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Creeping Phlox

Creeping Phlox
Creeping Phlox

My First Blog and Last Botanical Illustration

My last botanical illustration for the Washington Post- Southern magnolia Alta

As I write this, my first blog, I also work on my last illustration for the “Digging In” gardening column of the Washington Post newspaper. I have been producing a weekly botanical illustration for this column for ten years. My last illustration is of a southern magnolia Alta, Magnolia grandiflora“Alta”- an upright, columnar, tree. I’m glad to have it as the subject of my last illustration as I love its flowers and leaves. I want to do a good job, create something beautiful.  There are southern bay magnolias growing on my street here in Salem, Oregon but it is March and not the season for blooms.  I could draw the whole tree in its conical shape but I don’t think that would be as interesting as a close-up drawing of its large, dramatic white flowers and big, shiny, evergreen leaves.

Native plants of the Appalachian Piedmont Region.

In search of some references I “google” southern magnolia Alta and the first image I click on is from Mt Cuba Gardens, Delaware in the eastern United States. I take this as a good omen as I know the garden well.  I had been an intern there in the spring of 1997, my first year in the USA. Mt Cuba is well known for its extensive collection of plants native to the Appalachian Piedmont Region. I sought an internship there so that I could study these native plants. That spring at Mt Cuba I was surrounded by beauty. Every day I watched the garden come alive as a diverse array of spring ephemeral flowers woke up from their winter slumber. I felt very lucky to be able to work in such a bewitching place alongside thoughtful gardeners who were very passionate about what they did and shared their knowledge generously. As I pour over photos of Mt Cuba and wander down memory lane I picture myself in those pictures amongst the plants.  Even after so many years the garden is still familiar to me. I recognize where I worked and remember how I had carefully stepped between the creeping phlox and bluets in search of any weeds that might have escaped attention.

Spring blooms in the eastern United States.

My first spring in the eastern United States is a vivid and forceful memory.  I had no idea how dazzling a display nature could bring forth.  I was totally bowled over by the spectacle. I wonder if many of you, having grown up with this annual display, are now so accustomed to it that you take it for granted.  Being from Ireland and seeing it for the first time that spring was intoxicating.  I was charmed and delighted by every new plant discovery and marveled at what seemed like a never-ending parade of blooms- red buds, choke cherries, tulip poplars, mountain laurels, dogwoods- so many species, so much color. Later that same year I was delighted once again by the southern bay magnolias.

I’ve heard that our strongest sense for memory is smell but my memory of that first spring is an extremely powerful visual one. I find it difficult to pull myself away from the Mt Cuba pictures. It is an effort to come back to today and my last botanical illustration for the “Digging In column”. I have a deadline and time is slipping away. The southern magnolia Alta beckons.

Aislinn Adams

 

About the Author

Aislinn Adams is a graphic designer specializing in illustration and a horticulturist. She illustrated the Washington Post’s weekly “Digging In” gardening column for 10 years. In 2010 she launched a greeting card business combining her botanical illustrations with inspirational quotations. Please visit www.aislinnadams.com to learn more about her work.

 

How should I grow Creeping Phlox in a container?

If I plant Phlox in a container, should I take them in for the winter,and if so, do I bring them back out in early spring and should I keep watering them as they are inside? Do I cut them back when I take them inside? And if I should just go ahead and leave them outside, do I cut them back while leaving them outside? Do they grow back after cutting them down? OR, should I just leave them as is and do their own thing like when you grow them in the ground?
I live in southern Iowa, so the winters can get quite cold for a few months.



Most varieties of phlox are hardy perennial to zone 4. You should plant them directly in the ground to ensure the kind of strong roots they need to come back year after year, rather than confining them in pots. You can cut them back in the fall if you wish, but its not necessary. I don’t usually cut mine back, and they “resurrect” just fine in the spring. And I live in Zone 5 – which is likely your Zone as well in southern Iowa.

My Creeping Phlox


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