Sunday, September 28, 2025

August Blooms in My Garden

I know it is the end of September and I am very late with my "August Blooms" garden post, but I thought you'd like to see its one last hurrah anyway.  All these pictures were taken mid-August, then my husband and I went to Door County for a four day anniversary trip, and when we returned it did not look this way anymore;  as you will see at the end of the post.  A horrific storm moved in while we were away and knocked trees over, threw tree limbs all over the yard, and pretty much destroyed my flower garden.  What wasn't crushed by tree limbs was knocked over by fierce straight line winds.  But I fared better than a lot of people in the area who had trees come down on their house and/or cars.  

It was so ironic because I took these photos right before I left and thought the garden never looked more beautiful.  But I guess Mother Nature had something different in mind for my garden.  Well let's walk through the "Before" pictures, and then I'll show you the "After".



Black Eyed Susans, Hydrangeas, and Phlox are the stars of the August garden.  The sedum is looking good, but won't be in bloom for at least another month.


In the Shed Garden I have a very tall Rudebekia Laciniata growing in this garden.  This flower can grow nine feet tall and makes the perfect back of the border plant.  In front I have the common rudebekia with some purple coneflower.



This plant grows like a weed in my yard, but I don't care, I love it! It has such a long bloom time;  over a month!  Not many perennials can claim that. 





I love to sit on this bench during my garden breaks and look at this garden.


The butterflies love the Rudebekia too.  Here is a short video showing the plant covered in little butterflies.


The Front Yard Garden


I grabbed a lot of different coleus this year and mixed it in with my hosta.  I love the contrast of the colorful coleus leaves with the green hosta.  I will take cutting of the coleus before the first frost so I can try to overwinter some of the plants as these large coleus plants can be pricey.


I have to show you this photo because it drove my daughter nuts that I didn't pull the sunflower out.  I don't know why, but I just can't pick stray sunflower plants.  I feel if Mother Nature put it there, she has her reasons.


These tall red Salvias did excellent this year.  In fact, they did so well, I'm planning on buying a lot more next year!




The Septic Mound Garden stole the show in August.  It was absolutely jaw dropping this year.  

I love this color of Phlox.  I wish I had more this color.




I have a lot of wild orange dallies on this garden and I just let them go crazy.  I don't care, it's my septic mound.  I just move whatever gets in their way, if the entire septic mound becomes day lilies, so be it. 


The day lilies are so beautiful when they are in bloom and I love the lush green foliage when they are not.


The contrast of the bright purple/pink phlox with the orange/yellow rudebekias is so striking.


Street view of the Septic Mound Garden.






Here is a very short video of me walking through the garden.  Sound up so you can hear the sounds of nature. 




In the spring this hillside is covered with daffodils, but then in summer the hosta takes over.  It was a lot more shaded when I planted all this hosta, but then hubby chopped a lot of limbs off this tree so now it gets more sun.  Surprisingly, the hosta still did well.  There was only one plant that seemed to dry up.


Looking down at the Septic Mound Garden from the top of the West Hill Garden.






Hanging Baskets



I need so many hanging baskets that I can't spend $50 on one basket so I have to make my own.  I save and reuse my own pots then I just add a few annuals.  I normally don't fertilize my baskets until after the 4th of July because the soil has fertilizer in it and it is usually enough until mid summer.  But this year, they really fizzled out early and I thought I lost them.  I decided to cut them way back and fertilize them, and wa-la they sprung back to life!  They were pretty embarrassingly hideous for a few weeks though.




After The Storm

And as promised, here is what that same beautiful Septic Garden looked like after the storm.   Oh, it was so depressing to come home from a fabulous weekend in Door County to this mess.  I said "That's it.  I'm done for the year",  and I haven't been out there much since.  But frankly, it is the harvest season so I am busy canning and freezing.  I have gotten out there for a few hours here and there just to cut things down, but it still isn't what it was when I left and won't be again this year.  Here is to a better 2026 flower garden!






I will be back with a Vegetable Garden post soon and hopefully if I ever get the garden tidy again, I'll do a fall garden post to end the year.

Have A Great Day!  Amy

Linking Up with these Fabulous Blogs HERE!

 

48 comments:

  1. I am sorry the storm destroyed your beautiful garden but, you obviously have green fingers, you will get it looking just right once again.

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  2. I opened my computer this morning, thinking there might be a garden post from you! thank you. Love, love your garden as you know. My daughter pulled out all the rudbeckia in her garden, saying too much yellow, but I will show her your post. It's not too much yellow, you just need to add the contrasts like that lovely phlox. I too love that colour combination, I have black eye susans with cone flowers in one of my beds. I'm sorry that the storm caused so much damage, but things will come back better next year. It was a rough year everywhere it seems, did you have a drought? I had a tree limb fall on my favourite hydrangea one year, but it bounced back, it was as if nature did its own pruning on the shrub. Now it is covered with blooms. Once again, love your garden and appreciate all your hard work.

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    1. Oh my goodness! Rudbeckia would be the very last flower I would pull out of a garden. It has the longest bloom time than any other perennial and it blooms at a time when not much else is in bloom. No, we didn't have a drought, quite the opposite actually. It rained a lot all summer long and a lot of areas experienced flooding this summer. I never remember flooding in the middle of summer before. Usually flooding happens in the spring. Thanks so much.

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  3. Your property is so beautiful and the flowers exquisite. Some of our annuals did not bloom this year and we have no idea why ! One was our large patch of black eyed Susans that have bloomed for over 15 years and despite the greenery looking healthy - not one bloom. I enjoyed seeing all your flowers. Thanks.

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    1. Thank you so much. That is so odd that your flowers didn't bloom. I have never heard of such a thing.

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    1. I will. I always comment on anyone who blogs that leaves a comment on my blog, but I usually don't have time until the weekend.

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  5. Wow, Mother Nature sure wreaked havoc in your beautiful garden. The photos are lovely, and I love all the colors of the flowers. Will they just bloom again next year, or will you have to start over?

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    1. She sure did! Yes, I will cut them all down this fall and they will come back in the spring.

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  6. Beautiful photos...and such a trauma. BUT, be assured, nature will repair, take over and become what SHE will and may be just as beautiful as before or better. Enjoy what you can when you can...but then I am older than dirt, and have come used to living in the now. Hugs, Sandi.

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  7. You garden always has me awestruck.. it's like a botanical garden. So beautiful .

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  8. Oh, your garden was gorgeous! So sorry about the storm. You have such a talent for growing beauty.

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  9. Your flower beds are breathtaking! I’m so sorry the storm cut their season short.

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  10. Your garden is a beautiful inspiration and will bounce back with vigor! We had a similar situation last summer when several trees came down in the freshly cleaned backyard. Luckily they missed our sheds and the fence was easily repaired, but a couple neighbors lost vehicles!

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    1. Thank you. Storms can cause so much heart break.

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    2. I was hoping this post would end up at my link party, featuring you at Wednesdays in the Studio!

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    3. Oh, thank you so much! That is wonderful news!

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  11. WOW! Your garden is beautiful and so well cared for. I'm sure you enjoy spending time is such a lovely place. I live in an area that is frequented by many deer and, sadly, they eat almost everything. I have to enclose things I want to survive in chicken wire cages and even then they find a way to eat whatever hangs over or through. I have kind of given up gardening because of them and have learned to just enjoy their visits instead.

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    1. Thank you. I know your pain. Last year the deer at half my lilies, and they love my hosta. I try to protect what I know they love but I can't cover everything. Thankfully, they leave me some flowers to enjoy.

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  12. You know how much I admire your garden and this is beautiful. There is always much to do in the garden after a vacation, but a storm is the worst. I am so sorry, Amy! However, plants are hardy and with your great care, your garden will thrive again and look even more gorgeous than before.

    -Soma

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  13. Weirdly enough when we were away at Glacier National Park we had a big storm here and Ian texted us a few photos of a large tree limb that had fallen.. right in my garden on top of my azalea bushes. We eventually took down the tree the limb fell and it's "sister" tree right near it as both root balls were showing.

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    1. The tree that dropped all these limbs is still standing, but there isn't much of left of it now. We'll probably cut it down this winter. The other problem is the straight line winds just took off the tops of trees, leaving a lot of unsightliness.

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  14. Your garden is so colorful and plentiful in fall. What a shame about the storm. Thanks for linking at #TuesdayTwirl

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  15. Oh your poor garden. At least you have the memory and the photos of how it looked before, and I hope the garden will just look as wonderful next year.

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    1. I know. Such a sad way to end the gardening season. But I'm sure it'll bounce back next year and hopefully we won't have so many storms.

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  16. A beautiful August garden. What a disaster after the storm!

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  17. Amazing garden, lovely photos of flowers

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  18. Wow, this is just gorgeous! I would love gardens like this--you've done an amazing job. So sorry about the storm. I always say THIS is why photos matter so much! :) You can "enjoy" that garden even in the winter, and even when a storm wrecks it. Thanks so much for sharing this post with us at the Will Blog for Comments #70 linkup.

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    1. Thanks Jennifer. Yes, that is so true, and you can see how much gardens change over the years or where you can make improvements.

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  19. Amy, your garden is beautiful. I love seeing all of your lovely flowers. They did so well. Thank you for sharing your garden blooms with us at The Crazy Little Lovebirds link party. I am featuring your post tomorrow at the party. :)

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    1. Thank you so much! That is so exciting about the feature! I so appreciate it!

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  20. Amy, I always look forward to seeing what's happening in your garden. Everything is just so lovely.
    Thanks bunches for sharing with Sweet Tea & Friends this month sweet friend.

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  21. Oh, Amy! I'm catching up with my favorite blogs after a busy few weeks and I had so many thoughts as I read this post. #1 - You have an amazing green thumb! Your gardens are stunning! #2 - I love those phlox! That color is so vibrant! #3 - How do you keep the rabbits and deer out of your hostas and lilies? Always a frustration for us! And #4 - What a disappointment to come home after a wonderful trip to find your gardens in such disarray! Your beautiful septic mound sure took a hit! I'm so sorry! While I'm sure it will come back next year, better than ever, I can only imagine how hard it was to see all your hard work battered - let alone the energy the clean up must have taken! Here's to next year, I guess!

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    1. Thank you so much. I do have a HUGE problem with deer and rabbits and they have done so much heart-breaking damage. The vegetable garden is completely caged in with a 9 foot fence, so no animals there! :). But the flower garden is all open. I've learned through the years what they really love and have some plants protected with caging, but I've also learned to let it go and let them eat things. One trick I've learned is to cover young annuals with deer netting early in the season and that at least allows them to grow and develop a root system so they can grow back if a deer chops on it. The netting is black and barely visible from a distance.

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