A view of Sibylle’s garden

Small urban garden by Sibylle Pietrek, Gartenblick/enclos*ure

Back in October, I posted some photos from photographer Sibylle Pietrek’s blog Gartenblick (Garden View) of her small dachterrasse or roof terrace.

Today, I wanted to show you her garden on the ground —  on a mid-summer morning, a few days ago.

Sibylle says that the garden at the back of her rowhouse is 450 sq. meters (4,844 sq. ft.)  and “close to town,” which would be Dusseldorf.

I love the combination of clipped boxwood with the mix of flowers and grasses that, lit from behind, conjure up a sliver of meadow.

Small urban garden by Sibylle Pietrek, Gartenblick/enclos*ure

Above is the garden in May (with Sibylle). In the post, she wrote: “Do not go out in the midday sun in the garden, but only in the early morning, when the back light streaks across the tulips; it looks great.”

Urban garden by Sibylle Pietrek, Gartenblick/enclos*ure

Sibylle’s garden and her photography have also been featured in the magazine Gärtnern leicht gemacht (Gardening Made Easy).

Urban garden by Sibylle Pietrek, Gartenblick/enclos*ure

All the above photos: ©Sibylle Pietrek, used here with permission.

I see the wild flowers, in their summer morn
Of beauty, feeding on joy’s luscious hours. . .

— John Clare, from “Summer Images”

Foliage Follow Up for July

Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

I thought I would give you a look at the plants surrounding the hibiscus and shrimp plants from yesterday’s Bloom Day.

Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

First, I would be grateful if anyone could identify the tropical plant with the very large leaves in the center above — and below with clover poking up through the leaves.

Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

When we arrived in Kigali, it was in a big pot on an upstairs porch, where I felt it was not getting the attention it deserved.  It was also really in the way — it’s over 4′ across.

On its left above and in the photo below is a large burgundy-colored succulent — sedum? kalanchoe? — which I also haven’t yet identified.  Does anyone recognize it Euphorbia grantii (aka Synadenium grantii), possibly the Rubra variety.  It’s also called African milk bush and is native to East Africa.

[Thanks to Alison in Australia, who wrote me with the I.D. in November 2014.]

Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

This one is about 5′ tall, but I have seen specimens in Rwanda the size of a small tree.

Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

The burgundy leaves (red, green, and pink when the backlit by the sun — above) look good almost everywhere, so I have cuttings spread throughout the garden.

Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

In the picture above, there’s one in the back of a pink section of the long flower border — or it will be pink if the small shrub roses planted there will oblige me by growing and blooming. They are supposed to push up through the beach spiderlilies (Hymenocallis littoralis).

Below is one of two original plants that were here when we moved in.

Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

In the same planting bed with my two mystery plants are burgundy cannas, variegated liriope, yellow daylilies, and some lamb’s ear that I grew from seed from my parent’s garden in Virginia.

Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

At the ends are shrimp plants, “Fairy” roses, a caladium, and a small cycad (not in the picture).

This planting bed is on the right in the photo below.
Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

I also wanted to show you one of the common mulleins (Verbascum thepus) that I grew from seed taken from my parent’s garden last year.

Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

This one (located not very artistically in the vegetable garden) is 3′ across. The other plants are only 12″.

Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

The plant is something of a roadside weed in the mid-Atlantic region of the U.S., but it can send up a yellow flower stalk to 10′ tall. The garden writer, Henry Mitchell* liked tall mulleins so much that he wrote, “O for a lute of fire to sing their merits.”

Garden Bloggers' Foliage Follow Up for July, Kigali, Rwanda/enclos*ure

Thanks to Pam at Digging for hosting Garden Bloggers’ Foliage Follow Up the 16th of every month.


*in The Essential Earthman.

Bloom Day in July: tropical hibiscus

About 8:30 this morning:
Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day in July, tropical hibiscus in our Kigali garden/enclos*ure

Five hours later:
Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day in July, tropical hibiscus in our Kigali garden/enclos*ure

Well. . . aloha.
Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day in July, tropical hibiscus in our Kigali garden/enclos*ure

This is the second bloom I’ve seen on this particular tropical hibiscus. None of my others are this flashy dramatic.

Surrounding it are several Justicia brandegeeana or shrimp plants, which are always in bloom.

Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day in July, tropical hibiscus in our Kigali garden/enclos*ure

This is a small planting bed near the entrance to the front terrace. We removed* all the old clipped shrubs from this area early last summer, but in a combination of fatigue and indecision, I just cut this bush to the ground, thinking it could die (or not) in place.

A couple of months ago, I noticed that it had sent up two stems and that flower buds were developing.  I was a little amazed about a week and a half ago when the first one opened.

Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day in July, tropical hibiscus in our Kigali garden/enclos*ure

Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day in July, tropical hibiscus in our Kigali garden/enclos*ure

It goes well with the shrimp plants, so I’ll just leave it here and keep it pruned to about 4′ – 5′ tall.  The yellow-flowering plant in front of it is a Missouri primrose (Oenothera missouriensis).  It is an American native annual that self-seeds around the garden.

Cactus in our Kigali garden/enclos*ure

On the opposite end of the showy-ness scale, I discovered last week that our cactus-like Euphorbia (above and below) is blooming.

Cactus in our Kigali garden/enclos*ure

The flowers are a little over a 1/4″ across.

Cactus in our Kigali garden/enclos*ure

Cactus in our Kigali garden/enclos*ure

GBBD — the 15th of every month — is hosted by Carol at May Dreams Gardens. Click here to see other garden bloggers’ mid-July flowers.


*It was among the bushes on the right in this photo. It was always clipped, so it probably hasn’t bloomed for a long time.

Ruzizi Tented Lodge at Akagera National Park

After our recent drive to the southeast corner of Rwanda, we backtracked and then headed north to Akagera National Park to spend the night.

Picnic table, welcome center, Akagera Nat'l. Park in Rwanda:enclos*ure

It was about 4:30 p.m. when we arrived at the park’s welcome center, and I was anxious to get some photos before the light disappeared.  Here, near the equator, dark comes between 6:00 and 6:30 all year round.  No extra long summer days for us.

Pebble floor border, welcome center, Akagera Nat'l. Park in Rwanda:enclos*ure

I liked the pebble border to the welcome center’s concrete floor, which had been colored red, like the surrounding dirt.

Pebble floor border, welcome center, Akagera National Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

The attractive building, which for some reason I failed to photograph, was stone and stucco and had a thatched roof, like the lodge pictured below.

Long-neck weaver bird nest, Akagera Natl. Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

In a tree just outside the welcome center, there was a weaver bird nest (above) — this one with a very long entrance tunnel, a protection against predators.

Main lodge, Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera Nat'l. Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

The Ruzizi Tented Lodge — which opened inside the park just this year — is on a small strip of largely undisturbed land along the edge of Lake Ihema.

Boardwalk, Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera Nat'l. Park in Rwanda:enclos*ure

Boardwalks keep visitors off the native plants, not to mention away from the equally native crocodiles and hippos.  (An electric fence keeps other large animals out on the inland side of the lodge.)

Boardwalk, Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera National Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

Boardwalk to tent, Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera Natl. Park in Rwanda:enclos*ure

The camp has seven tented cabins, each with a full bath, one or two real beds (with reading lamps), and an outlet for recharging phones.

Tent cabin, Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera Natl. Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

Below is our tent’s “front yard,” which was quite close to the water’s edge.  That night, we heard, but did not see, hippos near our tent.

Marshy edge of Lake Ihema at Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera National Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

Solar panels for tents, Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera National Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

Each tent has a solar panel for lights and hot water — shown above.

Wildflowers and boardwalk, Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera National Park in Rwanda:enclos*ure

Even in the dry season, there were some wildflowers catching the last of the day’s light.

Wildflowers, Ruziz Tented Lodge, Akagera National Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

In the evening, we had cocktails around a fire on the riverside deck, below.

Lakeside eating area, Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera National Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

Breakfast was also served there — while monkeys ate fruit off a big tree above us.

Weaver birds' nests at dusk, Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera National Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

In the shrubby trees just beyond the deck, there were dozens of (empty) weaver birds’ nests.

Weaver birds' nests, Akagera Nat'l Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

Weaver birds' nests, Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera Natl. Park in Rwanda:enclos*ure

Located along Rwanda’s eastern border with Tanzania, Akagera National Park presents quite a different landscape from the mountainous forests and farms of western and central Rwanda. (It is one of four large national parks in the country.)

“[I]ts undulating plains support a cover of dense, broad-leafed woodland interspersed with lighter acacia woodland and patches of rolling grassland studded evocatively with stands of the superficially cactus-like Euphorbia candelabra [aka E. ingens] shrub,” according to the Bradt guide to Rwanda.

Grass and shrubs near Ruzizi Tented Lodge, Akagera Natl. Park, Rwanda:enclos*ure

There are also large wetlands surrounding several lakes and the channels of the Akagera River, which runs along the border between the two countries.

The game-viewing is not up the standards of the great savanna parks in neighboring countries, but every visitor I have talked to recently has seen elephants, hippos, zebra, and giraffes, as well as antelopes and impalas.  (Unfortunately, we did not have time to tour the park during our stay.)

Currently, there may or may not be lions and leopards in small numbers, but there are reportedly plans to restock them — and add black rhinos — eventually.

According to the Bradt guide, the birdlife is “phenomenal.”  The landscape is particularly scenic, with forests, lakes, swamps, and low mountains.  Perhaps best of all, the park is fairly empty of other tourists.

Camping (in real tents) is allowed in various locations.  It is also possible to take boat safaris on Lake Ihema.

Foliage Follow Up: two sedums

[Ahem, make that two succulents.]

Sedums:enclos*ure

I’d be grateful if anyone could identify these sedums succulents — both came with the garden.

Sedums:enclos*ure

I’ve had the tall, bluish one in at least two other African gardens.

[It’s a Kalanchoe, possibly a variety of “mother of millions,” K. daigremontiana.]

Sedums:enclos*ure

It’s nice in combination with the pink small and miniature shrub roses; otherwise their effect would be too sweet.

Sedums:enclos*ure

Sedums:enclos*ure

I didn’t realize until I took these pictures that the rosette-type sedum almost exactly matches the two-tone clay pot.  They also match the terracotta colors in the landscape beyond the hedge.

[It’s probably a Graptopetalum.]

Sedums:enclos*ure

Sedums:enclos*ure

Garden Bloggers’ Foliage Follow Up — the 16th of every month — is hosted by Pam at Digging.