A
walk
in
the
Cornus florida, Flowering Dogwood
Full of flowers, probably because it is in full sun.
The flowers are in the center,
and one can see five open or opening on this one.
A type of Camassia
Large-flowered Bellwort, Uvularia grandiflora
Common Blue Violet, Viola sororia
Mertensia virginica, Virginia Bluebells
As a spring ephemeral, the entire plant
disappears into the ground by early summer.
When the flower falls off or withers,
it often leaves behind the central reproductive structures.
I'm fairly sure this is Clematis candida.
It grows along the ground,
and will create 3 to 6 very large flowers.
Extremely stunning.
Trillium sessile
Celandine Poppy, Stylophorum diphyllum
Bottom side of leaves is a silver-white color.
Native Coral Honeysuckle, Lonicera sempervirens,
Dwarf Fothergilla (Fothergilla gardenii)
Below you can see the flowers not yet open,
along with the ones that are open.
Viburnum 'Winterthur' flower bud clusters
before opening up.
Christmas Fern, Polystichum acrostichoides
Young shoots are known as fiddleheads,
and furled leaves are fronds.
Do not remove the dead fronds from the year before.
They will act as mulch as the new fronds cover them up.
then they will become fertilizer as they decompose.
I think, a red-banded hairstreak (Calycopis cecrops) on
Philadelphia fleabane, Erigeron philadelphicus
A Gray Treefrog (Hyla versicolor)
Hiding during the daytime ,
wedged in between the house siding and the gutter downspout
I think this is a young male Northern Cardinal.
Watching fast moving clouds:
A pig smelling a flower.
'My Mary'
a native hybrid created from crossing
native Rhododendron austrinum, Orange Azalea
with Rhododendron 'Nacoochee',
which is a natural deciduous hybrid azalea,
likely a cross between Rhododendron alianticum
and Rhododendron periclymennoides.
Bumblebee collecting pollen.
Wilting flower slipping down the central reproductive structures
Lamprocapnos spectabilis, Asian Bleeding Heart
It is a member of the Carrot family, Apiaceae.
It has reseeded itself to this location, and is about three feet tall,
and much wider than that.
It is in dappled shade, so apparently the originals
I planted years ago along the back fence
only eek out a meager living as they receive more shade now
and grow flatter to the ground.
The plant above right is
Native Orange-red Columbine, Aquilegia canadensis.
After much research, we have determined this is Packera glabelia
It is a native annual that has seedheads
that look like small Dandelion seedheads.
It spreads so well each year that it would take over our yard
in probably three years time. We finally decided to removed it.
Carolina Geranium (Geranium carolinianum).
A native annual that can become weedy, but we like it.
Shooting Stars, Dodecatheon meadia
An ephemeral spring wildflower
Charlotte on her bed, contemplating mischief.
Cooling breezes, almost
too cool when a gust comes up, frame my mood in the garden this afternoon. Maybe I might retreat to the warmth of my
house, maybe a little bit longer outside would be much more refreshing. The only thing constant in this garden this afternoon
is the roar of tires gripping on the pavement one house over in their never ending quest to
hurry on.
Time has been spent on
pulling out Cleavers and Common Vetch, way too much time, but the two adult Asian
Amur Honeysuckle shrubs had to be beheaded and poisoned. The back garden is so lush, these plants get
away from us at times.
Robins and cardinals are
chatting away in the garden, and yesterday a Goldfinch was adding it’s two
cents worth. Earlier our tree frog was
chirping away with his companion, but we have no pond for egg laying, so I’m
not sure where that happens, if at all.
The yellow azalea flowers
are aging to a pale cream and burnt orange, as their intoxicating aroma drifts
on the breezes ever so often to delight my senses. It is a scent difficult to
describe; maybe a cross between cloves and honey, although the old Beeman’s Pepsin
Chewing Gum describes it best.
Birdbaths seem to be
needing constant refilling, which is a good thing, and sadly to say, the nest
box I thought housed a Starling nest, upon inspection, had the beginnings of
another type of nest.
Then I saw it- at the base
of the birdbox pole lay a dead bluebird, most likely killed by the Starlings
wanting the same box. The next hour the
Starlings were back, so we put a thick twig into the hole to make the box useless.
With no doubt, this garden
is flourishing after the demise of the Green Ash Tree opened much of the space
up to sunlight. Now we have to decide what
stays and what can’t.
Besides the four planters
that house Spicebushes, we’ve identified one in the wildflower garden which
will stay, but the one in the rain garden will disrupt the dynamics of what is
already there by growing too huge for the space. I's never easy making decisions.
It's so very late, as I have been endlessly researching, then researching again in my quest to buy a mattress. One of the toughest decision I have made lately, and maybe not the best. We shall see when it comes and I try it out. It has layers of different types of Latex and firmness's, so all I can do is hope.
I sit here this very early morning as the clock hands have just past the midnight hour while Charlotte is snoozing on the cat tree next to me. She fell asleep waiting for me to finally remember it's way past bedtime. I'm almost ready, but not quite.
I have no ending for this talk, so it's off to my torture bed, to not have a good night's sleep, or as Vic would say... a good morning's sleep. Bye,
Bye.
Always with Love~
Yvonne












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