In celebration of gardens and wild botanicals of Shaw Island, please view photos, cultural, and historical notes for seeds from a cross-section of island gardens and wild places. The posts listed here aid in cultivating the herbs and flower seeds bound in handmade packets at the shed along Reefnet Bay Road, in the spring, summer, and fall. There are also a few articles in the history timeline that help us remember some of the pioneer gardeners and the crops they grew.
01 December 2021
25 November 2021
Thanksgiving on Shaw Island 2021
01 November 2021
NOVEMBER ONE
"As one fine gardener of England put it, his was a garden made by doing unnecessary things that he could not afford at the wrong time of the year."
Courtesy of, Henry Mitchell on Gardening. Boston/ New York. Houghton Mifflin. 1998From the Gatehouse Garden library.
14 October 2021
SEEDS COMING IN for Autumn 2021
"Two sounds of autumn are unmistakable––the hurrying rustle of crisp leaves blown across the street by a gusty wind, and the gabble of a flock of migrating geese."
American writer Hal Borland.
A "V" of migrating geese were seen flying east over the Yansen farm yesterday headed for their safe "winter storage" in the Skagit River valley.
13 September 2021
PEA PODS ARE IN FOR THE WINTER
Autumn carries more gold
in its pocket
than all the other seasons.
jim bishop
Seed packets available at the Gatehouse Seeds roadside stand, Reefnet Bay Road, Shaw Island, San Juan Archipelago, Washington.
04 September 2021
CHILEAN LOBELIA TUPA , long-tall-sally
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Chilean Lobelia tupa Growing on Shaw Island, San Juan Archipelago, WA. Unenhanced photograph. September 2021 |
Botanical name: Lobelia tupa
Chilean name: Tabaco del diablo
Common names: "Chilean Lobelia," "Devil's tobacco"
Family: Campanulaceae
Origin: Chile
Plant type: Herbaceous perennial
Hardiness: to USDA Zone 07-10
Mature size in 10 years: 8 feet high and 4 feet wide.
Exposure: Sun
Bloom time: July-October.
Moisture needs: Average. Drought tolerant but appreciates occasional watering.
Attracts: Bees, butterflies, hummingbirds
Resistant to: Aphids, rabbits, slugs, and snails.
Culture: Very easy. Grows to 2 meters very quickly, at least in Chile. Short dry periods of not more than 1 month. Prefers good drainage but is undemanding, and will grow in almost any type of soil, including heavy clay soils.
Features: Very large, felted gray-green leaves and strange-looking, beautiful red flowers which bloom for a long time.
The best method of propagation for this striking specimen is from seed.
Spring sowing: Lobelia seeds need light to germinate. Leave them on the surface or cover them with a thin layer of vermiculite. Cover with film and mist every day. Emergence in ca. three weeks. Once 3-4" high and well-rooted, carefully lift and pot on into 4-5" pots with free-draining compost. Grow on for a month or so and then harden off for a week before planting outside. Delay if there is any chance of a late frost.
Avoid winter wet locations. Cut flower seed stalks to the ground once the foliage begins to fade in autumn.
Winterizing: The cut stalks are useful for a winter blanket in the Pacific Northwest, along with a few fir branches with needles on top for a covering with ventilation. This method of winter protection for the Lobelia has succeeded since 2017 for the specimen growing at the Gatehouse garden in USDA Zone 9, not tropical.
There are 300 species of Lobelia, mostly tropical and sub-tropical–they belong to the bluebell family, Campanulaceae. Some are highly prized as garden ornamentals and nectar for hummingbirds.
Chilean Lobelia tupa is one of the favored plants growing at the Gatehouse garden along Reefnet Bay Road, a darling–tall, colorful, and comes back to greet us in the Spring.
Uses: excellent ornamental value.
💀💀💀💀According to Michail Belov of Chileflora.com, this plant is poisonous. "It was used by the Mapuche natives as a ritual plant, the leaves of which were smoked. It has two medicinal effects, narcotic and analgesic (especially for toothache), but the whole plant is poisonous, so we must be careful with it."
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Chilean Lobelia tupa
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05 August 2021
GOLDEN OATS GRASS
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Reaching for the stars, it is Stipa gigantea. |
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Golden Oats Grass |
Botanical name: Stipa gigantea
Family: Poaceae
Native to: Spanish Pyrenees
Life cycle: Perennial
Hardiness zone: USDA 05-10
Foliage: 18" evergreen hummock with arching evergreen gray-green leaves.
Bloom time: May until early July. Seedheads soaring to ca. 8-feet, last until late summer or early autumn. These are useful in dried flower arrangements.
Tolerates: Drought after it has been established; also resistant to deer.
Sow: Spring.
Notes. This grass brings texture, form, and movement to the garden. It has a long period of interest. Popular for its soaring silver stems and golden drooping awns. The flowers make a great see-through "scrim" in gardens. It has a long period of interest.
Do not fertilize or it could cause the long stems to droop.
It can be tidied by raking through the clump to remove dead grass. and cut back in late winter or early spring for a cleaner look. If it is not a vigorous plant cutting it back can kill a weak or young plant, according to the Elizabeth Miller Library, Seattle.
Stipa gigantea was awarded an A.G.M. distinction by the Royal Horticulture Society in 1993 and is on the Seattle's Elizabeth Miller Library noted "Great Plant Picks" list.
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Seed capsules of Golden Oats grass (Stipa gigantea) Source: the Gatehouse garden 5 August 2021 Clay art by Jodie and Terri |
Packets are now installed at the seed shed on Reefnet Bay Road, Shaw Island, Washington.
03 August 2021
YANSEN FARM LUPINES
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End-of-season Two-toned Lupine blooming on the Yansen Farm, USDA Hardiness Zone 8-b Reefnet Bay Road, Shaw Island, San Juan Archipelago, WA. photo courtesy of Diana. July 2021. |
Common name: Big Leaf Lupine
Botanical name: Lupinus polyphyllus x Russell hybrids.
Life cycle: Hardy perennial
Hardiness zone range: USDA 03-10
Native growing region: Western North America
Preferred climate: Temperate
Soil type: well-drained, moist to wet.
Sun: Full sun to partial shade.
Height: 3-4-ft
Blooms: Early to mid-summer in shades of bi-color pink and blue-purple.
Tolerates: Drought and usually deer resistant.
Degree of difficulty: Easy to grow and one of the easiest perennials to propagate from seed.
Description: According to Diana these are vigorous, self-seeding plants.
Attracts: Pollinators, hummingbirds.
Germination: 7-14 days.
Planting: Tough seed coat so nick lightly with sandpaper or soak in water overnight. Plant outdoors only 1/4" deep where they receive full sun. Lupines have long tap roots so plant in their permanent location. Thin to 18-24 inches.
Notes: This plant is an important food for larvae of some butterflies; wildlife eat some of the mature seeds following the bloom cycle.












