Posts Tagged ‘Bloom Day’

Garden Blogger Bloom Day – August 2010

Sunday, August 15th, 2010
Swallow Tail Butterfly Loves Fragrant White Garden Phlox

Swallow Tail Butterfly Intoxicated by Phlox Nectar

It’s not hard to find blooms in the garden in August. The hardest part is choosing which to photograph and finding a time to take photos when the light isn’t glaring or the hot, easterly winds aren’t blowing.

This morning, before the sun began blasting out all the colors and while the air was still, I captured a few shots among the many glorious blossoms including, finally, capturing a photo of one my favorite sights in summer – Swallow Tail Butterflies. They are absolutely in love with my the fragrant, white garden Phlox all over my garden. This plant can become invasive — seeding and spreading underground. But, I am in love with its fragrance — as well as the butterflies that pollinate it!

d Hummer (top left) Buzzed Me on the Way to Scarlet Runner Beans (Right)

d Hummer (top left) Buzzed Me on the Way to Scarlet Runner Beans (Right)

Aroma-rific Clerodendrum: Jasmine-like Flowers; Peanut Butter-like Foliage

Aroma-rific Clerodendrum: Jasmine-like Flowers; Peanut Butter-like Foliage

White Anemone Just Opening; these will bloom into Fall

White Anemone Just Opening; these will bloom into Fall

Summer Squash Blossoms Lure in the Bees

Summer Squash Blossoms Lure in the Bees

Rattlesnake Pole Beans Climbing Repurposed Bamboo Cuttings

Rattlesnake Pole Beans Climbing Repurposed Bamboo Cuttings

Goji Berries Finally Blooming - Will We Get Fruit?!

Goji Berries Finally Blooming - Will We Get Fruit?!

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Garden Blogger Bloom Day – July 2010

Thursday, July 15th, 2010
Lobelia laxiflora - a Hummingbird Favorite!

Lobelia laxiflora - a Hummingbird Favorite!

Finally, summer is here. The garden is popping with color and food. The bees are buzzing like crazy. It’s a time when I get a little lazy in my own garden. That’s okay. The point isn’t to always be pulling weeds, seeding, mulching, pruning, watering, and so forth. Part of the point of having a garden is to enjoy it. With that said, here is a photo sampling of some of what’s going on in my garden this July.

This Lobelia laxiflora is a new addition to the garden this year, and I’m in love with it. It fits my current craving for hot reds, yellows and oranges. Plus, I managed to tuck it into a spot that worked from the get-go. Surrounding it (unseen here) is an invasive yellow Alstromeria that I’ve made peace with (and pull much of with a vengeance), Lemon Gem marigolds, red petunias and delicate Feverfew. I have a hard time believing I went for so long without this one in my garden. And, I think my hummingbirds feel the same way. Now, to pop in a last pineapple sage nearby and the hot, red DreamTeam bed will be complete! Need more blooms? View on!

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Garden Blogger Bloom Day – June 2010

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010
Clematis

Final Spring Blossom on Showy Clematis

Despite pouring rain, chilly temperatures and all around June gloom, the flowers keep pushing out their lovely blossoms.

The bees, from our honeybees to the wild bumblers to hover flies and wasps, are all over the place in the garden gathering the raw materials to build their homes, feed themselves and produce delicious honey.

The birds, from fledgling robins to chattering chickadees to a variety of hummingbirds, swoop through the garden, snatching undeserved bites of blossoming sugar snap peas, sipping nectar from tubular blooms, and puzzling out the knotted sheets of netting engulfing ripening berries.

Meanwhile, the flowers continue. As one fades, forming a fruit, another variety emerges as we near summer solstice, and hopefully, the warm season ahead. Enjoy the parade of color: (more…)

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Garden Blogger Bloom Day November 2009

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

There’s still fall foliage color in the garden to accompany the straggling bloomers.

Cerinthe - A Self-Seeding Cool Season Annual Blooming in November

Cerinthe - A Self-Seeding Cool Season Annual Blooming in November

Soon winter bloomers like Witch Hazel and Sasanqua Camellias will be showing their stuff. In November, I thoroughly enjoy the many berries brightening on Cotoneasters, Sarcococcca, a neighbor’s Mountain Ash, and our Arbutus unedo. Flowers are at a minimum. Still, I invite you to enjoy with me a few of the sturdiest still blooming through downpours, heavy hail and a few November breezes.

The Cerinthe featured here is a lovely cool season annual that appears in my garden year after year — in Spring and in Fall. Years ago, when I was studying horticulture I brought home one plant that is parent to the many that have shown up in our garden. Each season I watch for the tiny grey-green-purplish seedlings, carefully lifting them from their random locations to create masses of succulent color just where I want it. (more…)

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Garden Blogger Bloom Day October 2009

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

I try to be consistent in posting bloom day photos on the 15th of each month. This month Blog Action Day and Garden Blogger Bloom Day hit the calender simultaneously. So, I’m sharing bloom pix a few days late this month.

Crepe Myrtle Looks Fabulous in October Reds

Crepe Myrtle Looks Fabulous in October Reds

It was pouring rain when I grabbed these shots yesterday, and the brilliance of the autumn leaves truly overshadows the smattering of fall bloomers in the garden.

Sadly, my Crepe Myrtle hasn’t bloomed since 2007. I’ll be sending in soil samples as I’m fairly certain the problem is deficient soil. But, I’ve also been asking arborist friends for their thoughts. So far, no answers. Still, this tree’s form and it’s unparalleled fall color make all the difference!

During much of the year, my food crops are covered in protective hoop houses.

Thriving Fall Crops

Thriving Fall Crops

(If you follow the prior link, you’ll see pix of these hoops last spring with tiny plant starts. Some of these starts are still producing the delicious kale you see in the photo below.)
During the warm season, the covering is a lightweight, breathable horticultural fleece (aka floating row cover). During the cold season, the hoops are covered with heat retaining plastic. During times when the Pineapple Express weather systems pass through bringing rainfall and warm temperatures, I roll back the plastic to allow the plants a deep drink of fresh rainwater. Best these leafy greens not bloom, but I couldn’t pass up sharing a shot of one bed filled with arugula, lacinato kale, rainbow chard, savoy cabbage, pak choi, carrots, thyme, winter savory and butter lettuce. Each week, we harvest from this patch to donate to our local food bank. It’s really not hard to incorporate edibles in the garden and produce more than enough to share with hungry neighbors. Consider this post for ideas on ways you can help grow enough food to feed yourself and share with your community.

Fall Color in the garden

Fall Color in the garden

Okay, back to photos of the garden. A long shot showing another view of the aforementioned hoop house as well as lots of fall color and dots of colorful blooms like Japanese Anemone and the unparalleled blue of poisonous Aconitum popping beautifully against the clear yellow of its climbing hydrangea backdrop. In the distance, another view of the Lagerstroemia in Red near a lovely Acer triflorum coloring yellowish orange. Mid-shot, a laceleaf Japanese Maple just beginning to show its autumn oranges. Beneath it, unseen, a carpet of hardy cyclamen in pinks and whites. Foliage truly adds year-round color and dimension to the garden. Every plant has its moment (or moments) in this garden!

A View from the Dry Front Porch

A View from the Dry Front Porch

Here we see the front garden from the only outdoor dry spot (except for inside the greenhouse). Potted red geraniums continue to bloom, despite neglect. A stray zinnia blooms a clashing pink near the red crepe myrtle. Purple-blue Monkshood and Russian Sage mingle with (unseen) pink Schizostylis lily. Red Love Lies Bleeding drapes the ground under the weight of rain. The waterfeature, so perceptually cooling in summer, seems superfluous in the heavy rains of fall. Nearby, unseen firey dahlias provide last blossoms that turn rapidly to mush in the rain.

Soon, the fantastic colors of fall will be gone.

Blooming Arbutus unedo near Blueberries and Vine Maple

Blooming Arbutus unedo near Blueberries and Vine Maple

The Acer triflorum will hold its brown leaves into winter until winds finally blow the tree clean by early spring. Nearby Acer griseum have yet to show their fall color. Perhaps they will be worthy of sharing by November’s bloom day. Blueberries and Vine Maples (seen at right), brilliant in tones of yellow, red and orange will soon be reddish twigs for the winter ahead. Hostas and peonies (unseen), now turning tones of yellow, orange, red and brown will soon fade, be cut to the ground and hide beneath the soil until spring’s return. The lovely evergreen Strawberry Tree (Arbutus unedo seen at right) will maintain winter interest in the garden long after the fruit it now holds ripens to colors of rainbow sherbet. Plus, this sturdy shrub offers up white blossoms in October to brighten up our dreary, wet gray autumn days.

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