Showing posts with label sedum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sedum. Show all posts

Monday, March 17, 2025

spring things 2025

 There's a slow creep of green...

columbine

hairy rock cress

sedum

field speedwell

...and a bit of color too!  These daffodils were ready to POP earlier this week!



The best time to pick is just before they open up.


...because they open...


...fast!


We've got daylilies coming up too.


We had a big storm last week, and several trees were down....some completely uprooted.  A blooming elm tree was one such victim, but at least I got to pick some branches for another spring bouquet.

 
I love the flowers.


Almost a month later than planned, I finally got some sweet peas planted as well.


They're so easy.  No soaking, no nicking, no heat mats or special lights.  Put them in containers with damp soil...


...and put them in a cool, dark place.  In ten days, you'll have seedlings.  Calendar marked!

The warm weather turned our normally rambunctious kittens into drowsy, lazy cats.




The reprieve is kind of nice.  Maybe they're finally growing up!

Have a great week!  

P.S.  Check out the SPRING CHORUS at one of our favorite spring hiking locations, Bean Blossom Bottoms.  The spring peepers have been out in force in our pond and as soon as the water level recedes, we'll be heading to "BBB" to check it out!

Monday, September 7, 2020

in the pink

When I was a little girl, there were always morning glories growing on our front fence.  They were very obedient, producing bright blue flowers in a tidy line, but I had a terrible experience with them in our first Indianapolis house.  I made a clumsy support out of nails, thick twine, and some flimsy stakes.  Once they really got going, the vines engulfed and then overwhelmed it, collapsing in a tangled mass.  Worse, they reseeded mercilessly, and for the next 8 years I yanked every nefarious and mocking spade-shaped leaf from that desecrated ground.

I never gave up hope on my rosy childhood vision, and over Todd's worried clucking, I planted some this summer.  And victory!  It's amazing!


It's made a beautiful blue mass on our side porch corner, and blooms every day until the heat of the mid-afternoon.  I love using them in bouquets.  They stay open for a couple of days, and then fold up into their smooth spiral spikes, which is also visually interesting.


A distant cousin, Jimson Weed, is growing in the barnyard.


It has been used medicinally for centuries, both as an anesthetic and a hallucinogen, but the risk of overdose is very high.  Haitian priests have used it in their zombie-making concoctions, and in Europe, it has been used in witchcraft to help broomsticks stay aloft on night flights.  It's beautiful...


...and I like having such a powerful weapon in my arsenal, should I tire of my sci-fi business and decide to turn my eye to the supernatural realm!  :)  

If I did, this fellow would be the first thing I'd direct my zombie army toward.


He's decimating my vegetable garden.


Not content with taking single bites out of cucumbers and pumpkins, he has positively annihilated my watermelons, eating a whole one (rind and all!) every night and leaving me with a few seeds scattered in the mulch:


Todd was appropriately deferential to the surviving melon...


...and gave it 2 thumbs up, even though it didn't last very long!


I probably won't need to turn to the dark arts, though, since I've got plenty of cheerful pinks in the garden right now that distract me from my veggie debacle.












The pinks are not so...pink...when balanced with white, yellow, purple, and green.  They're so lovely in a fall garden, when everything else is turning brown.  They are always front and center in my bouquets!


We are definitely turning toward fall now.  Birds are eating...



...pups are preening...


...and cats are sleeping.



Yes, definitely feels like September to me!  :)

Have a great week!

Monday, May 18, 2020

Crowded House

While Todd finally unpacks his office and sets up shelving inside...


...I've been spending every spare minute working outside.  I've been struggling with some of the results of my first-year decisions in the garden:  cramming too many plants in a too-small space.  I naturally like a dense, messy garden, but in some cases, we have a really crowded house!

Between the Solomon's seal and the columbines, this little fern could barely breathe.


This coreopsis plant is completely overshadowed by looming peonies and salvia and therefore is not growing as well as it should be. 


Some things were growing nearly on top of each other!


Look at how healthy this lupine is.


I bought another plant at the same time but put it in a different location, where it doesn't have enough room to thrive.  Huge difference!


I've moved a lot of things around this year to make better garden partners.  It's not just spacing, but color.  I'm pretty pleased with how things are turning out, for the most part.  I tend to rely on 2 main colors for my contrasts - lime green and silvery green - for my favorite flower colors (white, purple/blue, and pink).

This sedum (bottom of picture) is commonly known as graveyard moss, although it's not a moss.  It is such a robust, quick-growing plant that years ago, it became a popular choice for planting on freshly-dug graves.  I love using it with other limes, like this euphorbia, and with silver, like this artemisia.


It looks great against color, like this Sweet William, and darker green, like this lemon thyme.


I planted a trusty lime euphorbia next to catmint, which has lovely purple spikes in summer.


I also like the sharp lime of creeping jenny, which I've tucked into my mint bed.  It's a great contrast against the darker green.  Once I finish propagating it, I'll continue to spread it around the garden.


Lime green looks really good against dark colors, like this penstemon.


This is another much-loved color - dramatic purple leaves.  I have multiples of this plant, and I also have this color in several coral bells plants (see below).  The deep purple looks great against both lime green and silver, which is why I love the artemisia that I planted last year.  Most varieties of artemisia are known as "bullies" because it grows so vigorously, but so far, I love it.  Its feathery foliage and silvery color make it a clear choice over another popular silver plant, dusty miller, that I never warmed up to. 


I also use greens and silvers to 'cool down' hot colors, like red.  I don't tend to like red in the garden, but I love these dainty alpine columbines.  I moved them all around in the garden until they were concentrated in 'cooler' areas with hostas and the artemisia.


I also moved several of them out to the new shade bed I'm building under our pine trees.  They make a nice pop of color there, although they won't be really robust until next year.


Yarrow 'moonshine' also has a lovely silvery tint.  You can see it best in this picture from earlier this  month.


They're all fantastic contrast colors and work well together.  And it gives a nice backdrop for my beloved pinks, purples, and whites. 


I think purple is so dramatic in the garden.  It just works so well with green.


Of course, black goes with everything!  :)


Now that most things are moved around (another huge relocation will happen this fall!), I can sit back and wait for the next stage of blooms.





Have a great week!