Today we’re back in Hugh Locke’s garden in Shrub Oak, New York, enjoying some of the beautiful annuals he grew from seed last year. Check out yesterday’s post if you missed the first half of his annual selections, and if you want to see more of his gardening, visit his Instagram.
The ‘Kilimanjaro White’ marigold (Tagetes erecta nana), one of the first white varieties, made its debut in 1975.
The white male flowers of the ‘Carmencita’ red caster bean (Ricinus communis) are on the same stem as the feathery red female flowers. Deer resistant.
The ‘Kew Blue’ salpiglossis (Salpiglossis sinuata) flowers have a velvety quality that makes you want to touch them. The plant is listed as a tender perennial, but in reality it is an annual in Zone 6.
Snow-on-the-mountain (Euphorbia marginata) takes a long time to mature, but its late-summer show is worth the wait. Deer resistant.
This ‘Iron Blue’ stock (Matthiola incana) has only one flowering stem per plant, so I had to resist the temptation to pinch it early on.
The ‘Violet’ sweet rocket (Hesperis matronalis) is a biennial that is hardly noticeable the first year and then early the second year (this photo is from 2021) grows to 4 feet with a mass of tiny blooms in spring and early summer. Deer resistant.
The ‘Whisper Rose Shades’ tobacco (Nicotiana hybrid) has masses of tiny trumpet blossoms. The Latin name comes from Jean Nicotine, French ambassador to Portugal who in the mid-1500s sent it as medicine to Catherine de Medici. The tobacco for smoking is another species of Nicotiana. Deer resistant.
This trailing nasturtium (Tropaeolum majus) produced blooms all summer and up to the first frost.
A mass of small composite Verbena bonariensis flowers seems to float atop wispy 6-foot stems.
This ‘Helen Mount’ viola (Viola tricolor), also known as the European field pansy, is an early addition of color in the spring.
The humble zinnia doesn’t always get the respect a color shot like this deserves.
I start my seeds using standard-issue fluorescent fixtures (no expensive grow lights are needed) and incandescent rope lights (not LED, which do not give off any heat).