We came home from three weeks vacation in mid-August and found that all of the pansies planted last October had finally died.
But then I found this fellow poking up through a crack in the sidewalk, a few feet from where the other blue pansies had been planted:
I assume this child of that batch will be the last, but am curious to see if others pop up.
Scenes from a Maryland Yard
Friday, August 26, 2016
Tuesday, June 28, 2016
June blooms
Here is everything in my yard that was in bloom on June 28th:
Calais lily (a potted plant gift I planted last year) |
Dark pink astilbe |
Pink hydrangea bush (before the deer ate the blooms) |
Pink hydrangea bushes |
Sweetshrub (the deer didn't eat this year) |
Blue hydrangea |
Yuk--what's left of the hellebore blooms |
White echinacea (not exactly deer-proof) |
Cosmos (grown from seed in my basement) |
Marigolds (purchased in bloom) |
The persistent pansy (all that are left) |
Sunday, June 12, 2016
An easy way to make watercolor pictures of your garden
I don't normally review apps or profess to know that much about them, but I recently discovered the Waterlogue app and have been using it to make watercolor-ed versions of flowers in my garden.
I spent part of an hour turning photos of my garden into "watercolors," all while watching something on PBS. This may be my new hobby, at least from time to time.
Here are some samples (this includes flowers from earlier in the season and from last summer):
Monday, May 30, 2016
Where do baby hellebores come from?
Click on this photo to see the tiny black seeds inside the leaves |
For years I'd heard how hellebores drop their seeds when the flowers wither at the end of season and that, underneath, at the beginning of the next season, one would find baby hellebores. I looked every year and found nothing.
Meanwhile, every year I also weeded this mysterious small plant that was in my garden. There would be dozens of it in random spots.
It wasn't until I went to a garden club sale recently that I finally realized that what I thought was a weed was actually baby hellebores. I don't know how many I have murdered over the years. Apparently its seeds fly off everywhere and don't stay just under the plants. Sometimes they grow randomly and sometimes in clusters.
Happily I now have groupings of baby hellebores that will now live and, hopefully, thrive.
Info on hellebores: http://gardening.about.com/od/plantprofile1/p/Hellebore_Pro.htm
Saturday, May 28, 2016
May showers brought these May flowers
Here are the flowers that managed to bloom in my yard this month amid the near-constant rain (which may have delayed the bloom cycle somewhat):
Chive blossoms |
Peony |
Clematis |
Pansies (still going!) |
Dahlia (annual) [a flower from the dump pile at a garden store] |
Sunday, May 22, 2016
The really persistent pansy
In a post last December, I praised The persistent pansy because the pansies in my front yard had survived not being planted (or watered) for a week before being planted, being munched down by deer* shortly after being planted, and then the onslaught of cold weather. The pansies appeared to die down into green nubs and were lost in the snow, so I forgot about them.
Then when the temperatures rose just a little, they began to reappear and bloom again. They have since survived and thrived in wild fluctuations in temperature, a big hailstorm, and a closeby cohort of eager deer.
I thought they would be gone by now, but here they are, bigger than ever. It probably helps that we've had only a few hot days this spring. The pansies seem to love all the rain we've had.
Finally I've found something positive to say about all this rain!
(As always, click on the small photo above to enlarge it!)
-------------------------------------------------------
* Afterwards I sprayed them with Deer Out, and have only sprayed them once this spring.
Saturday, May 21, 2016
My latest addiction: local plant sales
It's still mostly rain and gloom here (and the article I'm linking to here was written before our current, drizzly weekend), so I've been spending my time planning where to put plants when it dries out and, whenever I can, I've dashed off to local plant sales.
Plant sales, sponsored or attended by local garden clubs, are the perfect place to see which plants are thriving in local gardens. They are also a great way to get advice from gardeners on particular plants or challenges with local soil, etc. The easiest way to find out about local plant sales is to join a garden club. You can also google "local plant sales" or "native plant sales" [e.g., here's a list of native plant sales in Maryland: mdflora.org/plantsales.html]
Yesterday I went to a neighborhood plant sale and came back with an impressive haul for only $11 (they cut prices earlier because of the persistent downpour). So far this month I've spent $51 for a carload of plants, including four new succulents for my deck.
Mostly for my own record keeping, I'm including photos below of some of the plants I've purchased at recent sales. Beneath, I list links to pages on how to grow them. Many of these plants are native to Maryland; at the very least, they supposedly do fine here. I hope to update the pics at the end of the summer to see how or if they've grown.
Also purchased (not pictured): various succulents, greenhouse grown sage and lavendar, and pink petunias for a deck container.
Info links:
Peonies: Sunset: How to Grow Peonies; How to Propagate Peonies
Blue and Black Salvia: Perennial Resource: Salvia guaranitica 'Black and Blue'*
Forget Me Not: How to Grow Forget-Me-Not Flowers
Bear's Breeches: BHG: Bear's Breeches
Acuba: Fine Gardening Plant Guide: Gold Dust Plant
* Fern with Seeds (haven't found the particular species of this one; it was pouring rain by the time I bought this, so I didn't linger to ask questions)
** (assume this is the plant I purchased; it didn't have a tag... will see when it blooms!)
Plant sales, sponsored or attended by local garden clubs, are the perfect place to see which plants are thriving in local gardens. They are also a great way to get advice from gardeners on particular plants or challenges with local soil, etc. The easiest way to find out about local plant sales is to join a garden club. You can also google "local plant sales" or "native plant sales" [e.g., here's a list of native plant sales in Maryland: mdflora.org/plantsales.html]
Yesterday I went to a neighborhood plant sale and came back with an impressive haul for only $11 (they cut prices earlier because of the persistent downpour). So far this month I've spent $51 for a carload of plants, including four new succulents for my deck.
Mostly for my own record keeping, I'm including photos below of some of the plants I've purchased at recent sales. Beneath, I list links to pages on how to grow them. Many of these plants are native to Maryland; at the very least, they supposedly do fine here. I hope to update the pics at the end of the summer to see how or if they've grown.
Pink Peony |
Blue and black salvia |
Forget Me Not |
Bleeding Heart |
Bear's Breeches (Acanthus) |
"Fern with Seeds" * |
Aucuba |
Also purchased (not pictured): various succulents, greenhouse grown sage and lavendar, and pink petunias for a deck container.
Info links:
Peonies: Sunset: How to Grow Peonies; How to Propagate Peonies
Blue and Black Salvia: Perennial Resource: Salvia guaranitica 'Black and Blue'*
Forget Me Not: How to Grow Forget-Me-Not Flowers
Bleeding Heart: Fine Gardening Plant Guide: Bleeding Heart
Acuba: Fine Gardening Plant Guide: Gold Dust Plant
* Fern with Seeds (haven't found the particular species of this one; it was pouring rain by the time I bought this, so I didn't linger to ask questions)
** (assume this is the plant I purchased; it didn't have a tag... will see when it blooms!)
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