13 November 2007

Energizer flowers. They just keep going & going &....

The garden doesn't know it's mid-November. Apparently, it hasn't realized either that we've had a few light frosts, & one morning below freezing.

Six kinds of mums are still blooming, but this isn't a huge surprise.

Neither is it much of a to-do that the blue woods aster is still blooming. Every spring & summer, when it's doing nothing but growing into a bigger & bigger bundle of not-so-interesting little green leaves, I ask myself why I bother to leave it in that prominent spot in the pot between the two garage doors. Every October when it's one of the last things to burst into full bloom, I remember why. Every November, when the leaves turn anywhere from a warm golden yellow to a creamy soft red, & it's still covered with masses of those tiny blue daisy-like flowers, I'm certain it's in the perfect spot.

Even later to bloom are the grand, towering monkshoods. They are grand because they can stand over 5' tall, & are sturdy enough to not need staked.
They are grand because when most everything else is nearly done for the year, they have luscious, full buds. They are grand because they start blooming when many of the perennials at their feet have leaves already crispy & brown. They are grand because once they start blooming, there can be 2 months of flowers from the same plant, starting at the top, then gradually opening up clusters all the way down the stem. They are grand because the deer tend to leave them alone. They are grand because the flowers are somewhat translucent, & the sun shines right through them, showing you the dark veins that run through each one. They are grand because they do all of this in the SHADE under our white pines in the back, & under the huge maple on the side of our house.

No, as amazing as they are, the monkshoods aren't what's unusual right now.

Nobody told the 'White Swan' coneflowers it's mid-November. They're still going. Nobody told the Alyssum, or the 'Blue Hill' Salvia either. The Agastache doesn't seem to realize. The trumpet honeysuckle & the Heuchera are still forming new buds! The toad lily is still blooming. So are the 'Prairie Sun' Rudbeckia, & the catmint.

You don't hear me complaining.

26 October 2007

Autumn blossoms (& berries)

Things are still blooming. I hate that it'll end soon, but... there's still time. I actually have a few stalwart perennials that be going in November, but the last month of having blossoms all over the yard of every shape & color is generally October.


Some of the October garden:








15 October 2007

FAIR RESULTS

Yes, the results were fair! No, my plant photo that got the vote here did not get the vote at the fair. (What won? A photo of a weed! Um, uhhhh...wildflower, I mean.) Altogether, the kids & I had 15 entries. Drumroll, please:

Aislinn:

Art: drawing -- crayon 2nd place

Pumpkin extravaganza -- painted/decorated, not carved 1st place!Keegan:

Specimen plants -- cultivated berried branch 2nd place


Lynette:

Specimen plants -- favorite flower honorable mention (4th)

Specimen plants -- Chrysanthemum: single/daisy, sm/med honorable mention (4th)

Specimen plants -- fresh bloom collection, 5+ species 3rd place

Photography -- black & white: reflection, refraction, shadow 2nd placeSpecimen plants -- Rudbeckia 1st place

Specimen plants -- fresh bloom collection, 5+ species, perennials only 1st place

And of course we all left with plenty of ideas for what we'll do next year...!

07 October 2007

Unionville Community Fair

Every year the kids & I enter the Unionville Community Fair (http://ucfairinc.org/). This year, one of the categories I thought it would be fun to try is:

SECTION 003
Adult Photography
Color
1981 Flowers(s) Plant(s)

I'm not much of a photographer -- to me it's about the plants, not the pictures of them! -- but since I already have all of these plant photos anyway....

I've chosen a few from this year's blog posts, & reposted them below. To the right of this (top of the column), you'll see a poll asking you which photo you think I should enter. (I should've done this sooner, I know -- have to turn it in two days from now! Like I say every year at fair time: NEXT YEAR!) I need help to choose the photo that best fits what they're basing the judging on, as described here:

RULES AND REGULATIONS

9. Each exhibit will be judged on the following:
a. Technical aspects such as composition,
lighting, cropping, etc.
b. Meeting the stated class description/theme.
c. Impact on the viewer – does it catch and
hold your interest?


I started with 10 photos, but I realized that when I look at them I can't help but think of the live plant. I tried to narrow it down based on the impact of the photo itself. Here are the four I'm considering:



11 September 2007

The neglected garden

It's a rainy day. Finally.

I ought to be sorting through the 2 weeks of mail & school papers on my desk. Instead -- or at least first -- I thought I'd put up some of the (very few) garden photos I've taken lately.

August is the height of the Garden Doldrums. May/June is a blooming festival. Lots of things that languished in the July/August heat & humidity (& add to that this year's lack of rainfall) are starting to perk back up. A few are just hitting their peak now. Yet others (the hardy mums, the 'Autumn Bride' heuchera, the blue woods aster, the monkshood) are still in progress -- buds at this point, with the promise of becoming the season's last hurrah in October & November.

These are the recent & current bloomers -- few, & much appreciated:

28 July 2007

26 July 2007

Through the Roof!

We live about 3 minutes from the incredible Longwood Gardens (http://www.longwoodgardens.org/).
Their century plant - Agave americana, has decided to bloom. If you're not familiar with this plant, this is quite an event! Weird, wild, & wonderful.... Check it out here: http://longwoodgardens.org/CenturyPlant2007.html Keep scrolling down for the full story.

26 June 2007

catching up with the bluebirds

The bluebirds are now on their second brood. The first little darlings have fledged. Here's the first brood, in May:


FOUR EGGS
The female lays one a day. There ended up being 6 total.


2 DAYS OLD

6 DAYS OLD
Notice how big the beaks & eye spots look relative to their heads!



8 DAYS OLD
Eyes & feathers developing, heads larger now.



DAD GOES IN
At this stage, the parents are feeding them seemingly non-stop.



11 DAYS OLD
Soon, they will fledge.

24 June 2007

falling behind

Nature marches on. Flowers that are harbingers of spring - dainty snowdrops, majestic daffodils - will bloom in the snow if need be to maintain their schedule. I, being neither dainty nor majestic, more readily succomb to the forces around me, & regularly fall behind. Sometimes I end up altogether abandoning my intentions. Occasionally, I feel badly about having to do so. More often, after briefly weighing the choices, I feel relief about having one less thing on the list, in spite of the fact it left the list undone!


My "lists" sometimes take on a life of their own. At any given time, a large portion of them exist solely in my head. If I ever saw all of my lists in front of me at the same time, I think medical intervention would be necessary. It's a built-in safety mechanism that I usually don't know where half of them are. I don't know that they save me any time. Before my dear friend
Suzanne arrives for our shopping trip, I'll spend 20 good minutes (the breakfast dishes could have been done) sifting through stacks on my desk looking for that list of things I've been compiling to buy on just such a trip. Sometimes I find it. Sometimes not. But in the end, shopping trips with Suzanne are much more about spending time together than they are about buying the things on the list. The fabric softener can wait.

And so, in a fashion parallel with the rest of my life, I am falling behind on this blog! I had started a post about my children on June 7th, but didn't finish it, so saved it as a draft. I since posted twice about Aislinn's new dress. Yesterday when I finished the 7 June post, I realized that it would show up below the two dress posts, already buried, never having it's moment at the top. So if you're interested, scroll down a bit to 7 June: siblings.

Many gorgeous flowers put on their show during the past month, & are just now getting recognition here. My apologies to those that performed spectacularly without a single photo ever being taken (like my 5 or 6 varieties of tradescantia, and most of the aquilegias). Of course, that gives me something to post here next year!

So, some catching up, also titled What was blooming then....









I am frequently asked what my favorite flower is. You might as well ask which is my favorite child, or whether I'd prefer to give up food or sleep. I look forward to each new development in the garden with anticipation. However, one of my favorite combinations is when these three water irises are blooming at the same time in the rain garden. It unfolds over three days. The yellow flag iris blooms first. The second day the copper iris opens, & on day three, the Darby iris. Alone, they're pretty; together, sublime.