Texas Gardens in June 2012
/How many plants can you identify in the slide slow below? Here’s a quick list of what it includes:
- Trumpet vine
- Lilies (several kinds)
- Mesquite
- Canna
- Hibiscus
- Sunflowers
- Amaryllis
- Onion
- Pinks
- Purple peas
- Beets
- Squash
I got up early on the 1st to take a walk around our yard. We had been without electricity for about 18 hours and were going to go on our quest for ice shortly. A hot day was forecast but it was comfortable in the morning. The grass was heavy with dew. There were only small branches and leaves strewn across the yard from the storm that caused the electrical outage….no sign nearby of why the power was out since our neighborhood lines are underground. Our young sycamore tree with two trunks was bent over when we first got up yesterday but had righted itself in the past 24 hours.
The day lilies blooming last month have spent themselves; there are large buds on some others that should add color later in July.
The dahlia bulbs I planted in the spring have buds that are just beginning to open. I need to remember to water them.
The hydrangea that was just budding last month now has large beautiful pink blooms. I cut some to take into the house.
We have gotten enough rain recently that some large mushrooms have come up next to an oak stump.
Previous Months:
We have had some hot days and then some rains. Everything is very green so the day lilies are conspicuous with their golden color. They are doing much better this year and last year when the deer nibbled them to the ground.
The dahlia bulbs I planted in the spring are up but not blooming yet. The blazing stars are still just green too. Both will provide some color after the day lilies are done for the year.
The mint is back and looking robust enough that I’ll start trimming it to add to iced tea.
The hydrangea next to the house has a lot of potential blooms. They’ll probably be a profusion of pink by the end of June.
As I walked around I noticed some delicate mushrooms in the newly mowed grass. They must have sprung up since the mowing.
And finally - the maple is settled into its summer state - lots of green leaves. Some are old enough to already have evidence of munching by insects!
Previous Months:
I feel a lot like Kate Greenway - “I can really boast with truth that we have larger and more varied weeds in our garden than you have in yours - in fact, our garden has forgotten that it is a garden and is trying to be a field again.” The garden patch at the corner of our house is totally overgrown. I took a picture of it a month ago to use as a ‘before’ because I was going to start working on it (photo on left). I made a valiant start but got busy preparing for our house painting so the ‘after’ picture is not much improved (photo below). I’ll start work again this coming week.
This garden started out quite well with large flat pavers outlining it and bricks making squares for herbs. Some of the herbs survive - the chives, the mint, and the lemon balm (particularly the lemon balm). The day lilies have not done so well the past few years because there is too much competition from other plants. The hydrangeas are holding their own but could be tremendously more vigorous if they didn’t have so much growing into them.
The biggest culprits (weeds) that I can name are the honey suckle and blackberries. I dislike the blackberries the most because they have thorns. They could redeem themselves if they had substantially sized berries but they don’t. There are a lot of other things growing in the bed that I don’t know what they are but I know that I didn’t plant them. I am going to be quite ruthless about cleaning it out and then plant some other things there. When the mint was vigorous it kept out a lot of the other plants and I like to have the mint to cut up for making herbal tea. This year I’m going to cut the lemon balm more often to eat in salads so perhaps it won’t be so out of control. If it isn't allowed go to seed, it may not be quite so thick next year.
There is a sycamore tree at the edge of the garden furthest from the house. When it first came up, I kept cutting it off at ground level but then decided to let it grow. It is becoming a nice tree and should get tall enough to shade the west facing dining room window; it's a full story above ground so it will take a few more years of growth to shade the full window. I'll have to move the day lilies that like full sun but the hydrangeas should thrive in the shady space under the tree. Some gardening is all about control over plants; other gardening is about appreciating the serendipity of a tree coming up in a good place for a tree!
Longwood Gardens is one of my favorite places for botanical photography. The weather was near perfect for our visit yesterday and lots of subjects for my camera both in the conservatory and in the outdoor part of the garden. I’ll be sharing my favorite images in several blog posts over the next week.
This time of the year the water lily courtyard is closed but there were fragrant lilies in the conservatory that were in all stages of bloom. The buds unfurling with the strong central rib of each petal were full of graceful curves and color that tends to fad as the flower matures.
The open flowers are full of frills and texture…the powder of the pollen.
Previous Posts about Longwood Gardens:
May is a ‘between’ month. Many of the spring blooms are already over and the summer ones are up but not quite blooming - with the exception of the iris…which are truly glorious in our back flowerbed.
The summer bulbs are up - dahlias and day lilies and blazing stars. Fortunately the deer have not decided they are delectable.
I have some stakes around them to discourage browsing but they didn’t keep the deer from the day lilies last year about the time. I’m keeping by fingers crossed.
The pyracantha is blooming. It will have a lot of orange berries in the fall.
And last but not least, the maple has a lot of leaves still unfurling that are reddish before they enlarge and turn all green. Many of the stems that held the samaras recently are still attached to the tree. They’ll be falling off soon.
Previous Months:
There seem to be a lot of signs of spring already. The winter has been very mild here in Maryland so far and there seemed to be a lot of birds singing as I made my way around the yard this morning.
The hyacinths are up and one is blooming.
The maple buds are just about ready to burst (all the buds on the lower branches have already been eaten by the deer).
Tulips are peeking through the mulch. Even the lilies are sprouting (the ones in the photograph have not been discovered by the deer yet…a clump a few feet away have been nibbled to the ground).
Are their signs of spring in your neighborhood?
Celebrating the whole of life....
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