Jenny oh my gosh. One of the reasons I love your style and learning from you is because I get those “aha” moments, like today. When you said “don’t throw native soil back on top” I was like oh my God. That’s what happened to my perennials and bulbs this spring. Here I blamed those blasted squirrels for eating my bulbs. Maybe they did feast on some. But I threw our putty thick native clay soil right back on top of the bulbs and some perennial plants and they either didn’t come up or suffocated. Jeez. Ya live and learn. Had you not said it out loud I would probably have taken years to figure it out. Thank you for your gardening wisdom.
The overhead shots sorta make the heart pound, doesnt it --- same way for us here in WV, the colors are magnificent to say the least. The same can be said for our sunrise and sunset, Gods way of calming our spirit. Enjoy you so much, Jenny, be blessed.
Jenny and Jerry your videos always are so beautiful, informative, fun, inspiring, and everything else positive! Please keep up the drone views and fabulously "correographed" music! It feels like we are floating above the Garden of Eden! 🍁🍂🧡🤎
Gaura's are such an easy plant; but besides that, they are absolutely beautiful. They look so delicate, but are really tough plants that come back each year ready to put on a show. I love this!🌺🌺🌺👀
What a lovely start to my Sunday morning here in the UK 🇬🇧 Loved everything about this video, very calming from the planting to the drone footage at the end. You live in a beautiful part of the world Jenny and your grounds are amazing 😍 you are truly blessed and thank you for blessing us by sharing 🥰 xx
Love your videos. Always informative. Appreciate how you remind us that gardens can always change. Fascinating how quickly the guara rooted into their temporary spot.
Oh my goodness Jenny those drone shots were magnificent 💕💕💕 Your fall foliage is incredible and I love watching you transplanting those perennials. Your commentary makes me laugh. You obviously enjoy your work! Helen from NJ
Beautiful! That is really going to look nice with the roses too. I appreciate the detailed "how to" in transplanting and soil ammendments. The drone footage is stunning! Oh my! So peaceful! God's handywork in all its glory!❤
This was very interesting as I had always been told to divide or plant perennials in the early Spring. This means I can still play in my garden for another few weeks!! Thank you so much.
Another very informative video on transplanting and the drone footage captured the season perfectly. Fall as ALWAYS been my favorite season. Great job Laura and Jerry.
I know I said it before, but you and Jerry did a awesome job with the patio and the surrounding area. It is so beautiful !! Thanks for another great video!
Our NC fall foliage is absolutely breath taking this year. Thanks for the video. I have some day lilies and Shasta daises that I need to move. Unfortunately, I haven't decided where they are going, yet. Old shrubs, finally got pulled this week, so I will definitely be heading over on Saturday for some Black Gold, Biotone, so that I can get all of my plant babies into the ground. Knowing me, I'll probably be buying some more plants, too.
Absolutely beautiful and so knowledgeable thank you so much for all the lessons I will be moving to North Carolina in the next year and hopefully will be gardening and taking a lot of your advice thank you so very much
The fall color is really ramping up here in Stella NC. After the cold temps this weekend it’ll be even better! This has been one of the loveliest autumns I can remember. I’m so thankful!!!
WOW!!! that drone shot of your property is BEAUTIFUL. Loved it!!! I am just starting to do gardening this year and am loving all the stuff I am learning from you. I love the Gaura. I have several white blooms and they dance in the breeze. Keep up the good work. HI from Nash County NC.
I went back and forth on whether to trim them or not. I’m going to wait til we get a hard freeze (in 3 days) before trimming them, but I do think I could have easily done it before moving them.
You're doing something right. Sometimes when I've moved plants after a season in the ground they still have their can root ball shape. Maybe the difference is our soils. Mine's sandy. I see your "supervisor" showed up in time to ensure no irrigation lines were harmed in the making of this video. 😆 I love gaura. Unfortunately, here in zone 4b we have to treat them as an annual. Pretty in pink, Jenny. 😉 To the viewer mention. 🔥
Gaura is one of my favorite flowers. I’m in zone 5 b and it is a perennial here. I think it must be a different variety then yours. The drone footage is fabulous. Our fall foliage is at peak here too. We are having a cold front coming thru this weekend so most of the leaves will come down with the winds that will come with the cold front.😞. I am in Northern Indiana. Thanks for sharing, I love your videos!!❤️🍂🍁
I am so jealous of your weather!! I just spent the morning planting bulbs with the wind blowing 25 miles per hour, it was sprinkling, and only 43 degrees here. I am in Indiana, and this is the first week it has felt like a normal fall here. I have never planted bulbs before. For some reason I kept buying more and more. My neighbors are looking at me like a crazy woman lol. Love your videos!!! You have made me a better gardener.
Jenny you look great in pink! I enjoyed this video, very much. I'm still planting here too. I received my final tree, and I just planted it, yesterday.
Stunningly beautiful North Carolina in the fall! Thanks for the tutorial on transplanting in fall, we are 8b and I’ve been needing to transfer Mexican Heather and was afraid it was just too warm, but our temps are running about the same as yours, soooo a project awaits!
Thanks for the info on the Black Gold! Part of my yard here in SWVA has hard pan clay and the other part not so much. 🤷♀️ Love your scalloped shirt! Take care 💚
Absolutely beautiful! I have a couple of gaura's I want to relocate and was wondering should I add Bio-tone. I always love the drone views! Love this!🌸 😍
I love Gaura! i got a few for the first time this year, and they have thrived (Garner NC, 7b)! LOVE LOVE LOVE them! and i might need to relocate one of them, so this is perfect 🌺 They are so pretty even when not blooming.
What I’ve learned about guara is that they have a tap root and they don’t like to be moved. They bloom here in zone 8a when they coming out of dormancy and when it’s dry. It we get lots of rain the blooms fall off. Which is why Laura’s are blooming all the time since they don’t have much rainfall. They are so beautiful though and worth the space they take up.
And strawberry vanilla hydrangeas... when is best to clip back an older bush? This thing is HUGE. And beautiful 😍 I couldn’t bare to touch it in fear of losing blooms. Also, I suffered with leaftier 🐛 ALL over my Annabelle hydrangea hillside last season. I had to go through and chop the tops off majority of the blooms from all the nests and damage to the Annabelles. I salvaged all of 5-6blooms. And I am talking about a 10x20foot space, covered in packed Annabelles, really should be divided. But Idk what the solution is to that problem other than picking though and losing blooms. It was a sad spring to realize they had taken over. I cleared all the undergrowth, cut them way back, then picked through to find nests and clipped them all off. It was a ton of work in hopes it would prevent a reoccurrence next season. 🤞🏻
You are just the cutest. Pink looks so great on you. I’ve just completed the digging and splitting and dividing and transplanting and finally got them all stored away. I’m still collecting and sorting the seeds from various flowers I have dried. But all the corms and tubers are done ✔️ I have a question about weigelas though. The previous owner planted them in horrible locations that get heavy snow loads., they get beat up. Can I clip them way back and transplant them away from the foundation? And when would be best to approach that? I read that I should dig around them a few months before attempting a transplant to severe the longer roots.. I just left them be this year., may still clip them back.. but for next season, I would love any tips you can give me. I have three, two colours, they are mature and large.. They are beautiful. But just really bad locations. One seemed to suffer this last year. I would appreciate any advice. 🙏🏻