Garden Design

Today we’re visiting with Mariel Tribbly. Mariel does most of her gardening at her job at the Missouri Botanical Garden in St. Louis, where she is in charge of the rock garden. She is also a board member of the North American Rock Garden Society, and she grows a lot of cool rock garden plants. Sometimes these plants have a reputation for being difficult to grow, but mostly they just need good drainage and good plant choices. The St. Louis area has hot, humid summers and pretty cold winters (Zone 6), but Mariel cultivates lots of great plants that love those conditions.

Note: A lot of these plants are so uncommonly grown that there isn’t a lot of information on winter hardiness, so many of the Zone rankings below are educated guesses.

Campanula formanekiana in full bloom in a rock gardenThis Campanula formanekiana (Zones 6–8) is just loaded down with flowers! The species generally grows as a biennial, so this explosion of blooms may be its swan song before leaving the garden, but wow, what a beautiful display!

fly sitting on a Aristolochia tomentosaA fly visitor is pollinating this Aristolochia tomentosa (Zones 5–8). Aristolochia’s odd flowers lure in flies with colors—and sometimes smells—that trick them into thinking the flowers are carrion that they can lay their eggs on. Once a fly crawls into the flower, backward-pointing hairs keep it trapped; as it buzzes around, it gets covered with pollen. It is only released when another fly enters that already has pollen from another flower on it. That pollinates the flower and causes the hairs to collapse, releasing the pollen-covered fly to go off and pollinate the next flower.

close up of Globularia punctataGlobularia punctata (Zones 3–8) looks beautiful in the morning light. This plant forms a low cushion or carpet with these blue blooms in spring.

purple Penstemon flowersPenstemon cobaea (Zones 5–8) is in full bloom. There are nearly 300 different species of penstemon, native mostly to western North America, and many of them are beautiful additions to the garden. Most, but not all, require well-drained soil to thrive.

close up of Dracocephalum ruyschiana flowersMariel says she’s a big fan of Dracocephalum ruyschiana (Zones 3–7), as it is easy to grow and not overly vigorous or aggressive, despite being in the mint family.

close up of bright purple iris with yellow flowers behindThere is a whole world of little rock garden irises. This is Iris timofejewii (Zones 4–8) with the bright yellow Aurinia saxatilis (Zones 3–7) behind it. What an amazing color combination!

close up of fuzzy pulsatilla flowersPulsatilla (Zones 4–8) emerge with their incredibly fuzzy new leaves and flowers early in the spring. These emerged so early that they caught a dusting of late snow on their blooms.

close up of pink and purple flowersCampanula baumgartenii (Zones 4–8) and Silene schafta (Zones 3–9) grow together in a tapestry of cheery blooms.

If you want to see more from Mariel, check out her Instagram: @rockeryplantess

Have a garden you’d like to share?

Have photos to share? We’d love to see your garden, a particular collection of plants you love, or a wonderful garden you had the chance to visit!

To submit, send 5-10 photos to [email protected] along with some information about the plants in the pictures and where you took the photos. We’d love to hear where you are located, how long you’ve been gardening, successes you are proud of, failures you learned from, hopes for the future, favorite plants, or funny stories from your garden.

Have a mobile phone? Tag your photos on Facebook, Instagram or Twitter with #FineGardening!

Do you receive the GPOD by email yet? Sign up here.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *