The moderate-to-strong El NiƱo continues as last night another Spring thunderstorm rolled though dumping a bunch of rain. It is SO nice to have rain this year after a few years of awful drought, which as a result, produced very few and very small bluebonnets the past couple of years. Oh!, but this year there are bluebonnets! Big bluebonnets!
-The Sun is Killing Me or To There and Back Again.- A Garden Journal about leaving Seattle to live and garden in Central Texas and returning home a decade later to once again garden in my beloved Pacific Northwest.
Thursday, March 25, 2010
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Species Tulips, etc.
Ever since moving down South from up North, I have mourned the loss of Tulips. But then I discovered Species Tulips! These are so much prettier than those big hybrids and they grow AND naturalize in the South. Outstanding!
I picked up these red and yellow ones last year at a local nursery. I'm not sure what kind they are exactly, but last year I had three and this year I have 6! Yay!:
Open:
OK, so Pam from Digging says these are Tulipa clusiana 'Cynthia'. Thanks for the ID, Pam! Here are some more photos of these open. You can see how they are all yellow inside:
New this year Tulip clusiana. I am completely head-over-heels in love with this one and will need to acquire more for next year:
Also new this year Tulip Saxatalis. I am going to get some yellow primrose to plant around this one (Actually, I am going to try and rescue some native yellow primrose from just down the road. They are widening the road and about to plow over a bunch of wildflowers. We'll see if I get there in time to save them from the bulldozers.):
Here are some naturalizing narcissus 'Thalia'. They have quite doubled since last spring:
And look at the redbud blooming. So pretty against the blue spring sky:
The Mt. Laurel is also beginning to bloom. Soon my garden will smell like grape soda:
I picked up these red and yellow ones last year at a local nursery. I'm not sure what kind they are exactly, but last year I had three and this year I have 6! Yay!:
Open:
OK, so Pam from Digging says these are Tulipa clusiana 'Cynthia'. Thanks for the ID, Pam! Here are some more photos of these open. You can see how they are all yellow inside:
New this year Tulip clusiana. I am completely head-over-heels in love with this one and will need to acquire more for next year:
Also new this year Tulip Saxatalis. I am going to get some yellow primrose to plant around this one (Actually, I am going to try and rescue some native yellow primrose from just down the road. They are widening the road and about to plow over a bunch of wildflowers. We'll see if I get there in time to save them from the bulldozers.):
Here are some naturalizing narcissus 'Thalia'. They have quite doubled since last spring:
And look at the redbud blooming. So pretty against the blue spring sky:
The Mt. Laurel is also beginning to bloom. Soon my garden will smell like grape soda:
Friday, March 19, 2010
Spring Flowers
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Cedar Waxwing Invasion
My garden was invaded by a flock of Cedar Waxwings this morning. I heard a bunch of high pitched meep-meeping and looked out the window to see them all grouped atop the orchid tree. They came to gorge on the berries that were left on the various holly bushes in the garden.
These guys are so stylish looking I think; always appearing as if they are all dolled up to go to a masquerade with their slick looking feathers and neatly outlined-in-white, black masks:
Grouped in the orchid tree:
Wider shot:
These guys are so stylish looking I think; always appearing as if they are all dolled up to go to a masquerade with their slick looking feathers and neatly outlined-in-white, black masks:
Grouped in the orchid tree:
Wider shot:
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
First Hummingbird of 2010 Season
Monday, March 15, 2010
Bloom Day - March 15th 2010
It's been a cold winter this year and my flowers are just now beginning to pop out. I've got a plethora of narcisus right now. Check them out:
A double. I really love this one:
Hoop petticoats:
Various narcissus:
Some big daffodils. I really don't like these as well as the wee wildflowery ones, but I bought some to try them out just to see how they do. Plus, they remind me of the silly, goofy daffodils in Alice in Wonderland and they make me smile. I do think they would look better in a more formal-like garden instead of my wildflowery-native-type garden:
Leucojum:
A windflower I rescued from the lawn before it was mowed over:
And some cardinals that have been visting my garden. They fly away if I step outside to take a photo, so these are through-the-window snapshots:
Happy bloom day everyone! It's springtime - get outside and plant some seeds! That's where I'm headed...
A double. I really love this one:
Hoop petticoats:
Various narcissus:
Some big daffodils. I really don't like these as well as the wee wildflowery ones, but I bought some to try them out just to see how they do. Plus, they remind me of the silly, goofy daffodils in Alice in Wonderland and they make me smile. I do think they would look better in a more formal-like garden instead of my wildflowery-native-type garden:
Leucojum:
A windflower I rescued from the lawn before it was mowed over:
And some cardinals that have been visting my garden. They fly away if I step outside to take a photo, so these are through-the-window snapshots:
Happy bloom day everyone! It's springtime - get outside and plant some seeds! That's where I'm headed...
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