Ah, spring in our garden. The air is sweet, the sun is warming, and most importantly, the garden is putting on its most spectacular show.
After a long damp winter. It is pure joy to see the grounds erupt in color. This year, we seem to be having a perfectly timed bloom, with some of our absolute favorite varieties peaking together in a truly magnificent display.
We are so excited by this year’s showing that we had to share a tour. While pictures can capture the beauty, we only wish you could join us in person to truly smell the air!
The real landscape-changers this spring are our incredible climbing and structural blooms.
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First up: The Lady Banks Roses. This sweet, small-flowered rambler is a cascade of soft yellow petals, creating a literal curtain of color. This year, it’s climbing its way across the back fence in a spectacular, cascading waterfall of blooms. It’s one of the first roses to appear and sets the perfect joyous tone.

Next to it, or perhaps framing another pathway, we have the magnificent Wisteria. There is simply nothing like the dramatic, pendulous racemes of wisteria. Our specific variety is Chinese is draped like a canopy on the arbor, in a lush shade of lavender-blue. The fragrance alone is intoxicating.
Completing this trio of fragrant wonders are our beloved Lilacs. This classic shrub is absolutely loaded with dense clusters of tiny, star-shaped purple flowers. It feels quintessential to have the nostalgic scent of lilac wafting on the spring breeze. They are looking (and smelling!) better than ever.
Sensory Aromatics
While the larger climbers grab attention from a distance, we love integrating fragrant, tactile, and texture-rich plants along our walkways and border gardens.
Our Rosemary border is currently alive, not just with its characteristic sharp, clean scent, but with a beautiful dusting of small, pale-blue flowers. It adds a wonderful cool-toned structure to the lower garden layers and supports so many of our early pollinators.
Just behind it, the Lavender is starting to stretch and send up its iconic stalks. Though its full peak is perhaps a few weeks away, the silver-green foliage is lush, and the promise of its relaxing aroma is everywhere. They are looking healthy and ready for their upcoming summer debut, but even now, a quick brush against their leaves is instantly calming.
And for texture that truly pops, our Spring Bouquet Viburnum is in its prime. This specific variety, Spring Bouquet Viburnum produces clusters of fragrant white flowers emerging from pink buds, creating a delightful contrast against the foliage. Its dense, globose clusters of tiny florets look like miniature clouds floating above the glossy green leaves. It’s a clean, elegant presence that balances the stronger colors.
Our Marguerite Daisies (Chrysanthemum frutescens) are popping up everywhere, creating patches of classic, daisy-like happiness. They are a resilient, ever-blooming variety, currently a sea of yellow. They bring an instantly approachable, friendly feeling and are perfect for filling in borders and attracting beneficial insects.
Our palm trees keep growing. Last year, we had someone trim a lot of leaves back, so now it is more open. I added two pink flamingos.
While the blooms steal the spotlight, our Boxwood hedges are the silent heroes of the landscape. This spring, they are showing off a flush of bright, lime-green new growth that looks so crisp against the older, deeper foliage.
Japanese
spiraea is a deciduous shrub that can grow to a height of 4-6 feet. The
leaves are ovate and alternating on the stem; its eye-catching blooms
are a rosy-pink color and in rare cases can also be white. Flowers only
occur on new wood.
The Scent of the Evening: Jasmine- No spring evening in the garden is complete without the heady sweet perfume of Jasmine. This is growing on our pool equipment shed.
Finally, our Japanese Maple is reaching its most ethereal stage. There is a brief window in spring when the new leaves are so thin and vibrant that they practically glow when the light hits them. Whether yours is a deep burgundy or a bright lace-leaf green, its architectural shape provides a stunning contrast to the soft, rounded clusters of the lilacs and viburnum nearby. It truly feels like a piece of living sculpture in the center of it all.
That's it for now. We are adding handrails to the front porch and down to the pool. It will make it easier to walk up or down with something to hold onto. The perils of growing old.
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Linda @ Life and Linda
Hello, welcome to LifeandLinda. I am from Northern California. I enjoy blogging, Designing Blogs, Decorating, cooking, entertaining, gardening and clogging. I hope you enjoy your visit.
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