


Fall Camellias are peaking now at the Arboretum; if you make time for an hour's walk through the collection this weekend, you'll be glad you did. These are three of Dr. Ackerman's hybrids. Good and hardy in USDA Zone 7!
One in Adelphi, Maryland, one in Wildwood, Florida, one at the US National Arboretum with a grandfatherly interest in many more around the DC area (unless noted, pictures are taken the day of post)



Somehow I missed this tree a couple of years ago when I informally cataloged specimen trees at the Arboretum. Not only is this one a beautiful tree, it lives just across the road from the Metasequoia triangle so it's easily appreciated.
This is one of those plants that we've been conditioned to sneer at, to dismiss condescendingly as something the riffraff of the red ! states might plant around their trailers. Still, when I saw it growing amongst the more prestigious Salvias (GrayC grows umpteen taxa in the Herb Garden and many spend the winter as 4" pots in Poly 7) it stood out...not in a bad way. I feel like the color is better than many/most of the other S. splendens cultivars; more crimson than scarlet. I tend to like my reds cool. It has occasionally been accorded specific status but is generally considered a selection of the species splendens. It is thought to be closer to the straight species than most of the cultivars.












About those vertical labels....I don't know. recently I've been having issues posting this shape picture horizontally!?!? What can you do?
A third of the way through the month and we've still got crazy colored trees! The top picture is near the head of the Dogwood Collection, the bottom, is the edge of the Azalea Collection on the west side of the Ellipse. The light is odd in the second picture because it was taken just before 7:00 which means just a few minutes after sunrise. The light is warm in color and almost parallel to the ground. 'the effect occurs in reverse in the evening when the trees on the west side of the ellipse are similarly gilded.

These plants are in full bloom across the road from the sign marking the entrance to the Camellia Collection. They were covered with bees and yellow jackets today. This is one of the fall flowering camellias that has a pleasant fragrance.
They, Chris Carley et alia, grew this giant spider mum this year along with the other disbuds. It's nearly 5" in diameter.
Thats a lot of roots.!
This magnificent specimen stands at the intersection of Hickey Lane and Holly Spring Road, a favorite tree of Arboretum visitors and staff alike. The size of this individual suggests it's at least 200 years old. Across the region, I've seen a fair number of White Oaks this size cut and they''re usually just about that age. Why would so many trees date to the early years of the 18th Century?
My back is still recovering from helping to move the stones, the cement mixer, the generator, and umpteen bags of concrete; now comes the good part. It'll probably take him a couple weeks to finish the wall. Amazingly, if the weather goes as forecast, we won't have a freeze during that period. It's going to be nice.
Neal, a fixture in the Asian Collections and at the Arboretum for the past 15 years, is retiring from his volunteer position. The problem is that Neal isn't a halfway kind of guy; he's either in moving mulch, logs, rocks, or he's out. We'd love to have him come in and just weed but no half measures for Neal.
I don't know what will. If I had someone in the bottom photograph for scale you'd be able to see that the plant is approaching 15 feet in height. It died back to the ground last winter as it has done every year I have known it, that would be three. I love it; Big, bold, almost sculptural. Some of th larger leaves are every bit of 3 feet across.. Wow. If it could produce viable seeds and make it's way into disturbed habitats in the city....life would be more interesting.






I took the top picture Friday, the day the contractors began moving in the modular units that will be our home for the next 18 months, knock on wood. In the bottom picture, taken this morning at 7:00, Amanda serenely ignores the looming presence of the newly installed modular building. Our Florida house is "modular" or, a double-wide, so I ought to know the proper nomenclature. I'm not easily offended but modular does sound nicer. Or pre-fab.