Showing posts with label Lily. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lily. Show all posts

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Sunday Blooms Remembered



Some Sunday blooms for a rainy day.
There is a promise of a beautiful week ahead
for gardening and time outdoors soaking up
some sunlight and warmer temperatures.




How far you go in life depends on your being tender with
the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with
the striving, and tolerant of the weak and strong.
Because someday in your life you will have been all of these.
~ George Washington Carver ~












































Happy Gardening Everyone!




Saturday, January 30, 2010

Some Perennial Favorites

 Looking through the picture files again I decided there
were just some perennials that I would not like to do without
every Spring and Summer.
Everyone has their favorites they depend upon to be
fragrant, colorful and reliable.
These are also the ones that I tend to keep adding new colors
or new varieties of  to the beds every year.
A few of them are:

Brunnera
‘Jack Frost’ is an early bloomer and who would
not love the tiny blue blooms. The foliage stays around all summer
for me adding contrast to the beds.
I also have Brunnera ‘Looking  Glass’ but its foliage tends to die back here in the heat of summer.

 


Dianthus spreads in mounds and smell heavenly.

I have this white variety that I have had for years and
which has lost its name if it had one.

A new Antique Rose one that I grew from seed last summer
now has been introduced into the garden and I hope to see some
blooms from it this summer.

Creeping phlox is also the first to bloom along with the
tulips in the Spring. It is a tough ground cover that is just
the thing for that bank or slope that everyone has that tends
to wash away. This cover a whole section along the banking
on one side of the garage to keep it from washing away.

 

 
Astilbe
Is a must have for any shade gardener.
I have several colors of it.

From white, red, pink  and lavender.

 
More pinks were added to the woodland bed last Fall and
I am searching for a pretty peach colored one to add to them.

 



Tall Phlox is one of my favorites and I keep looking
for new ones to plant every Spring. If deadheaded they well
keep putting on flushes of blooms all summer.
The blooms  may get smaller in later blooms.
‘Adonis’ pink is an old one with a strong fragrance that fills
the yard on summer breezes.

 

‘Nora Leigh’ was new to bloom last Summer and
has lovely variegated leaves. I am told the variegations
may get lost over the years so we will see.

 

 

David tall white phlox is a very tall one with pure white blooms.
Also to the collection of phlox in the beds little “Laura’
was added last summer and it has a very strong fragrance
and is more compact in growth.
Besides the wild lavender phlox that comes up in early summer,
Nikki , Katherine and Miss Ellie will be joining these in
the summer blooming.

 

Achillea’s  of all colors is another perennial I have come
to love. ‘ Richard Nelson’ is a lovely deep pink.

 


‘Oertel’s Rose’ achillea is a lighter shade of pink yarrow.

 

Achillea  ‘Snow Sport’  with its white blooms will be joined
by newly blooming yellow Moonshine, Apricot Delight, red Cerise Queen,  and light yellow Anthea this summer.


Wooly Speedwell Blue Veronica has upright candle blooms
that the butterflies and bees love.

 



A favorite by many gardeners is ' the ‘Lolypop’ lily.
This one has been around for years and just  keeps
getting fuller and better every summer.
I planted over fifty new lilies last summer and fall that
I am so anxious to see bloom this summer if I can separate
them from the munching deer’s.


These are just a few of my favorite perennials that seem
to grow in numbers through out my garden beds and are
added to as the new varieties come out every Spring.
Echinacea’s are another favorite perennial in my garden
and several new ones were introduced to the garden
last Fall. Among them  are Summer Sky, Harvest Moon,
Sunrise, will join Razzmatazz and Double Decker.

What are some of your favorite perennials that you
would hate to do without in the Summer?

Happy Gardening Everyone!


Sunday, January 24, 2010

In The Search Of Sunshine Or Rainbows



What do gardeners do when it is looks like the
day is going to be a total loss and there is not even
a hint of some sunshine? The day started out foggy
and only got worse with a steady rain falling out
side. With not even being able to sneak out and
check the flowers beds for some more sign of life
I had to find my sunshine from the picture files
to brighten the day a little.
Looking through the picture files one thing became
apparent, my garden is lacking in the color sunshine yellow.
Then I remembered Rebecca @ " In The Garden"
had posted a Rainbow Invitation so thinking this
would be a fun project I went on a search for
Roy G. Biv





Now red was easy to find with the help of
my 'Crimson Bouquet' roses. They are what
are pictured in the header collage.





And if that is not red enough I can always count
on the huge blooms of the 'Lord Baltimore' hibiscus.
I have the red amaryllis also but I know everyone
must be tired of seeing them.




This is my orange find. Alright it is not really
orange but I am not fond of the color orange as many
of my blogger friends know. So this 'Pardon Me' Lily
will have to do.





Oh, I almost forgot about the orange mums
that were grown from seed. Well that do for orange?




Now to the absent color of yellow in my garden.
'Moombeam Coreopsis is one that never fails to
please. The one wished change I would have for
this flower is that it had sturdier stems but on
the other hand it will grow in any type of soil.
It has dainty cream yellow blooms.




On the other hand 'Stella de Oro' lilies are very yellow.



The 'Japanese Painted Fern' will is green but leaning
toward the silver and burgundy area so may not count.




But the woodland ferns that were moved into my
front shade bed is a lovely green.




'Sentimental Blue' campanula is a true blue.
Correction it is Blue Chips not Sentimental Blue!





But not as brilliant color of blue as the 'Bluebird' Delphinium.





' Laura' is shorter than the other phlox but its
indigo color is lovely and its fragrance devine.






This indigo delphinium needs a name.





This Purple Clustered Bellflower will be the violet
color in the garden.






And 'Blue Hill' salvia is more violet than its blue
name.

Sadly the only picture I have of an actual rainbow was
this one I caught as it was almost faded away last
summer.




Do You Have A Rainbow in Your Garden?




Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Beauty From Within



Jane Magnolia





Iris



Rhododendron




Crimson Rose




Stella de Oro





Lasting Love Rose



Queen Charlotte Anemone




Pink Blush Cleome




Becky Shasta Daisy




Salmon Pelargonium



Gerbera Daisy




Roulette Red Streptocarpus




Honeysuckle




Lily and Bee