Our Japanese Lilac literally hits the dust. |
We paid to have the other two trunks of the tree removed from the front garden, and yesterday a company came to grind out the stump, so today we went tree shopping.
We tried a nursery new to us in town, and we came away with not one, but two, ornamental trees for the yard. (That's what happens when a person cannot make up his or her mind as to which tree to choose!)
The tag shows the Limelight blooms. |
The Limelight Hydrangea will soon be in full bloom. |
For the front garden, to replace the Japanese lilac, we purchased a Limelight Hydrangea tree. This tree is just starting to bloom, and it is supposed to hold its blooms into the fall. The blooms start as jade green flowers that turn to pink and then to burgundy as the seasons change to fall. The blooms will remain a rust color throughout the winter and can be trimmed off in the spring. The tree will only get to be about 8 feet high, so it will be a pretty, compact tree for our front garden.
A promise of what the tree will look like when it is full grown. |
Right now, the tree has a long way to grow! |
The second tree we chose is a purple Dwarf Korean Lilac tree. Years ago we had a small tree in the back yard that fell onto our back porch during a straight-line wind incident. Ironically, when we chose where to plant this tree, Christopher dug down a few inches and came upon the rotten remains of that long-ago tree. It seems our eye always picks out the same place for trees in the back yard.
This tree, too, is small and colorful. It will get to be about 8 feet tall and will bloom in the early spring. The nursery owner said that it is very easy to prune, so we can keep it in whatever shape we wish. We can't wait to see it in bloom next year.
Very slowly we are getting our landscape into shape. We need tons of dirt and sod yet, but the trees are a start to making the landscape look good again.
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