ace hardware, my favaorite place to shop.
In zone 9b central FL my favorite yellow tabs just past their peak bloom (handroanthus chrysotrichus). Really enjoying new blooms on my bougainvillea and orchid trees (bauhinia) as well. Love the tree tours Jim
Jim why do you think our native dogwoods are declining? Maybe you said and I missed it. I’m in Sampson County and have noticed there are almost none in the wooded areas!
I bought two daliahs that were full of blooms and planted them immediately. Last night it got down to 29 degrees and today the blooms are all brown and the foliage is wilted like rotten lettuce. I don't think the tubers were damaged, but will the plants push new foliage and even bloom this year? I'm in Shelby County, TN, zone 8a or 8b - not real sure.
I'm wondering if you've had or are going to have that damaging frost after this video. I saw yesterday we're finally getting warmer in the North west and I saw the south is getting a cold front. I hope none of those beautiful shrubs will get damaged. I would cover that snowball. That would be so sad if it gets hit!😢
I watch you all the time and you've helped me with a lot of questions this one is not about flowers instead I have a shed like the one you're in front of over the years my doors have rotted at the bottom , I see you have mulch in front of yours ,does that help keep water away , I'm having mine replaced what type of wood is your doors made of.thanks . I'm a 75 year old widow and don't have a smart man like you to ask lol
Love your content. Learn so much about gardening through your channel. My question is: When do trim my conifers and transplant my lambs ears. Here in zone 7b/8a Greensboro.
Yes, who wouldn't want to live next door! Can I use the clean compost offered from our city to start my Dahlias? So, in the fall, do you put your leaves on top of mulch, or do you rake away mulch first?
Hey Jim. Thanks for all of the great everything!! During the limbing up of the Hydrangea part what is the plant to the right in the background behind you?
I’m about to plant my first dahlia in the ground. I’ve read not to water it in till I see new growth, should I plan to plant it when there isn’t rain in the forecast?
I live in Arkansas on a slight slope. We get gully washers. The last one was 5 1/2 inches of rain 🌧️ in a few hours. My bark gets displaced where there are rivers of rain. My question is this Jim: Do you get “gully washers” where you are at? Does your mulch wash out?
When a tree does that with the water sprouts should they be removed? I have a declining tree sending them up, and I am torn. I know they aren't good, but lord knows the poor tree needs all the chlorophyll it can get. It is a crabapple with fireblight.
Could you talk about trees with sprouts like the dogwood you showed? What is the difference between a water sprout and a sucker? Is this type of growth always a sign of distress? I had a big trashy-looking shrub in the corner of my property that I limbed up into a tree when we first moved in 5 years ago (or maybe it was a tree all along?). Most years I need to trim off sprouts/suckers/growth to keep the shape. The winter we had that flash freeze polar vortex in December, the following spring the tree did not leaf out very much and had more sprouts than ever. I am wondering if some of the upper limbs died. Anyway, I'm just curious about this whole process and what actions I should take.
Jim, my transplanted native Redbud is growing but no blooms again this year 😢 Does it need something? Moved 3 years ago, nice form, 7-9 feet tall, enough sun.
I really like your mulch. I recently purchased a huge quantity of redwood mulch called “Horse Hair” it has such large pieces of wood that I’m spending more time picking that out of the flower bed then I would like. Can I ask how long you think this is going to take to break down? I don’t want to dig it up and replace it, but I’m definitely gonna go with something very different the next time. I covered the entire yard, which is a little more than a half acre and I am not liking it. It stays put, but I’m not a fan of the look or the stringiness of the layers.
Forecast is calling for 16-20 for a low this week. My daffodils are mostly just budded up with a few blooming. Can I assume they are going to lose their flowers with temperatures that low?
Oh the dogwoods 😢. Have one that is probably 70 to 80 years old. Has not looked good the last couple years. Pretty sure it has died. There are no new buds and every limb I check is dry and brittle.
All my added compost and mulch is making my garden beds overflow, do you ever remove any of the older material or just keep on adding? I've raised the soil level 4-5 inches over the past few years and it's starting to spill over.
hey Jim, i always see you dumping more and more mulch on every year... I know it's great stuff, but dont you find that your garden beds get higher and higher while the surrounding paths/grass stays low? (or do you come through every few years and remove broken down/used mulch)
Jim, I don't have much room indoors, so I have used the winter sowing method for many of my cold-tolerant seeds & most are doing quite well. Now that it's a bit later in the season, can I use the same milk jug sowing method for tomatoes, peppers, & cukes? I know they prefer growing over a heat mat, but I just don't have the space. I'm thinking that, @ worst, they simply won't germinate till it warms up a bit &, @ best, it will work. Am I wrong? Thank you. 😊
You know, mulching is a lot more enjoyable when I'm watching someone else do it instead of me! 😂
😂😂😂
I could solve all my gardening problems by becoming Jim's neighbor!
Well, there is a house for sale!
I was thinking the same thing!
Me too😊
😂
We could share him 😄
I really appreciate when you call out invasives or make sure to note when something can take over a garden bed. When people plant things without educating themselves or refuse to be educated, it can end up being detrimental to a lot of native species and wildlife and I think it's an important topic of conversation to keep having.
I like the longer form nature of this video with different topics. It's like an American version of gardeners world. Great to watch with my morning coffee.
I love how handy Steph's little trolley has turned out to be!
I had the exact same cart. Best cart EVER...finally busted up after many years of use. For Christmas last yr my husband bought me a replacement one. Not quite the same but close enough.
It’s really the perfect size for most jobs in the garden
If your dahlias started making a “stem” in the bag would you leave it on? 3 inches long
@@HandcraftedintheFoothillsmy husband bought me a similar gorilla cart this past Christmas. Have used it once and already love it!
I have my eye on one!
Jim Putnam and coffee first thing in the morning while researching tree preservation codes. Best day ever! ❤
Only a gardener would enjoy watching another gardener work. I love spreading compost type mulch. Long term benefits from a little bit of work.
❤hello everyone, gardeners 😊, Mr Jim putnam and Stephany. Happy gardening.
The curve pathways and berms are very attractive, park like setting.
“Don’t have to make diamonds or anything” 😂
I love seeing an old-fashioned Southern neighborhood.
Endangered species! So charming tho.
Jim's gym..come on by spread 40 yards of mulch..plenty of cardio!
My back hursts just watching 😢.
Sadly THAT activity is not going to happen in MY garden.
I like the overhead view of the yard.
The Camelia sport is really cool! Thanks for sharing!
Holly is a noble beauty. Edit of the year.
When she was laying in those tulips, I was thinking she’s the queen! Lol you have to love Holly.
Azaleas and ornamental pear with pretty flowers.
Thanks guys! 😊
P.S. I miss seeing Stephany in the videos and hearing her thoughts on design.
Aweee thanks.
Getting to see that triple shredded hardwood mulch up close was revelatory. I didn’t fully appreciate how finely ground it was. Very helpful to see what it actually looks like.
I really miss my little low wheelbarrow like yours. It had a good life but I wish they would start making it again. It made doing anything in the garden so much easier
There’s a Gorilla 4 wheel low cart with dumping ability. Maybe this could serve you?
@@joannc147
I actually have the small Gorilla dump cart. I just miss my little wheelbarrow. It served me well for many years.
🤣 you threw the mulch and my eyes instantly felt the itchy feeling 🤣🤣
In zone 9 my stellar ruby magnolia is covered massively with those reddish purple flowers. Stunningly full and beautiful this year.
We know it’s officially gardening season when Jim has his shorts on again! I’m with ya, Jim…but here in Michigan I have to wait a few more weeks.
Oh my word - love the shovel throw towards the camera in slow motion!!! Coffee and Jim in the a.m.♥
Stunning Japanese Maple Tree, Thanks Jim
Hi Jim and Steph! Great video, thank you. I did cringe at the thought of that oak coming out (if it is healthy and safe, of course).
Look at sweet Holly 🥰🐶
Love mulch not rocks !! So natural
Loving the pooch also!!!!
The official Wood Chip Channel now
Photinia serrulata was introduced by J. van Lindley's nursery in the early 1920s and 1930s. (from Southern Gardens, Southern Gardening by William Lanier Hunt). Hunt describes it as one of the most handsome broadleaf evergreens in the Southeast. It is, for sure an interesting plant.
OMGosh--a live & doing well photinia!!! 😯😯😯
2:51 - Those are the legs of a landscaper! :-)
Thank you for this, Jim. I have a hard time knowing how to execute tasks around the house and yard, and this helps a great deal. I'm sure 'm not the only one. Thank you sir. What a gorgeous japanese maple! Wowza
Jim,
I'll take a baker's dozen of Baker's Lilac tulips! ❤
I think this may be one of my favorite videos this year. Highlights were all your daffodils! That truly amazing Japanese maple, one of the most beautiful specimens I’ve ever seen. The redbud next to the cherry was great too.
I’ve decided I’m going to get some daffodils from colorblends after this. I have late blooming daffodils and they bloom in May.
17:00 lilac wonder tulips come back year after year in my zone 10 garden. Suddenly they’re gone and never come back. I’ve tried planting some again but no sign of growth recently. 😒😒😒 love your neighbors garden videos ❤❤❤
5:15 coyote! 😂
1:41 Beautiful!
Jim,
I see my fav daffodil, Mary Poppins, is still blooming in ya'all's yard--mine are, too. 😊
Here in TX 8a we have we have the same plants blooming. One other thing that is beautiful in our garden is the morning sun lighting up the several small weeping Japanese maples that are just leafing out.
1:55 Love the action shot!
Hi Jim, great video! Your yard looks so nice with the new mulch. Have you ever thought about painting the front fence? I think it’d look great white or the color of your new siding.
I love your camellia japonica it is beautiful. I cannot wait to have one & watch it thrive!
That Japanese maple is a stunning specimen 😮 gorgeous
I own a landscape company in Fairhope Alabama. I was introduced to your channel from your video on Espalier Landscapes. We had the opportunity of bidding on some of their designs. Great work you do, i’m learning everything from you & a couple others. Thanks a ton from Fairhope
So ready for the backyard patio update 😊
Love the progression of this video.. many interesting topics. Beautiful Japanese maple. I’m enjoying seeing the established plants in these older neighborhoods. Raulston Hardy viburnum still looking fantastic here. Double Play Doozie Spireas aren’t blooming yet but their red/green bicolor foliage looks great. When do you usually see new growth on last year’s dahlias?
Thanks for showing the still photos of the blooms fully open in the middle of the day
Your Agave ovatifolia looks fantastic Jim! It looks just as healthy as any Agave over here in the Southwest. I love these longer videos!
Jim & Steph! Loved the slow-motion of you, Jim, tossing the mulch. Great video work! Loved the scene where Holly was behind the tulips. Love your neighborhood videos also.
13:42 omg those daffodils are gorgeous!!!! I gotta get some more varieties…
Really enjoyed this video,I always say Fall is my favorite season UNTIL Spring starts.. I love my bulbs 🌷. I too have a little Gorilla cart similar to yours,,it’s my Most used wheelbarrow by far💚💚
Great job. Advil anyone? I like the look of mulch.
If that white oak come down you might want to call dibs on that mulch.... 😊
I won a Viburnum Winterthur from Pender Nursery at a vendor party one year. It was a sentimental plant that I really enjoyed but the flowers were so fetid that I eventually removed it.
Thank you Jim and Stephany. 🪻💚🙃
Daffodils are finally blooming along with Bridal Wreath Spirea but the subfreezing temps of the last few nights have finally taken out the last of my Star Magnolia blooms here in Lexington KY. Epimedium, Yoshino cherry, hellebores. On the wild side: Twinleaf, Troutlily and Bloodroot.
Those cassata daffodils are fabulous. I have never seen those before. Love them!!!
My Holllyhock seedlings are now 11inch plants
That’s exactly what I need to do pot up my dahlia tubers … I got some caladiums too and strawberries 🍓… I hope my dahlias made it outside!!!! I’ve got Iris’s blooming that have not bloomed in 6 years idk what happened lol I’m glad for this pretty mild Winter all my boxwoods are so fluffy I hope this last night of cold everything’s ok it’s like May outside all my plants are leafed out 🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍 I wish I could get a chip drop I need wood paths too
Since its "Bridal Wreath" Spirea, I think that makes it a "Quincess Bride" 😂
I really enjoy watching Jim working in the garden. Be careful with Steph wagon now and how's your new shovel?
Your neighborhood has so many interesting plants! I agree that this is a good spring for loropetalum -- even my newest one (which had half of its foliage eaten by rabbits in the fall) is blooming!
A new shovel! Love my tools too
Sigh….I love a little house ❤ What’s wrong with living in a cozy home? Great oak tree! I have some big old beauties on my ppty (builders left them, hooray!). I fully enjoy watching you work in your gardens….imagining myself getting stuff done out in mine. Jim - HOW are you growing tulips?! I thought voles ate them right up. Everyone I know growing tulips in the Raleigh area grows them as annuals. YOU are a Master. Well done! Thanks for another great video.
Enjoyed this video Jim! Love seeing the neighbors’ landscapes as well. (That little White House that’s for sale is so pretty!)
I have a beautiful native dogwood that is showing its age and is sending up the sprouts. Is there a good way to propagate it? I tried last year unsuccessfully.
Thanks for sharing the neighborhood trees…makes me feel more confident that when it is a problem all around the town there is really no need to stress as there is not much you can do…fire blight in the chicago area with crab apples and decorative pears is a real issue…Just have to start planning for a new opportunity and maybe get it in the ground soon in anticipation for the sick trees inevitable decline.
I found a great little cart like yours but just the bed tips on hinges, not the whole csrt. Saves my back alot.!!! I got it at Ace hardware, my favaorite place to shop.
Did I miss the planting of your Mr. Maple order?
Thanks for the inspiration!
In zone 9b central FL my favorite yellow tabs just past their peak bloom (handroanthus chrysotrichus). Really enjoying new blooms on my bougainvillea and orchid trees (bauhinia) as well. Love the tree tours Jim
Need to break in that new shovel.
Jim why do you think our native dogwoods are declining? Maybe you said and I missed it. I’m in Sampson County and have noticed there are almost none in the wooded areas!
I bought two daliahs that were full of blooms and planted them immediately. Last night it got down to 29 degrees and today the blooms are all brown and the foliage is wilted like rotten lettuce. I don't think the tubers were damaged, but will the plants push new foliage and even bloom this year? I'm in Shelby County, TN, zone 8a or 8b - not real sure.
I'm wondering if you've had or are going to have that damaging frost after this video. I saw yesterday we're finally getting warmer in the North west and I saw the south is getting a cold front. I hope none of those beautiful shrubs will get damaged. I would cover that snowball. That would be so sad if it gets hit!😢
Need every plant paint
Jim, is there anything we can do for our native dogwoods when they show signs of declining to keep them from succumbing?
I watch you all the time and you've helped me with a lot of questions this one is not about flowers instead I have a shed like the one you're in front of over the years my doors have rotted at the bottom , I see you have mulch in front of yours ,does that help keep water away , I'm having mine replaced what type of wood is your doors made of.thanks . I'm a 75 year old widow and don't have a smart man like you to ask lol
Love your content. Learn so much about gardening through your channel. My question is: When do trim my conifers and transplant my lambs ears. Here in zone 7b/8a Greensboro.
Thanks!
Thank you so much!
Yes, who wouldn't want to live next door! Can I use the clean compost offered from our city to start my Dahlias? So, in the fall, do you put your leaves on top of mulch, or do you rake away mulch first?
Hey Jim. Thanks for all of the great everything!! During the limbing up of the Hydrangea part what is the plant to the right in the background behind you?
I’m about to plant my first dahlia in the ground. I’ve read not to water it in till I see new growth, should I plan to plant it when there isn’t rain in the forecast?
I live in Arkansas on a slight slope. We get gully washers. The last one was 5 1/2 inches of rain 🌧️ in a few hours. My bark gets displaced where there are rivers of rain. My question is this Jim: Do you get “gully washers” where you are at? Does your mulch wash out?
When a tree does that with the water sprouts should they be removed? I have a declining tree sending them up, and I am torn. I know they aren't good, but lord knows the poor tree needs all the chlorophyll it can get. It is a crabapple with fireblight.
Could you talk about trees with sprouts like the dogwood you showed? What is the difference between a water sprout and a sucker? Is this type of growth always a sign of distress? I had a big trashy-looking shrub in the corner of my property that I limbed up into a tree when we first moved in 5 years ago (or maybe it was a tree all along?). Most years I need to trim off sprouts/suckers/growth to keep the shape. The winter we had that flash freeze polar vortex in December, the following spring the tree did not leaf out very much and had more sprouts than ever. I am wondering if some of the upper limbs died. Anyway, I'm just curious about this whole process and what actions I should take.
I adore watching no Dalia for me. Big hell.😊
My triple-shredded looks like single shredded compared to that.
Jim, my transplanted native Redbud is growing but no blooms again this year 😢
Does it need something? Moved 3 years ago, nice form, 7-9 feet tall, enough sun.
I really like your mulch. I recently purchased a huge quantity of redwood mulch called “Horse Hair” it has such large pieces of wood that I’m spending more time picking that out of the flower bed then I would like. Can I ask how long you think this is going to take to break down? I don’t want to dig it up and replace it, but I’m definitely gonna go with something very different the next time. I covered the entire yard, which is a little more than a half acre and I am not liking it. It stays put, but I’m not a fan of the look or the stringiness of the layers.
Forecast is calling for 16-20 for a low this week. My daffodils are mostly just budded up with a few blooming. Can I assume they are going to lose their flowers with temperatures that low?
It's 24 degrees here today this morning.... Blah.
I planted Dahlia seedlings and now I have Dahlia plants in pots in the house. They are not liking it inside when can I put them outside?
If he didn’t show us, would we believe he did it all? 😂😂😂
Oh the dogwoods 😢. Have one that is probably 70 to 80 years old. Has not looked good the last couple years. Pretty sure it has died. There are no new buds and every limb I check is dry and brittle.
All my added compost and mulch is making my garden beds overflow, do you ever remove any of the older material or just keep on adding? I've raised the soil level 4-5 inches over the past few years and it's starting to spill over.
hey Jim, i always see you dumping more and more mulch on every year... I know it's great stuff, but dont you find that your garden beds get higher and higher while the surrounding paths/grass stays low? (or do you come through every few years and remove broken down/used mulch)
Jim,
I don't have much room indoors, so I have used the winter sowing method for many of my cold-tolerant seeds & most are doing quite well.
Now that it's a bit later in the season, can I use the same milk jug sowing method for tomatoes, peppers, & cukes? I know they prefer growing over a heat mat, but I just don't have the space. I'm thinking that, @ worst, they simply won't germinate till it warms up a bit &, @ best, it will work. Am I wrong?
Thank you. 😊
Yes you can!
1:57 My eyes!! Why?!? WHY?!?! I got mulch in my mouth, my nose, my ears, MY EYES!!!!