Brevity is not always easy with Six on Saturday. I might elaborate on some of these later. There is no common theme. These are merely six random pictures from last week.
1. Sambucus nigra ‘Black Lace’ European black elderberry got ‘Madonna’ as a pollinator only this year. ‘Madonna’ will not bloom until next year. ‘Black Lace’ makes a few berries anyway. I hope that they are prettier when more abundant. I can elaborate about it later.

2. Amaryllis belladonna, naked lady is demonstrating is preference for sunny exposure. This row of bulbs extends from left to right across this picture, but blooms only half way, with no transition to where bulbs are too shaded to bloom. I can elaborate about it later.

3. Canna musifolia, canna, which has been very fun to grow, was a gift from a neighbor, but not practical for our landscapes. These, with a few fancier cultivars, were potted here temporarily until a new landscape develops this autumn. They earn many compliments.

4. Canna X generalis ‘Inferno’ canna arrived with Canna musifolia. I think that it looks like ‘Wyoming’. Without a plan, we put this specimen into this ugly cobalt blue pot from a very dead Ficus benjamina houseplant that someone left for us, and now it looks RAD!

5. Hymenocallis festalis, Peruvian daffodil had been in the nursery for too long when we finally put all ten into three landscapes shortly before bloom. It is supposedly as reliably perennial as some of the more reliable types of Crinum. If so, it should be more popular.

6. Dahlia ‘Tabasco’ dahlia was purchased as a bedding dahlia, which implied that it is as disposable as annuals. However, this is its third season. It was originally red with orange stripes. Then, it was yellow with orange blotches. Now, it is this delightfully simpler red.

This is the link for Six on Saturday, for anyone else who would like to participate: https://thepropagatorblog.wordpress.com/2017/09/18/six-on-saturday-a-participant-guide/
Loving the peruvian daffodil, great and the canna is magnificent. I’ve just added a Sambucus ‘Black Lace’ to the garden and have high hopes for it. I’ve not seen any berries yet.
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I was not so keen on ‘Black Lace’ when I met it. I put it into a landscape just to get rid of it from the nursery. Then, it got so many compliments that I could not help but like it. I pruned it aggressively to promote vigorous growth, which is richly colored. Now, I want to also try ‘Black Beauty’.
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I think it does respond well to vigorous pruning, I must give it that treatment next year!
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My main objection to it outside of here is that so-called ‘gardeners’ shear it, which is comparable to shearing a hydrangea or rose. It just collects a bunch of dead twigs and gets very shabby. Pruning it aggressively during winter dormancy promotes limber arching growth with vivid foliar color, and cleans out all the twiggy growth. I prune it sort of like hydrangeas, but I also cut the big canes back a bit. Some people prefer to prune it up on trunks, like a small tree.
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The canna is RAD! Love the Hymenocallis too.
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Yes, and the Canna was so unplanned. That big ugly pot was just . . . there, and so was the Canna. We put them together and got that. I had been wanting Hymenocallis of some sort for a while, so what pleased why my associate found these.
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