Monday, May 19, 2008

And all the rest



There is a lone hyacinth in one flower bed, and another in another flower bed. These are new flower beds where there was grass until three years ago. I didn't plant them, they just appeared. I imagine that years ago there might have been flower beds in those areas that were allowed to go to grass and these bulbs just lay dormant under the grass till I took it away. They came up last year and the year before and I assumed they were tulips of some description till I saw the buds. They're quite pretty. There are also a huge number of grassy looking sprouts that have come up along with the hyacinth. They've never bloomed and I was going to get rid of them if they didn't bloom again this year, but, lo and behold, some of them have produced buds this year. I'll probably have photos of daffodils in the next week or so.
The pink bleeding hearts are blooming early this year. They were planted two years ago, along with a white and a red. The red promptly gave up the ghost (or so I thought), and the white struggled to survive, but the pink took to the spot as if it had grown there from seed. Last year it started bloming in mid June and bloomed right through the summer. It even produced some seed, but the birds got them before they ripened enough for me to collect. You can see the white directly behind the pink, and in the upper right corner you can see the ressurection of the red. It appears quite healthy. I guess it did come up last year, but it was hidden behind the white which grew profusely but only produced a single rather pathetic flower stalk. Here's hoping they all bloom this year.

The gooseberry bush looks like its going to produce an abundant crop this year. I've put it in a cage so that it won't ambush my ankles as I walk by in the garden. It tends to want to spread along the ground, and its quite thorny. The cage will also allow the birds a place to sit while they eat the berries. They got most of them last year before they got dark and sweet. If there are enough for me this year I may try to make a jar or two of jelly.
We welcome a new addition to the north yard. A pear tree that we planted on Saturday evening. It seems quite happy with its new home as the leaf buds are opening nicely. No flowers, so no fruit this year. The nursery said it wouldn't fruit for three years or so, but they said the same about the apple trees and they gave us fruit the first year. There wasn't alot that first year, but both the Spartan and the Jonahfree did have a few apples on them. It looks like the Spartan will give a good crop this year if the blossoms don't freeze once they open, and provided the Jonahfree blooms to provide the necessary crosspollination. There are some crabapple trees in the area so I'll get some fruit regardless, but it would be a more sure thing if the Jonahfree blooms.


Monday Magnolia Madness

The magnolias are in full bloom. I'm always afraid they won't and then they do and its abosolutely the most marvellous sight (at least till the irises bloom, then THEY"RE the most marvellous sight (till the roses bloom, then. . . . .). They just get better every year. The white grows about 6-10 inches per year. The pink is slower and tends to want to grow autward rather than up. Weve only had one night of heavy frost since the buds opened and I had ample warning so we covered them with sheets.



Tuesday, May 13, 2008

tree sketch


Monday, May 12, 2008

Monday Morning Garden Blogging

The delphiniums are growing apace. They were started last spring and a few of them actually matured enough to bloom last fall. The blooms were paltry and few, probably because it was already October and very cold, but they were there. They over wintered well and are stocky hardy looking little plants. Can't wait to see what colors they are.


The lupins too are happy little plants. They were also grown from seed last spring and didn't look like much by fall. I didn't think they'd make it through the winter, but here they are, growing like weeds. I think they're pretty much all blue ones because the store bought seed didn't germinate nearly as well as the seed I collected from my own plant. Because I didn't think they'd survive the winter, I set some fresh seed in the cold frame over winter and those appear to have all germinated as well, so I'll be having plenty of lupins going forward.


The magnolias are in full bud as well. I always worry that they won't bloom, and they always prove me wrong. Its well worth the trouble of wrapping them for the winter to protect from the weight of the snow and from the winter sun. There wasn't much worry this winter about sun damage. Both the pink and the white magnolia disappeared under snow banks shortly after Christmas, and didn't reappear till mid April. I think the snow helped to protect them. I just hope we don't get a heavy frost so that all the buds get a chance to develop. I collected some seed last fall from the pink and I'm hoping to start a new one. Don't know what the chance of success is, but I'll try anyway.



Saturday, May 10, 2008

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Wednesday, May 7, 2008