Monday, March 31, 2008
Shocking; Just Shocking!
Most of the very early spring flowers are harmonious little critters, modestly and quietly pushing their tiny, pale yellow or soft violet flowers up through last year's dull brown oak leaves... and then there is this bright fuchsia hepatica nobilis var japonica, which just opened. I knew something was up when a honeybee buzzed past me wearing sunglasses.
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Raggedy Robin Spreads Its Wings
Bulbocodium vernum wastes no time in opening its fragile little blooms; with the first kiss of pale, watery sunlight it throws its flowers open. This is a monotypic plant; the only species in its genus. Bulbocodium was comfortably sitting in the genus colchicum, until somebody noticed that its petals are completely separate; they aren't fused at the base into a tube like all the rest of the colchicums... well that was enough for the taxonomists, who banished it all by itself to another genus. You would think that looking like a colchicum, and even being loaded with exactly the same unique toxin as all the rest of the colchicums (colchicine, which is still used to treat gout) would be enough qualifications to stay in the colchicum club, but I guess not.Taxonomists are such exclusionary people; I think too many of them were the last people chosen for dodgerball.
Saturday, March 29, 2008
Snowdrop Magician
Snowdrop 'Trotter's Merlin' is thought to be a hybrid of Galanthus elwesii x plicatus. It is noteworthy for having the inner petals completely covered with green, except for a dainty white edging at the bottom. I assume the Trotter in this case is Dick Trotter, a well known gardener who has one of the most beautiful, deep colored colchicums named after him, and also a strain of hellebores. Now the next question is, why did he name this snowdrop cultivar Merlin? Was it because it was so magical that a snowdrop would pop up in his garden with all-green inner petals? I've alternatively tried to talk myself into thinking that the shape of the green spot resemble a magician with his arms extended, casting a spell. Maybe Dick's dog was named Merlin.
One thing I do know for sure, is that Trotter's Merlin is quite lovely on a bright spring day; now if I could just wave my magic wand and make my tiny clump of these bulbs turn into a thousand!
One thing I do know for sure, is that Trotter's Merlin is quite lovely on a bright spring day; now if I could just wave my magic wand and make my tiny clump of these bulbs turn into a thousand!
Friday, March 28, 2008
Raggedy Robin Sees The Sun?
I love every small flower bulb; I love them even more when they are just sticking their little noses out of the ground... testing the waters, so to speak. I love Bulbocodium vernum when it's just peeking up, more than I can communicate. It sits there for a day or so, then at the first sign of warm sun, no matter how fleeting, it just throws caution to the winds and billows its fragile little flower into full sail, hoping a honeybee comes along before the next freezing rain. Its pale lilac flower, which I must show if the sun ever reappears, is called 'Raggedy Robin'.
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Asarum Minor Is Major Cool
Asarum minor (which should actually now be called Hexastylis minor) is a small, wild ginger native to the mid-Atlantic states, west into Kentucky and Tennessee. It is evergreen in nature (which is why it is now in the genus Hexastylis, where all the evergreen gingers were placed). Surprisingly, it is also evergreen in our much more northerly and more inclement climate here on the western edge of the long grass prairie country. I am quite amazed that these thick, shiny leaves came through our vicious winter unscathed (perhaps I am hasty even at this late date in pronouncing our winter done, as light snow is predicted for today; this has become "the winter that would not die").
The plant pictured is a special cultivar of Asarum minor found in North Carolina, and distributed by Plant Delights Nursery; they have named it 'Dixie Darling'. It was selected for its very prominent silver veining on the leaves, which appears in summer. I actually prefer the plant in the cold weather of late fall and early spring, when the leaves take on dark maroon highlights with a faint silver wash. The flowers are quite striking too, being reddish maroon with white spots. I don't seem to have a picture of the flowers, probably because when the plant blooms, its flowers are pretty well hidden by the leaves.
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
Galanthus woronowii; The Green Snowdrop
Galanthus woronowii (wor-uh-nov-ee-eye) is a species that is sometimes called the 'green snowdrop', because of its very distinctive leaves, which are broad and deep, waxy green. It is native from Turkey up through the Caucasus to southern Russia and it is particularly common on the eastern shore of the Black Sea. Because its native haunts are rather dry, it tolerates dryness in the garden, and a fair amount of sun. The flowers are rather small in proportion to the lush foliage, and ghostly pale. The green marking on the inner petals is also distinctive, looking somewhat blocky, like a molar tooth rather than the more common upside down heart seen for example on Galanthus elwesii. Also noteworthy is the prominent notch on each inner petal at the base of each green spot. This is a rapidly multiplying snowdrop for me, and has quickly formed a dense clump that needs dividing this year, so in only three years my original six bulbs have become thirty. I am almost at that point where I can drop a little comment now and then about how most of the obscure snowdrop species don't seem to do well for other people here in the midwest, but this one is becoming quite a pest for me.
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Galanthus 'Bitton' (And English As A Foreign Language)
Galanthus 'Bitton' is a very small snowdrop; a nivalis clone (nivalis being the small 'English' or 'European' snowdrop species). Bitton is known for being a husky version of nivalis and for having a thick, straight flower stem (a rather relative thing, since nivalis is such a tiny, frail-looking little thing... we're talking about a sturdy version of a four inch tall flower). I assume this clone is named after either the Parish of Bitton, or Bitton Village which lies in that parish; they are in the county of Gloucester, in S.W. Great Britain; a lovely spot indeed, which many years ago I traversed traveling to Bath, on my way to Cornwall to go hiking. I eventually found that Gloucester is pronounced gloss-ter, much to the amusement in the meantime of the locals (though they had no ready answer when I asked why they kept wasting time and ink putting syllables in their words if they weren't going to ever pronounce them). I only later thought I should also have asked if Gloucester is Glosster and Worcester is Wooster why isn't Winchester pronounced Winster? They probably wouldn't have had an answer to that either.
Monday, March 24, 2008
The Day Before Spring Flower
Yesterday was improbably cold and bitter, with a thin blanket of new snow in the morning, stinging sleet driven by swirling winds in the afternoon, and a high temperature barely above freezing... not the most propitious day to take the camera out to the garden to find what's in bloom. However, this little flower, Shibateranthis pinnatifida, has been out for a week, shyly and bravely just poking through the brown leaf litter. In its native land of Japan its common name is Setsubun-so, meaning literally day before spring-flower ; an apt name if ever there was one. On the ancient Japanese lunar calendar (in use until 1873, when Japan adopted our modern, solar-based Julian calendar), Setsubun was the third day of the second lunar month, and was recognized as the end of winter; the holiday was kept when the Julian calendar came in, but Setsubun was re-set as the day before solar spring and "so" means flower or plant; hence Setsubun-so became the day before spring-flower .
The delicate appearance of this little Japanese alpine is deceiving, because in fact it blooms in nature (and in our garden) just at the edge of the receding snow. The leaves that ring the base of the flower seem almost an afterthought, looking far too small and frail to sustain the plant, being just a finely cut little collarette of bronze-green which wilts and disappears at the first puff of early summer's hot winds. The basilar leaves are almost more lovely and frail than the flowers, and soon also disappear in summer's heat.
The genus shibateranthis was split off from eranthis, with the seven Asian species being placed in the new genus (Shibateranthis pinnatifida, stellata, siberica, keiskei, uncinata, albiflora and longistipitata), leaving the two European species in the original eranthis genus (hyemalis and cilicica... the winter aconites). In our garden we do grow S. stellata, which is just starting to bloom, and we grow both of the winter aconites, which I need to start looking for amongst the dead leaves.
Seen closely, the tiny flowers of pinnatifida are quite fascinating; the white "petals" are actually sepals, while the little yellow protuberances are in fact structurally petals. The anthers are bright metallic blue and break open to release sticky white pollen granules, as you can see on the left side of the flower above. The stigmas in the center are light grape in color.
These miniature flowers will never be used in a spring bouquet; they are not going to be a cover subject for any gardening magazine; you'll not see them featured in garden catalogs... but they do wonders for the spirit on a gray and wintry day in Iowa.
Sunday, March 23, 2008
A Different Shade Of Green
I've always loved these stanzas of Tolkien's poem:
I sit beside the fire and think
of how the world will be
when winter comes without a spring
that I shall ever see.
For still there are so many things
that I have never seen;
in every wood in every spring
there is a different green.
of how the world will be
when winter comes without a spring
that I shall ever see.
For still there are so many things
that I have never seen;
in every wood in every spring
there is a different green.
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Garden On Fire
Every March, when the snow is not even completely gone from the ground, cyclamen coum, seen in the top picture, raises its tiny blooms up from the damp, dark leaf litter. The shockingly bright flowers always look to me like so many little fiery sparks floating over the cold earth. Cyclamen coum's early spring display is only the first installment of the cyclamen year. Cyclamen purpurascens, seen blooming in July in the middle picture, although a softer pink, has flowers that are still quite striking but because of much more floral competition in mid-summer, it is much less memorable; however its long bloom cycle is still welcome, and it is the most evergreen of the wild cyclamens for us. Cyclamen hederifolium shown blooming in October in the bottom picture helps close out the gardening year.
Friday, March 21, 2008
Old Fashioned Roses... A Lost Dream
The weather outside may be cold and misty, but I'm touring warm, sunny gardens overflowing with bright flowers... though they are paper gardens; it's garden catalog season. I must admit, I'm being tempted again by roses. When I first began my garden here, one of the first things I planted were rows of old fashioned roses, which grew to huge sizes, tumbling over with lush flowers every June. Unfortunately, the garden has since then gradually grown more shady as a host of other shrubs and also trees, planted faithfully every spring by the wheelbarrow-full, have steadily grown so that the roses, as they became progressively more shaded, began to get blackspot and then to die back altogether.
Alas, I know it's a foolish notion to consider planting more roses; I've cast my lot with rhododendrons, Japanese maples, and Magnolias, underplanted by hosts of small, shade-tolerant perennials and bulbs... not boon companions for roses in this climate. Therefore, one after another the rose catalogs have gone into the recycling bin, their sun-filled pages glowing with roses are just a fool's dream for me. Now where is that RareFind Nursery catalog of rhododendrons?
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Don't Worry, Bee Happy...
We have been given a brief reprieve from this morass of cold and cloudiness that we've found ourselves stuck in this spring... brief because we are to have only two days of sun, then snow and cold are to return. Gardeners being by nature a hardy and wildly optimistic bunch, we will take the few crumbs of sunlight that have fallen from spring's bountiful table, and be grateful for it. The honeybees certainly have no complaints today, their pollen sacs already heavy with bright yellow and orange granules from the early crocuses and snowdrops. A faint hum fills the garden, as they buzz from flower to flower, and the sweet honey smell of snowdrops blooming in the warm sunshine is like whipped cream on my cocoa... I am a happy gardener today.
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Which Way To Aberdeen?
This has been the anti-spring; day after day, week after week of cold, damp, misty weather... it is as if we are trapped in the far north of Scotland, in some icy, wind-swept moor. Normally this might not be such a bad thing for a gardener; there would be something to be said for going out to view the crocuses blooming on the Fourth of July, but I do like to grow the occasional daylily, and we do have to get on with it, as we have a little something called winter coming in seven months.
Now I know why the Scots are so glum...
Now I know why the Scots are so glum...
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Saving Miss Lawrence's Garden
Elizabeth Lawrence was to my mind our pre-eminent American garden writer; my copies of her books are well-worn old friends. After her death in 1985, her famous garden in Charlotte (by then woefully overgrown and neglected due to her absence due to ill health) was fortunately purchased by a wonderful lady named Lindie Wilson, who in 1986 bought the property to live in and began removing the overgrowth from the garden, revealing many of Lawrence's original plants that were hidden but still surviving, especially many of the flowering bulbs for which she was so well known. The Garden Conservancy and the Wing Haven Foundation have now been involved for some time in planning and fund raising to permanently preserve the house and garden; Wing Haven has already raised the money to purchase the property from Lindie Wilson and is now working towards raising another $50,000 as a stewardship fund. I have mentally toured this garden so many cold winter evenings with Miss Lawrence as my guide, that I know it as well as I know my own garden. It was therefore with pleasure that I just sent off a check to help, in a small way, to keep this garden blooming for many generations to come. The picture above of Miss Lawrence's garden was copied from the Wing Haven Foundation web page, and I hope they do not mind; the web site, if you are interested is:
http://www.elizabethlawrence.org/tour.html
http://www.elizabethlawrence.org/tour.html
Monday, March 17, 2008
Snowdrop Double Doubles
Here are two double snowdrops blooming today: double doubles, I guess you'd say. For reasons that I can understand, double snowdrops get mixed reviews by fanatical snowdrop lovers (galanthophiles). The main knock on the doubles is that they are not graceful, like the single snowdrops. However, to me it depends on how you look at them; looking from above, or maybe even from the side, flore pleno does look a little... boxy. Actually from above they sort of look like little lobster claws to me; indeed not exactly graceful. Now when you get down and look at them from below (no easy task with a plant all of four inches tall) they give quite a different impression, and are very pretty; kind of like wee hoop skirts with petticoats with upside down heart markings along the hemline... quite sweet. I've taken to planting them on little hillocks in the garden to facilitate being able to see under them better, but even so when I'm seen walking around with muddy knees in early spring it's a pretty good bet I've been out looking at the snowies. I saw a picture of a Brit galanthophile out in his garden who walks about with a mirror which he sets down below each snowdrop so he can see it better... guess he doesn't like getting his pants muddy. The other snow drop fanciers who read his post about the mirror, oohed over how clever he was. Being or being described as "clever" seems to be a uniquely British trait, as in "He's such a clever boy!" Here in the States, I know I've never heard anybody call me clever... even though I feel like over the years I've given them plenty of opportunities to do so. Now maybe they were thinking it, but just didn't want to seem overly flattering. That could be.
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Squirrel Math
I've always thought early, small crocuses are best when they are scattered here and there as if they popped up randomly on their own. Well, I (or I should say WE) have achieved that effect in the garden... the other half of this equation being the squirrels, who dig up the crocuses, and re-bury some of them in the oddest spots. It is always a delight to see various little bulbs popping up all over the garden, and guessing what they might be.
The only problem with this human-large rodent partnership is squirrel math: an even split is eat six, plant one!
The only problem with this human-large rodent partnership is squirrel math: an even split is eat six, plant one!
Saturday, March 15, 2008
P.J. The Cat Goes Down To Defeat
Bluebells: All Is Forgiven...
I recently complained about native bluebells (Mertensia virginica) spreading willy-nilly through my woodland garden and trying to take over some of the flower beds; I will say, however, that in late April when the hostas are just unfurling their leaves, you can get some smashing combinations with the bluebells. Just when I think about ripping all the bluebells out, they do something cute! Sigh... well, vigorous garden management was never my strong suit.
Friday, March 14, 2008
Snowdrops Bring Spring (Or Vice Versa)
With much creaking and groaning, the seasonal page is turning here in Iowa to spring. Even though a thick blanket of snow still covers most of our garden, the snowdrops, just can't contain themselves any longer, and are blooming anyplace the sun has released them from this icy grip. They've been out of the snowbank and into the light for such a short period of time that their foliage is still yellowish. Galanthus elwesii, the greater or Levantine snowdrop from the western mountains of Turkey always blooms first here, as it should, but the double snowdrop Galanthus nivalis flore pleno, blooms hard on its heels, which doesn't seem right, since the regular single form of Galanthus nivalis blooms almost a month later. I have flore pleno planted in several locations, so I know it's not just some fluke due to a favorable spot. I guess I'm puzzled, but not complaining.
Galanthus elwesii is shown open and closed, with flore pleno shown at bottom.
Thursday, March 13, 2008
It's About Time!
I've had a good quality digital camera for some time, but with a rather cheap lens (I know this is backwards from the way you're supposed to do things in photography). This lens has some strange Cyrillic writing on it that I suspect indicates it was manufactured in Kazakhstan. Well, today the Fed Ex man delivered my fancy new macro close-up lens. Of course he had to arrive with the package requiring a signature just as I was high up on the roof shoveling snow and ice off. Here's my first picture with the new lens, which happens to show my $5.47 Walmart watch. This watch is so clunky that I found out it sets off the airport metal detectors so I have to send it through in my carry-on, and the date function seems to wander somewhat mysteriously, perhaps following some alien calendar... though it says on the watch face that the movement is Japanese, I suspect the rest of the watch may also be from Kazakhstan; the workmanship is strikingly similar to my old camera lens. It also says on the watch face that it is water resistant to 100 feet; not water proof, mind you... just resistant; so I suppose it's like "No, no no water in here... oh what the heck!)
Anyway, now that I have my new lens, I just need the snow to melt so I'll have some flowers to take pictures of... oh, and maybe I need an upgrade to a ten dollar watch.
Anyway, now that I have my new lens, I just need the snow to melt so I'll have some flowers to take pictures of... oh, and maybe I need an upgrade to a ten dollar watch.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Sweetheart The Deer Makes It Through
Sweetheart the deer first showed up at our back door last summer, a motherless fawn so tiny that he could hardly hold up his ears. I don't know what happened to his mother; perhaps she was hit by a car. Sweetheart (as I soon named him) seemed unlikely to survive on his own, and the larger deer in the neighborhood were soon bullying him and trying to run him off. He would stand there in the middle of the yard all alone, long wobbly legs akimbo, and with his ears held down, not knowing where to go or what to do. Sweet corn and a ripe red apple made things a little better, but things really looked up when one of the does, who already had two slightly older fawns of her own (shown in the middle picture), took Sweetheart into her fold, and protected him. Sweetheart and his new family were then a regular fixture in our woods all summer, growing strong and healthy on the rich green grass, with long afternoon naps on the high hillside where the cool breezes blew.
This winter was a new challenge, as a thick layer of ice was soon laid across the landscape, followed by several feet of snow, which never melted. In past brutal winters like this, the deer grew gaunt and weak, tottering about through the ice and snow, continually and ever more desperately searching for food, like so many wan ghosts. I decided I couldn't watch this happen this winter (never start naming your deer) so have been putting out some corn every day.
This week we finally seem to be coming out of the other side of winter. Sweetheart (shown at bottom between his two step-sisters), has made it. Thick-furred, larger, and darker now than his sisters, he will soon be frisking through his first spring, full of promise and adventure. Living with and in nature can be frustrating (there is no tree or shrub that is truly deer-proof anymore and the four foot long prairie kingsnake that hunts toads at night on our front stoop tends to discourage visitors); it can be expensive (the property taxes on our land have tripled as enormous houses with four car garages crowd in around us); but above all it is a joy... and a privilege.
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
Rhododendrons And Hostas... No Quality Time Alone
Another garden combination that I've grown to like, is pale lavender rhododendrons with hostas that have a lot of creamy white on their leaves. The two seem to each soften and complement the other, and the hostas planted around the "skirts" of the rhododendrons, cover their bare legs nicely... pictured is a new bed from last spring. Now add some primroses, and a bunch of early spring bulbs like crocuses and snowdrops, a half dozen lilies for late summer bloom, squeeze in a couple of hellebores, and have the whole bed invaded by bluebells, blue squills, and lamium, and you've pretty much got a typical mature flower bed from my garden. The rhododendrons and hostas in this garden just don't get much quality time together by themselves.
The Sun Came Up Like Thunder
After a long and unrelenting winter; the stuff of weather legends, warmth (and with it, hope) returned today, in the form of the sun, which rose like thunder from behind the eastern ridge, draped in robes of orange and peach.
All the birds began clearing their throats and singing from the tallest trees, the deer started racing back and forth along the far ridge in sheer joy, and the first drip-drip of snowmelt from the roof signaled a new day, and hopefully a new season... spring!
All the birds began clearing their throats and singing from the tallest trees, the deer started racing back and forth along the far ridge in sheer joy, and the first drip-drip of snowmelt from the roof signaled a new day, and hopefully a new season... spring!
Monday, March 10, 2008
Cardinals Like Drops Of Blood
This endless winter; this cruel frozen ghost of a March, is beginning to weigh on me... during the day the red cardinals hang motionless on the ice-encrusted branches like congealed drops of blood, and all night from the tall red oak tree the barred owls mockingly hoot No Spring For You . It is truly the winter of my discontent. However, just when all seems cold and gray, when the spirit and body cry out for hope and sustenance, the doorbell rings... it's the Girl Scout cookies!
Sunday, March 09, 2008
Why They Call Them Snowdrops
It was four below zero this morning when I tumbled out of bed... just another fine spring day in Iowa. The garden gate squeaked and shuddered with cold when I opened it, and the foot of ice and snow on the frozen ground crunched loudly under my boots as I trundled down the path, surveying a scene that could as easily be from the far north tundra as from an idyllic midwest flower garden. I have been gardening for twenty-five years in Iowa, and have never seen such a late (no, not late: nonexistent) spring. Our early snowdrops, Galanthus elwesii (el-WEZ-ee-eye) in favorable winters may bloom in early January; in more wicked years it may not bloom until mid or late February. This year I thought it might be April before it could open its small hanging bells.
However, much to my delight I found a small spot in the garden where the sunlight collected on a southward slope, and this little gathering of snowdrops was rising out of the icy ground, with blooms poised to open on the first hint of warming. That they could tolerate below-zero temperatures in the open attests to a hardiness beyond expectation or explanation. I guess though I don't need to explain it... I just want to enjoy it. Galanthus elwesii is the early, or great snowdrop. It is native from western Turkey up through the high Caucasus and west to Eurasia, and should be the snowdrop of choice for most gardeners in this country, as it better tolerates sunnier, dryer, hotter conditions than its frailer, later-blooming little cousin Galathus nivalis, the English snowdrop. Galanthus elwesii is almost always the first bloom in the garden, so its flowering is very special, while nivalis blooms a month or so later when there is plenty of competition for attention.
Saturday, March 08, 2008
Ever Seen A Puzzled Bee?
Not all flowers can be beautiful, or fragrant, or striking. Some are just... well, what would you call it... hmmm. I once watched a honeybee circle this little flower, eyeballing it for five minutes, then fly off in puzzlement. This plant is Asarum caulescens, a type of wild ginger, and asarum flowers aren't meant for bees anyway; most of the species have their flowers very close to the ground and are fertilized by beetles. This particular asarum flower is puzzling to me too, as the flowers are held on upright stalks off the ground, and seem too small to be fertilized by all but the smallest beetles, so I can't imagine what it would be attempting to attract. I do know its foliage (along with several other species of asarum) is critical to the existence of a beautiful butterfly, a type of swallowtail (Luehdorfia japonica) that is considered the national butterfly of Japan. In its native range in the mountains of Japan, Asarum caulescens is the prime plant eaten by the caterpillar of this butterfly.
Apparently Asarum caulescens is very closely related to our North American native ginger, Asarum canadense. Both have somewhat fuzzy, heart-shaped leaves that are deciduous, and so both are pretty hardy compared to the evergreen gingers which, in our midwest winters all too often become wannabe-evergreen gingers. The evergreen gingers, of course have now been assigned to their own genus (hexastylis).
I believe that some gingers can be self-fertilizing, and maybe this odd little flower just doesn't care a wit whether it attracts a pollinator or not. I know it didn't do much for the honeybee.
Picture of Luehdorfia japonica butterfly: http://www.tolweb.org/Luehdorfia_japonica/65404
Friday, March 07, 2008
Strangest Plant In My Garden
Not too long ago a friend asked me what the strangest flower was in the garden... now, that's kind of a head-scratcher, as our garden has more than it's share of oddities, but after thinking about it I've decided on Asarum minamitanianum, a wild ginger originally native to the Japanese island of Kyushu (but said to be nearly extinct in the wild).
It has speckled, evergreen leaves, and the flowers... well, I've seen them described as "mutant starfish". They are maroon and white, and waxy. They have long 'tails" on each of the petals, the flower lying uneasily just off the ground like some Daliesque creature from space... Cool.
Thursday, March 06, 2008
Aquilegia Tower Light Blue
I recently posted a rather whiny complaint about how columbines won't grow in my garden; a modest exception is Aquilegia Tower Light Blue, which has seeded about slightly in one spot. I guess if you can only have one columbine in your garden, this is a pretty nice one. Actually I don't much care for the plant habit itself; columbines in general are rather attractive when they first arise out of the ground in spring, but by the time they bloom, and especially later in the dry, dusty late summer, they become somewhat ungainly and "stalky". Well, A. Tower Light Blue actually accentuates that ungainliness, with rather sparse, low-growing foliage and very long stalks with the flowers "towering " over the low plants. I'm not sure why this trait was considered desirable, unless it is that it makes a better cutting plant (but columbines don't last well as a cutting flower). However, the flowers themselves... well, they are quite lovely; double flowers in kind of an old-fashioned dusty lavender, which contrast with the greenish unopened blooms.
So, here it is... my one columbine (assuming it's still there this spring); I'm still suspicious of alien columbine abductors being active hereabouts.
So, here it is... my one columbine (assuming it's still there this spring); I'm still suspicious of alien columbine abductors being active hereabouts.
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
Robin Discontent In The Garden...
It was certainly not unreasonable for the robins to show up this week; temperatures are supposed to be in the forties this time of year, and some nice patches of green grass normally ought to be showing. However, this year we have two feet of snow still on the ground, with temperatures predicted to be well below zero Friday night (thirty degrees below normal).
The robins' reaction to all of this seemed at first to be utter disbelief, turning into a complete, dejected sulk. They perch about in the trees, hunched up and shivering, glowering at everything and everybody. Now, you'd think they could just fly back south a few miles, where the snow ends, but I guess their navigation systems don't allow for two migrations in a year. The alternative explanation of course is that robins are rather dim bulbs; an opinion which I've held for years. Robins are colorful, an icon of spring, and normally the cheeriest of birds... however they are not the Einsteins of the bird world.
The robins' reaction to all of this seemed at first to be utter disbelief, turning into a complete, dejected sulk. They perch about in the trees, hunched up and shivering, glowering at everything and everybody. Now, you'd think they could just fly back south a few miles, where the snow ends, but I guess their navigation systems don't allow for two migrations in a year. The alternative explanation of course is that robins are rather dim bulbs; an opinion which I've held for years. Robins are colorful, an icon of spring, and normally the cheeriest of birds... however they are not the Einsteins of the bird world.
Tuesday, March 04, 2008
Rhododendron Tragedy?
While we were in Mexico, here in Iowa almost two feet of wet, heavy snow fell in one day, which has subsequently (in combination with the deep snow already on the ground) turned into two feet of near-ice. When I was finally able to pry one of the garden gates open, to go look around, most of the rhododendrons were nowhere to be seen; they were flattened under all the snow, and are now entombed in ice, pinned down and frozen to the ground. I don't think this is going to end well...
Monday, March 03, 2008
To Dream...
P.J., our little tabby and white cat, is not a fighter or a hunter; the only thing I've ever seen her catch was a June bug once, and I think it might have been sick. You can dream, though...
Sunday, March 02, 2008
An Underused Garden Combination
A combination of garden shrubs that I've always thought is way underutilized, is weigelas and old fashioned roses; in fact now that I think about it, I've never seen it mentioned anywhere. Not fancy enough, I guess.
Saturday, March 01, 2008
A Garden Oozing With Potential...
There are more than a few little areas in our garden that still lie somewhere between a blank slate and a half-baked idea... steps to nowhere, paths that end in a brier patch, or meandering walls of uncertain purpose.
But, always being a glass half-full sort of a gardener, I like to say that these are all just areas that ooze with potential.
















































