The Impatient Gardener: CONTAINER SURGERY (LIKE A NOSE JOB GONE WRONG)

05 August 2015

CONTAINER SURGERY (LIKE A NOSE JOB GONE WRONG)

And just like that, it's August. It's almost impossible to fathom that we're at the beginning of what I once considered the last month of summer. The weather, though, is changing from what it was like in my childhood, and since I'm not personally tied to school schedules, more and more, my idea of summer continues right through September.

We had a scorcher last weekend and I'll be honest, it was good to be uncomfortably hot for a little bit. We sweated it out doing some work in the yard and then jumped in the pool to lower the internal body temperature a little. And Mother Nature was kind enough to provide us with some desperately needed rain in the form of some fun-to-watch storms that rolled through in the evening. That's my idea of a great summer day.

Last week I made what may have been an ill-advised decision in the garden. The urn that I plant in the middle of the main garden off the patio was looking great, and then the dahlia I'd planted as its centerpiece bloomed. The 'Cafe au Lait' dahlia I'd planned the entire container planting around was not at all 'Cafe au Lait.' Instead it was, well, something else.

I'm not surprised that I mislabeled a dahlia because I potted up dozens of them. But the odds of the ONE I put in that container being wrong can't be that high.

Before: Although it wasn't the dahlia I intended for this container, it still looked OK. By the way, this is the smaller pot I insert in the urn, temporarily sitting on the patio for surgery.
I had two options: Live with the container the way it was with everything growing well, or try to transplant a 'Cafe au Lait' growing in the garden to the container. Because I had a very fixed idea of what I wanted that container to look like, I decided to swap it out.

The first 'Cafe au Lait' I tried to dig up had spread out underground a bit more than I expected and I sliced the main tuber in half when I tried to dig it up. I stuck it back in, but the poor thing is suffering and I doubt it will survive or produce any flowers. Then I found one that was smaller and I was able to dig that one up and transplant it.


The unnamed magenta dahlia fared better and was moved to the spot where I pulled out the other one alongside the house.

More than a week later, the 'Cafe au Lait' dahlia in the pot looks fine but not robust and certainly not blooming. I don't know if it will.

After: Well, not much to say. The before was better.
Should I have performed this surgery? Probably not. Even though the container wasn't what I had planned, it looked really nice. Now the whole thing looks a bit spent.

Well, that's gardening for you. Try again next year.

Have you ever ripped apart a container planting to swap out something else?

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4 Comments:

Blogger Lisa at Greenbow said...

I haven't swapped but I have taken out clumps of things growing well to put them into other pots or places that need a little umph.

August 6, 2015 at 6:32 AM  
Blogger prince snow farm said...

Ah gardener's remorse. I get it often! Your gardens look lovely!

August 6, 2015 at 9:43 AM  
Blogger MaryJean Zajac said...

Saw your post "On Sutton Place" and after seeing your blog I wonder if you have any tips for someone who has tried to grow the most easiest plant to grow, zucchini! For some reason I get a beautiful plant, but when it comes to fruit I get the start of something and then it shrivels up and dies. I don't know what I'm doing wrong! Can you help?

August 7, 2015 at 9:51 PM  
Blogger Erin @ The Impatient Gardener said...

Hi MaryJean! There are so many random things that can affect veggies, but I've actually had a similar problem this year. I've not had one real zucchini yet (although now that I say that I think it's been five days since I've checked so there could be a baseball bat waiting out there for me.) In my case I'm almost positive it's a soil moisture issue. We've had a very dry summer and I've not been good about watering out there. Inconsistent moisture is really tough on zucchinis, which thrive with a lot of water. What's your water situation been like there?

August 14, 2015 at 10:17 AM  

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