Fairy Tori |
Garden Cottage, Potting Shed & Play House |
Cotton Candy Bridge |
Vintage Laundry Garden |
Iris at Sunrise |
Garden Frolic |
South Garden |
Asiatic Lily |
'The Fairy' Rose and Lavender |
Wild Bird Plantation |
East Garden Vignette |
Hydrangea Endless Summer |
Antique Climbing Rose - Late 1800's |
DIY Solar Chandelier |
South Garden Path
Fairies in Residence |
The Boardwalk |
The 'Pool House' |
Rescued Garden Bench |
Sunrise Garden |
Shasta Daisy |
Robin Hood Shrub Rose |
Buddleia davidii, White Profusion Butterfly Bush Red Admiral Butterfly |
Poppies |
Peonies |
Iris |
Baptisia False Indigo |
Hydrangea Pinky Winky |
Althea - Pink |
Althea - Blue |
Althea - White |
Hibiscus - Pink |
Hibiscus - Kopper King |
I'm glad I found your second message to me, because I had come back to find these photos, but thought the link was in your sidebar. When you mentioned it was a tab, I realized it may be at the top.
ReplyDeleteI love your flowers, art, water, sheds, and even the little child enjoying the outdoors!
Thank you Sue - the little one having fun on the paths is my grandson.
DeleteYour garden look so beautiful.
ReplyDeleteAre they anyway able to survive in a tropical region?
Thank you very much for your kind words, James. I do know that Hibiscus is a tropical plant. The ones I have were bred to be hardy in Michigan USA, some of them reaching 5-6 feet tall (150-180 cm). Plants in our garden are hardy to a temperature of -15F degrees (-26C).
ReplyDeleteWould all of our plants survive in the tropics? I think most would; especially if provided with enough water. It wouldn't hurt to try to grow a few of them but I am certain you can grow a variety of hibiscus in Malaysia; it is a beautiful plant. ~Debra
colorfull garden, i loves the iris, the color so attractive
ReplyDeleteI can't believe your kids are lucky enough to have a purple play house!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed strolling through your garden! Wish I could borrow your creativity for this place!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Sheila! I do enjoy gardening. I hope you will follow me either here or on Facebook - facebook.com/Gardens.Inspired
ReplyDeleteFeel free to follow along and copy any idea you'd like! ~Debra
What beautiful gardens you have. I would like to point out that on the photo of the Buddleia davidii, White Profusion Butterfly Bush, the butterfly is a Red Admiral and not a Monarch Butterfly.
ReplyDeleteHi there! Thanks so much caring enough to make a comment and include a correction. You are, of course, correct - I will make that change to the picture immediately.
DeletePlease stop by the gardens again soon! ~Debra
Fun touring your garden. I love all the garden whimsy. I do a series of secret private gardens, I am the Miami Garden Reporter for Examiner.com. Too bad you are far away or I would feature you! Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteWell Robert, thank you very much for stopping by and for leaving a very nice compliment. If you eventually decide to highlight a garden in a the colder USDA Zone 6A, please feel free to contact me.
DeleteThanks again! -Debra
Lovely Gardens, beautiful flowers, nice Lavender. Looks a lot like our Gardens in western Pennsylvania. This list shows some pics of Herbs in our Gardens: http://improving-your-herb-know-how-joanie.blogspot.com/p/herb-plants.html
ReplyDeleteLovely garden. Lots of colors, textures, etc. A wonderful escape. Do you offer seeds or plants from your garden?
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kind compliment, AllDJs. Yes; I often share from my gardens.
DeleteDebra, it turns out we are both Grand Rapids gardeners. I found you via Blotanical. You can visit my garden at http://garden337.wordpress.com .
ReplyDeleteWOW! What beautiful crafts and flowers! I'm so glad I found you blog! I love creating new things and gardening too!
ReplyDeleteJust found your beautiful gardens via Pinterest..Your style of gardening is right up my alley! I love whimsey. We live in a gated, Sr. citizens community where there are no fencing allowed and all lawns are considered "common ground" Lots of rules/regs but it is done for a reason, to keep our community of over 8500 residents beautiful and it is like that all the time. I wouldn't be able to copy anything like yours..we are only allowed to have foundation flowerbeds..Do you know how boring they can be? I love the statue with the fairy reading a book..what type of plant is she living in? Evidently a great ground cover..what is the fairy made from? I have a lot of concrete garden statues and my favorite is a peasant woman watering the flowers. They are all too heavy to move around from place to place..Wonder where I could find a garden fairy like yours?
ReplyDeleteHello Pippi - I don't know if my heart could stand being away from creative gardening, and relegated to only foundation beds :( Do you have someone in your life you could "help" garden? At least you would have an outlet then.
DeleteI wish I could refer you to a retailer selling the fairy I have, but I have never seen another one. Thank you, I love her too. 'Tori' is made of resin, and so I store her away during our harsh Midwest winters. She is relaxing in a creeping ground cover named "Sedum Acre", that is hardy in USDA Zones 4-9.
I'm so happy you stopped in for a chat. Please come back to visit again, soon. -Debra
I thought that might be "Sedum Acre" but wasn't certain. We used to have that at our previous home where we lived 27 years..I paired it with deep purple petunias, red geraniums each year right next to our screened in porch, deck. We had a pink dogwood in the middle of that bed too. I'll have to think about some more of that in 2015.
ReplyDelete