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This certainly has been a wonderful spring for working with mosses and ferns! Abundant rain, muted light, humidity and cool days provide the perfect conditions for our ferns to grow and mosses to thrive. Sometimes it feels like Oregon’s climate followed me home to Virginia!
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The various ‘moss gardens’ I started this spring continue to grow, but not as rapidly as the wild mosses taking over in more areas of the garden than ever before! We continue to find new little ferns popping up in unexpected places even as all those we’ve planted take off in our moist, cool May.
This hypertufa trough held succulents in full sun, until a couple of weeks ago, when I re-purposed it for our newest moss garden.
We refreshed the trough with fresh potting soil, over a layer of gravel for drainage, planted out some tiny fern starts found at The Great Big Greenhouse, and moved the container to shade.
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An extensive collection of tiny 1″ plants for terrariums and Bonsai always excite me at this favorite Richmond area greenhouse, and I end up ‘collecting’ a few more with each visit. They are fun to use indoors all winter and grow quickly to standard sizes. We had a few brake ferns, and what are likely bird’s nest ferns, which needed more room to grow for summer. The trough seemed the perfect container for them.
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There are also a few starts of Leptinella pusilla, Purple Brass Buttons, which look like tiny purplish ferns. If you’ve seen a display of ‘Steppables’ at your local nursery, you have likely seen this plant for sale. I first used it when a friend and I constructed fairy gardens in 2014.
It is a tough but beautiful ground cover for shade which spreads with horizontal stems. I took the clump out of its nursery pot, pulled a few rooted stems loose from the mass, and tucked them in among the moss of this newest garden. The rest of the clump went into a shallow pot of its own ready to divide again and use elsewhere…..
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And of course the soil is carpeted with several varieties of lush, beautiful moss lifted from the yard. Although it takes a few weeks to establish, it will soon begin growing again here in the shade of our grape vines.
But what really inspired me to construct this newest little trough garden was a wonderful ‘fairy house’ made by local potter Betsy Minney. We were thrilled to find her at a local artist’s show on Mother’s Day, with several new items added to her offerings. Betsy’s work is always uniquely textured, whimsical, and beautifully glazed.
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We wanted to enjoy Betsy’s little fairy house in a properly ‘wild’ setting, and that meant outside amidst mosses and ferns. Knowing how our birds love to peck at moss, we now wire it in place while it establishes. Since the fairy house now lives outside on our porch, we also want to protect it from getting knocked over by a curious bird or squirrel! It is supported here on broken chopsticks and held in place, like the clumps of moss, with bent floral wire.
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These ferns aren’t hardy in our winters, so the entire garden, and especially the fairy house, will come inside in late autumn. But we’ll have a good six months of enjoyment of this woodland garden by our kitchen door before the weather shifts.
You could make a similar garden using hardy ferns, especially some of the small deciduous cultivars of Athyrium niponicum and native harts tongue ferns, or Asplenium scolopendrium.
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One of our newer Athyrium niponicums in another part of our garden.
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I’ve not cut flowers for a vase today. Most of our roses and Iris have suffered from heavy rains these last few days. But I will share this little potted garden with you, and still link to Cathy’s In A Vase on Monday post at her Rambling In The Garden.
I hope you will visit to enjoy her beautiful vase of white flowers, and follow the links she posts to other gardeners around the world, to see what is blooming in their gardens today. There is always so much beauty to enjoy from these dedicated florists and gardeners!
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What a sweet little fairy house – I can see why you were charmed and inspired by it! ❤
This is delightful – I love the whole concept and have always been fond of teeny-tiny things. It must give you so much pleasure assemnling your moss gardens as well as looking at them – and you will have a stream of potential lodgers for your fairy house, I am sure!
“the moss in the shade of the grapevines” – what a charming feel to that… and beautiful post!
Thank you 😊
I love the little fairy house, and think you’ve created beautiful surroundings for it. 🙂
Thank you, Robin 😉
What a lush and adorable little garden!