Thursday, June 30, 2011

It's June - A Rainbow of Blooms

Blooms of the rainbow will be featured today, with as close as I can find to a ROY G BIV color scheme, without repeating  previous photos. Not all colors will be exactly like the usual depiction of the spectrum of colors, but I tried to go for bright. This was more challenging than I had imagined when I planned the post early in the month. I had no idea what flowers would be good choices for blue, indigo and violet and a green flower does not exist in my garden world!

My best entry for rainbow "R" is a red, red rose from the backyard of client P, fresh from a morning shower:


The lily is my pick for a bright Crayola orange. My first bloom opened on June 23. This photo of my asiatic lily patch was taken on June 29:


Yellow goes back to early June with Client P's striking columbine:


Green was the most challenging choice. All I came up with is an immature coneflower that will develop into some shade of reddish purple. I took the photo July 1. A day late and a color short. Lady's Mantle (Alchemilla mollis) blooming chartreuse green was my other choice. Any suggestions?


Blue--the color of the skies and seas. Here are some blue pansies and blooming ajuga reptans, photographed by my small pond on June 1:


Indigo--the color of purple grapes, dark denim blue or my choice, (blue) false indigo--baptisia australis. This photo was taken from my backyard deck in the mid-morning sun, June 6.


Violet--the color of the recently-deceased Elizabeth Taylor's eyes?? My pick--a recently planted clematis at Aunt V that is blooming beautifully this year and is being coaxed to climb up the garage wall trellis. This photo was taken looking upwards toward the sky and with flash, to capture the inside of the flower "bell." The flash may have changed the flower from more of an indigo blue to what I am calling violet:

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Neighborhood Garden Tour 2011

Monarda (with a twist!)

I almost forgot the tour this morning even though I had a postcard reminder displayed prominently. Last year, 2010 Neighborhood Garden Tour I promised myself that I would spend more time at the free neighborhood event and once again I failed. I didn't see every yard, but I got a free sample of a dwarf variegated goatsbeard, and a promise of a one-of-a-kind daylily to be divided sometime after blooming. To be offered a hybridized and registered daylily that no one else in the world has, from my former college instructor who named it for the college and purchased it...that was worth the tour time in itself! It is not yet in bloom, so I have to wait until later this summer for my promised division. If I catch the blooming, I will post a photo of  the special daylily later.

The monarda bloom above had an unusual growth so I thought that was photo-worthy. Below, a photo of a nice hosta trio. This homeowner claims sixty distinct cultivars and knows their names. Quite amazing.

Hosta diversity

I do not know what buttercups are, but it seems that I should, being a country girl. At first glance I thought they were evening primrose, oenethera missourienses, or Ozark sundrops which are blooming yellow around town.

Buttercups? Apparently not! Yellow loosestrife?

 There was lots of greenery in the shady gardens of this established, heavily canopied area. I didn't take many green pictures because I still seek color with my lens. I did see many wonderful plants, mostly in one spectacular garden, many of them green and dark. I took this photo of  'Othello', just to see if it was different from 'Desdemona', but I still just can't tell them apart.

Big Leaf Ligularia - Ligularia dentata 'Othello'

Before leaving, I took this photo (is that a bug? earwig?) of one of my own hostas that is blooming--white and wonderful:

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Garden Club - June


Pots of dragon wing begonias
These beautiful pots are at the entry of an immaculately landscaped property that my garden club toured this evening. Also in this plot are Sumac 'tiger eyes', grasses and evening primrose:

Evening primrose with persicaria
Here I attempt to demonstrate braiding the daffodil foliage, but the clump was too large to make a neat braid. I have on my resale shop denim shirt with the flowers sewn on (referenced in my other blog).

Rose braids and folds over daffodil stems
Some more photos of the lovely, mostly shady yard:

Sunday, June 19, 2011

This Week in the Church Garden


This is one of six container gardens in front of church this year, with over-wintered mandevilla growing on trellises providing the "thriller" function. The grower took the six plants back in April to replant a second year in the containers. The fall-repotted mandevilla barely survived the lack of watering, an aphid infestation, and a severe foliage drop, but Harriet and I are proud that they survived to bloom another year. It was an experiment, probably one which will not be repeated next year!


The Kousa dogwood is still blooming as a lovely backdrop for the hot-hued geraniums and complementary petunias which are already going bonkers.


The pansies are still growing in the fountain garden, but the petunias, impatiens, alyssum, lobelia, begonias and ivy are filling in nicely--this garden is not available for underground sprinklers, so sometimes it suffers a bit in the summer heat. I am here at least once a week, but that is not enough and I always hope others notice and water this area as necessary.


Have you ever seen two patches of lilies this full? They are expanding like crazy. Frank wishes they were a brighter color, but they are blooming their butts off this year.


The perennial pink campanula has been invasive in places, but is filling in this corner of the garden, where it has historically been hard to keep annuals alive, due to hot sun and insufficient moisture. The roses have been here for years and are looking good this year.


Frank is a bit zany for zinnias and they are beginning to bloom. There has been a huge problem with powdery mildew the past few years but Frank thinks that he has the correct cultivars and the appropriate chemical antidotes this year--so far, so good. A few susceptible phlox have been removed from the gardens so they can no longer spread their leprous mildew to the zinnias. They were gorgeous, but flawed. Here the bright pink zinnia color echoes the petunia.


This year the circle garden around the coral burst crab tree has been planted in a tear-drop shape--another Frank favorite. It is a little slow to fill in this year, and with no mulch used, is not as beautiful yet as it probably will be in a few months. Begonias, dusty miller, and victoria blue salvia dominate here. In the background, a whole bunch of lilies are getting ready for a show. Perhaps I will sprinkle the teardrop with a little magic blue juice.


That's about it for This Week in the Church Garden. I will probably have another post in a month or two. Frank, along with a handful of volunteers, is hopeful that this will be the best year ever. The drumstick allium that I featured last year are about to open. There is a large astilbe patch, and daylilies about to bloom. We finally have a clematis that is beginning to climb the Rose of Sharon tree. Huge yellow African marigolds dominate by August, pairing well with the blue salvia that also is still developing. And Endless Summer hydrangeas are just beginning to develop color.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Rugosa Rose on the Lake

Pink Rugosa Rose

Rosa Rugosa

Yesterday we spent the day at Lake Michigan and the roses were in bloom there, as well. The rugosa rose is well suited to just such an environment, surviving in sand as well as other adverse conditions, with a minimum of care.

The harsh thorniness of the rugosa discourages the deer from nibbling and apparently their fragrance is also distasteful to the deer. We saw several potential munchers in the area.

 The pink rose and the beautiful blue lake were a perfect pairing on this cool June day.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Everything's Coming Up Roses!

Rose Photos Today










Success with roses can depend on a lot of factors--perhaps sometimes even neglect. I see beautiful blooming roses in neglected city yards--shrubs that have probably had no care in years. The abundant spring rains and sunshine have allowed nature's glory to naturally emerge with no chemicals and no special pruning. The roses pictured above were actually ones that I pruned a bit last year, not wanting to truncate some of the growing long canes too much on a few of the climbers that had nothing on which to climb that high, but cutting back the dead wood and some of the errant branches. The roses this year (I am no longer involved) have been tied back to the fence even more than last year to keep them in place and are bursting with blooms--many dozens of these blooms on some of the bushes. I'm not claiming more than a miniscule amount of credit for their success this year, but it seems to be another very good year for roses in Michigan.

 We have had three unseasonably hot days, in the 90's this past week, and the roses buds have exploded quickly into bright blooms all around town. Cooler weather is predicted, so hopefully we can enjoy the show for a few weeks. The peony show suffered last week--along with a lot of human beings--with the dreadfully hot and humid weather. I know I wilted, although I didn't turn brown or fall on the ground. 

Roses and peonies.....those old fashioned favorites never cease to amaze! I think my mother would be pleased that I am paying attention to all that beauty. She adored peonies, for sure--and she named me, Rosella!


Red roses with pink peony

Monday, June 6, 2011

Photo of the Day - Rosa Glauca

The flowers of this blue rose are small, fleeting, and cute, captured here after a morning sprinkling in my backyard today.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Blooms - First Week of June

Chinese Fringe Tree
Peony
Baptisia - white
Baptisia australis
Globemaster Allium in late evening glow

A few more iris from the church garden, taken at 8:40 PM!