Good Plants, Good Design
Hellebores (aka Lenten Roses) are abloom and spring is in the air! The good news is that Contained Exuberance is back open with a full inventory of garden pots, fountains, and ornaments. My Shop is bursting with pots in new shapes, styles, and composition. If you don’t find what you’re looking for, custom-orders through Campania International and several other manufacturers are available. Now’s time to get your garden ready for a season of outdoor enjoyment.
Shop Thursday-Sunday, 10am-6pm
Holiday Pop-Up Sale. 50% Off. One-day only!
I resume regular shop hours again on March 1, 2019.
My Shop CONTAINED EXUBERANCE
It’s the end of another gardening season and I’m celebrating with a 4-day pottery SALE.
50% OFF all in-stock pots, remaining fountains, and garden decor.
Friday-Sunday, October 25-28; 10am-6pm
Contained Exuberance for Summer Gardens
I love pairing pots and plants to boost a garden, outdoor patio, and business entrance in Portland’s summer-dry climate. Well-placed containers carrying artful plant combinations become focal points during the dog days of July and August. Granted, that’s easier for me to say and do with a shop full of garden pottery at my disposal and wonderful plants a few steps next door at Xera.
A large pine planter box in front of my Shop greets summer shoppers with a play of Ribes sanguineum ‘Xera’s Lime Punch’, Panicum virgatum ‘Heavy Metal, Sanguisorba amplexicaulis ‘Golden Arrow’ and Calibrachoa Superbells ‘Pomegranate Punch’
This Saturday, July 14, I will be selling a variety of planted and empty tabletop size containers at the garden of HPSO member Nancy Goldman on the Garden Conservancy/HPSO Open Gardens Day tour featuring Nancy’s and six other outstanding private gardens in north and northeast Portland. Proceeds from the tour go to the HPSO Grants and Scholarship funds as well as to the Garden Conservancy which works to save, preserve and restore gardens across North America.
You can bid on and take home this cast stone trough that I’ve donated to benefit the tour. It’s planted with a Sempervivum mix, Sedum rupestre ‘Angelina’ and Acaena inermis ‘Purpurea’.
Here’s a sampling of other container plantings I’ve got going around Portland this summer.
MOVEABLE ART
Like furniture in the house, pots don’t have to stay in the same spot year-in-year-out. (I’m often guilty of this!). Use pots to hide summer plant failures and redirect attention.
At this entrance to a client’s garden on Mt. Tabor, I’ve used a tall multi-glazed, earthenware pot as the sculptural centerpiece to the left of the garden gate supported by two lower pots on the right. The neutral stucco walls allow for ever-changing shadow play and added dimension at the entrance. Strong, architectural plants like Callistemon sieberi, Yucca filamentosa ‘Bright Edge’, and Cordyline australis ‘Torbay Dazzler’ are featured.
ENTRANCE DRAMA
On busy Division St. in southeast Portland I’ve used twin pots to provide symmetry and drama at the shaded, south-facing entrance to Holiday (formerly Roman Candle Bakers). The cast stone rain barrels add pot texture to accompany the stunning variegated foliage of Acanthus ‘Whitewater’. The new leaf stencils on the windows and doors ain’t bad either!
OUTDOOR DINING
I love eating outdoors during long summer days and nights on our deck or a well-designed patio at one of Portland’s restaurants. I work with businesses to provide escape from traffic noise and foul streetside odors. It’s a bit of “trick the mind, trick the senses.”
At Nostrana we’ve planted Woolly Pockets (now WallyGro) made from post consumer recycled plastic bottles that hang from corten steel dividers to provide a textured living wall and boundary from the parking lot.
AERIAL DELIGHT
For clients with limited space, I’m fond of using colorful aluminum hover dishes from Pot, Inc. in Vancouver, British Columbia. Available in my Shop and mail order.
A simple planting of Hakonechloa macra ‘All Gold’ and Trachelospermum asiatum ‘Ogon Nishiki’ (like this example hanging beside our mudroom door) never fails to spark conversation and is so much easier to keep going than a busy hanging basket mix of petunias.
Flash Sale, May 31-June 3
TAKE 15% OFF all pots, fountains, and garden decor in my Shop from Thursday, May 31, through Sunday, June 3.
WORKSHOP, SATURDAY, MAY 5
PAIRING POTS & SUCCULENTS
Join Claire Bandfield apotspot.com and me this Saturday, May 5, 2018. Get tips on selecting and planting zany, Dr. Seussian cactus and succulents from both a local grower and Xera Plants. Planted alone as single specimens and in artful combinations, succulents are low maintenance, easy on the water, and bold conversation starters. Bring your mom and make a Mother’s Day gift (10% off all pots for workshop participants).
WHERE: Hyland Garden Design, 1114 SE Clay St. (next to Xera Plants)
DATE: Saturday, May 5
TIME: 10:30-11:30am
FREE… REGISTER at bobhylandgardens@gmail.com
Stylish, Weatherproof Garden Pots
I sell an artful selection of outdoor and interior garden pottery and decor in my Portland shop Contained Exuberance. All pots are NOT created equal in craftsmanship and durability throughout the 4 seasons. The old adage “you get what you pay for” rings true. I strive to offer quality garden pottery at affordable pricing and I extend a 20% trade discount to landscape and garden professionals.
At my shop, you’ll find pots in contemporary forms, textures, and colors to suit your personal tastes and style. If you don’t see it in on the floor, you can browse catalogs and place custom orders with several companies that I represent. Here are some POT STYLES that I am particularly excited about this season.
CAST STONE from Campania International, a U.S. company that has designed and manufactured cast stone pottery at its facility in Pennsburg, PA, since 1983.
What’s new? Realistic cast stone barnboard troughs and planters. Guaranteed not to rot!
GLAZED EARTHENWARE imported through Campania International’s Pacifica program. Manufactured in Vietnam and China.
What’s new? Art pottery and Angkor collections of glazed, sanded pots from Vietnam in a variety of color plays.
LIGHTWEIGHT polyresins, fiber cement, recycled plastics, and hypertufa.
What’s new? Playa Blanca fiber cement pots in beautiful shapes AND hand cast stone pots (aka “hypertufa”) beautifully crafted by Camas, WA-based potter Claire Bandfield of apotspot.
TERRA COTTA. Campania’s line of Antico terra cotta in contemporary forms and surface textures.
What’s new? Handspun linen pots, tela bowls, and antique lattice baskets.
Spring Yellows
My pottery and garden decor shop Contained Exuberance reopens for the season on Thursday, March 1st.
It has been a relatively benign, warm winter up until this past week. The Portland Metro region has experienced colder nights in the 20s and up to 7 inches of snow depending on where you live.
Mild January weather triggered an early bloom season, by my record-keeping 2-3 weeks ahead of normal time in our garden for shrubs like witch-hazel, paperbush, and daphne. Hamamelis x intermedia ‘Arnold Promise’ started blooming in mid-January with long-lasting, clear yellow flowers that perfume the air with delightful sweet fragrance.
Hamamelis x intermedia ‘Diane’ sports copper-red flowers. It’s fragrance is more subtle than ‘Arnold Promise’, but the flowers are to die for.
Another favorite variety that I use frequently in my garden designs is Hamamelis x intermedia ‘Jelena’. I love its coppery flowers that on closer inspection are red at the base melding with orange centers and yellow tips.
Another fragrant winter-blooming shrub that rides winter to the cusp of spring is winter honeysuckle, Lonicera fragrantissima. To my nose it offers the sweetest winter aroma. Unlike the witch-hazels which drop leaves in fall, winter honeysuckle is semi-evergreen through the winter months.
For deep, spicy pungent fragrance I’m forever a fan of wintersweet, Chimonanthus praecox. The waxy, almost translucent flowers open on bare stems in January and February. Once smelled, you will remember and lust for this shrub.
Just now Edgeworthia papyrifera (paperbush) is trying to steal the fragrance show in our garden (snow keeps getting in the way!). Sweet, softly hairy umbels of golden yellow flowers pop from buds that look like Hershey’s Kisses. The flower balls pack lots of fragrance that lure hummingbirds.