Posts Tagged ‘gardens’

From Spring and Summer to White?

Monday, March 7th, 2011

This is definitely proving to be a winter like some we used to have quite regularly…. The worst storm of the winter decided to pop up quite unexpectedly yesterday while we were exploring the beauty of Spring and Summer in Philadelphia.

Delphiniums 1

Yesterday was the first full day of the Philadelphia Show. We ended up going there as a last minute decision, and were expecting to meet Marla and a granddaughter or two. We didn’t get to see the granddaughters, but spent some nice time with Marla.  The weather forecast was calling for heavy rain all day, and we left home in rain, some quite heavy on the way to Philly.

Fallen Roses

The Philadelphia Flower Show is a Huge, Beautiful show full of displays of flowers and gardens of all types. This year’s theme was based on Paris, so there were many Parisian inspired displays. One of the first big ones we saw was this display of roses that had toppled due to someone (or more) touching the outer ring of roses. It looked like a horribly challenging thing to fix with crowds of people watching.

Pink Table

Here is part of a display of very opulent tables perfect for a wedding… I loved all the pink…  I will post a bunch of photos and not too many words here:
Oops!  If I would get the captions with the photos I wouldn’t have to write so much…. This is a beautiful Yellow Lady Slipper Orchid.

Wild Display

There were even weeds in this display… It was a natural looking woodland walk.

Can Can Dancer

There were 4 displays done like this… The dancer image is made from various items including cut up cans to create the shadow.

Bed of Roses

Not sure how comfy this would be, but it was beautiful!

Funky Lilies

I just HAVE to find out what variety of Lily this is… I am pretty sure is is a Lily that seems to grow like and Oriental or Asiatic by the looks of the foliage.

Pitcher Plant Flowers Maybe

Here is another one for researching… The plants these flowers were coming from looked to be Pitcher Plants… I have never seen flowers like these. There were yellow ones in some other planters, too.

Rock Garden

The plants in this planter were placed between thin slices of rocks placed on their edges… a really neat idea! I love the tiny Alpines growing here.

Pink Hellebore

There were lots of Hellebore plants in many of the displays… this is there usual blooming season. Another “I want”.

Floral Fashion 1

There were 4 parts to this display… Each had a floral arrangement that depicted gowns on mannequins.

Botanical Prints

A very large display of watercolor and colored pencil botanical art pieces really got me thinking that I need to start sketching and trying this myself…. I love these and would love to be able to do some of my own….

Tulip Vases

Very Elegant, simple vases full of Tulips… So pretty with the narrow metal bands curved throughout.

Rose Ring Fixed

On our way out of the show, I was able to get a photo of the Rose display that had toppled over earlier in the day.  The photos shown here are only a few of the 270+ I took… There are many “flops” due to my camera and the very low light at many of the displays. It was a very crowded day, but it was great to be able to wander through the flowers and plants in the displays since things have been pretty white here at home.

Philly in the Rain

When we finally left the city, the rain was pouring down…. Made for a few interesting photos, but it was not raining all the way home. After calling home to see how cold it got, we found that it had been snowing much of the day here….

Ice Covered Tree Half Way Home

It was spooky enough riding in a car on busy highways in the pouring rain, but things changed…. The photo from downtown Philly was taken about 6PM…. at about 8:20, the wet road turned into a slushy road, and the rain turned into sleet. We stopped for gas where this tree was covered in icy slush.

March 6 Snow Storm1

Fortunately, Ken is a much better driver than I am as a passenger… I spent most of the ride home gripping a door handle…. We passed a lot of big trucks that were not able to climb some of the steeper roads, but we were able to slowly keep going. Each town we got to meant we were that much closer to home. We had heard that our county was under a state of emergency, but we had no place to go but home…. The main roads actually were better once the slush and ice had turned to snow and frozen roadways.  Most of the main roads were plowed, but when  we got off them, we were following tracks made by others. The road we live on was the spookiest…. drifts over it, not plowed, wind whipping, but Ken was able to get the mini van all the way to our driveway!

Bird Houses When Home

Ken got the van off the road, just into the end of the driveway and we ended up  walking down it. We were not prepared for a 1/4 mile trudge through drifts of all sizes and gusty winds…. When we left home it was warm and raining. I had my duckie shoes for the mud when we left, but they stayed in the van…. My sneakers were warmer than they are and easier to walk in. I was lucky to have taken my gloves and always keep a quilt or 2 in the van. With no hat, I wrapped in the quilt. Ken had no gloves or hat, and carried our bunch of curly willow purchased a the show in the hopes we can get some to root. I don’t see well in the dark, and we had no flashlight, so I followed Ken’s tracks. Some areas were blown clear of snow, but there were some drifts nearly butt deep, not fun, but we were not sure how close we would get to home, so only walking the driveway was better than some options.  The first snow photo above shows our tracks to the front step. The other is one I tried to take of the bird feeders, but the snow was falling so hard the flash caught the flakes the most. Pretty interesting shots.

March Blizzard 1

With all the snowing and blowing, we had no idea what things would look like this AM…. Well, here it is…. No tracks can be seen where we walked in, and the large planters that line the walkway are totally buried in snow. To the right you can just see the front corner of Ken’s big van…. A pretty big drift beside that.

Deck Steps

The deck has quite a bit of snow on it even with the roof, and this is what the steps look like…. I remember the guys purposefully packing snow on them to make a sled ramp when they were at home. It is a ready-made ramp now…. The pool rock pile is nearly fully buried,too.

Outside Greenhouse Door

Here is the view out the greenhouse door, with my short handled broom to give an idea of the snow depth. The drift between the door and the Lilac bush is 3-4 feet… just guessing….

Tractor and Van

See that tractor nearly buried in the snow?? Poor Ken has to dig it out so he can use it to dig out a path to get the van out of the way of the pickup, who’s plow is not on right now…. It was only to be a rain storm with maybe a couple of inches of snow at the end….

Pickup and Alberta Spruce

The Dwarf Alberta Spruce out my studio window has a really neat pattern of snow on it, and you can see why the tractor will be needed to get the truck out…. The tractor will have to be used to dig a path before the truck will be able to get to where the plow is buried and then to get it out of the driveway.

Cardinal at Feeder

I guess with the tons of snow, the Cardinal wasn’t as spooky as he has been… It was a bit tricky catching a photo with the feeder twisting in the wind with the bird clinging to it. It will be a while before I get a path to the feeders, so for now I just tossed some seed out onto the snow…. The birds approve. I had to knock snow out of the deck feeder before I could fill that one.

Blackbird

I don’t think the Red Winged Blackbirds expected this… He was very happy to have the tossed seed.

I thought I would be posting photos of slightly greening grass with the rain taking away most of the snow that was on the ground…. I guess not yet….

I am so glad I got to see Spring and Summer flowers yesterday…. Back to reality today….

It Finally Rained!!

Saturday, July 10th, 2010

It so far has been a very dry late Spring and Summer, with so many storm fronts approaching and splitting…. rain to the North, rain to the South and none here…. (The date on my blog is not coming up right, so I am writing this on July 25- time for some tech geek help to figure out what is going on.)

Wet Planter

When we did get precipitation, it was just enough to raise the humidity and barely dampen the bottom of the bucket I have used as my “rain gauge”. The lawn became pretty crispy, and some of my newest additions to the gardens were looking sad. The spring that I use to water my gardens and planters, dried up a couple of weeks ago, and I have had buckets in sinks to catch hand or dish washing water to use to keep planters and new babies alive without using too much from our well which likes to go dry in Summer.

Sky 01

It seemed as if every time there was rain in the forecast, all we got to see were white, puffy clouds like these. They are really pretty, but when you are praying for rain, not what you want to see every day.

Wet Nicotiana

Finally, on Friday July 23, we woke to a nice gentle rain shower…. heavy storms were predicted, and there were severe ones in other areas not far away- even a tornado, but the half inch we finally got was wonderful. The above photo is of the pink Nicotiana in one of my deck planters… the blurry flower had a drop off the eves fall on it just as I clicked.

Tomato

Another nicely wet planter… This one has a volunteer Tomato plant growing in it…. I left it there to see what it does…. the only tomatoes I have grown on the deck have been grapes,  so I am hoping for similar ones.

Stormy Sky 1 8PM

The rain on Friday came with a very hot and humid air mass that hung around for the weekend. This photo above, and the following ones were taken Saturday evening. We began the evening listening to many severe thunderstorm warnings, then tornado watches and warnings. Tornadoes are not common around here, but this summer there have now been at least 4+ in the region. By the time I took this photo the sky was looking pretty “spooky”…. with pinks, yellows and black clouds.

Stormy Sky 2 8:25PM

This was the sky a bit later… The color doesn’t show great in this photo, but it did pick up all the different types of clouds that were present, from little white wisps to dark ominous ones.

Stormy Sky 3- 8:42PM

Shortly after the previous photo was taken, the rain started to fall. Heavy downpours were forecast, but things came fairly gently…. what we need to get moisture into the ground. The sky really began to change, and I was amazed that my camera got the colors pretty close to what they were. We were babysitting our granddaughter Jenna, and she had to have her stool by the front door to look out with her “Poppy”. The pink in the sky made the water drops on the door window look pink, too.

Stormy Sky 4 8:43 PM

This was the first time I remember seeing clouds that looked like this…. The puffy ones higher up were like cottonballs, not like normal cauliflower T-storm clouds, and the lower clouds were darker, wispy ones. It was spooky and amazing at the same time, especially knowing that a possible tornado had been spotted by the weather service in the county to the West of us.

Stormy Sky 5 8:43 PM

As you can see by the times of the photos, I was clicking as many as I could…. This one came out a bit more orange than the actual sky, but shows the shapes of the clouds great. It was a wonderful combination of bright pinks, oranges, shades of gray and even blue sky peeking in the distance.

Stormy Sky 6 8:44 PM

The colors in this photo are pretty close to what we saw… The trees in my Maple tree garden made some great silhouettes against the sky. It kept changing so quickly.

Stormy Sky 7 8:44 PM

This was a different angle, catching the white wisps below the streaks and ripples above in pinks and blue-grays.

Stormy Sky 8- 8:45 PM

This shows the blue sky creeping in along with more dark streaks following.

Stormy Sky 9- 8:47 PM

This is the last photo I took because it was getting too dark for the camera. I really didn’t expect the photos to show as good as they do with my old Kodak digital, but sometimes I am really amazed at what I end up with.  We only ended up with less than a half inch more of rain from this storm… much less than fell other places nearby, but yesterday AM while in church we got another rain shower that gave us a total of an inch. An inch and a half of rain in 3 days… That’s the way we needed it to come…. mostly gentle enough not to wash right off, but soak in.

White Lily 2

OK, I have to add at least one more flower… The last bud from my newest Oriental Lily bloomed…. It has been glowing in the garden… I can’t quite see this one from my kitchen window, so it forces me to get out to wander the gardens to see it. That is how I have planted many gardens…. You have to walk around or through them to see all the treasures in them.  I will have to give my gardens another day to recover from the rain  until the Petunias and Phlox are “photo worthy” again…. the rain knocked off or turned flowers to mush… I am sure it will be worth the wait!

July in the Gardens and it’s HOT!

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

The very first few days of July were nice, with warm days and cool nights, then the heat arrived….. We are now in day 3 of a heat wave with temps in the mid 90′s.

(Today’s date is July 7, but the blog seems to think it is still July 1st..?.?.. I guess I’ll have to figure out what is going on…. Later….)

Front Door Garden

There has also been no measurable rain in a loooong time… The lawn is pretty crispy, but the gardens are doing pretty well with the hay mulch on them and occasional waterings. I have been lugging hoses all over to keep the newest plants growing well.  The Front door garden is pretty colorful now with the Phlox coming into bloom along with the Daylilies and Echinaceas. You can also see the mildew on the tall late blooming Phlox in the photo above. The lower growing varieties seem to be much more resistant to the nasty white powder that makes the plants really ugly.

Van- Not a Good Sign

Since my last post, I went back to Fillmore, NY to see family and had a bit of trouble getting on the road….. The van really needed new brakes, but during the repair things didn’t go all that smoothly. A few more parts were needed, and after an extra day of waiting, I now have brakes that stop the van very smoothly! You can see that the Maple Tree Garden in the van photo, with the Annabelle Hydrangea in full bloom.

Mom's Deck

The main reason I went back to my hometown was to see my grandmother who has ended up in the nursing home again… another fall. My sister was also visiting from TX, and I wanted to get some plants that I had taken up earlier in the spring planted for my mom. It was a busy visit, and the garden around Mom’s deck and patio is looking much better. The Hosta, Phlox, and Echinaceas I took from my gardens are now in their new homes. Amazingly, there was a lot of rain the day before I did Mom’s gardens- over an inch- we got nothing in PA….

Baby Kitties at Gram's

My sister and I stayed at my gram’s house and did some cleaning and preparing of things for her to come home when she is able. The first couple of days, there were not too many cats around, but by the last day there were cats and their babies showing up. Here are a couple that I lured out with some milk. They were pretty skittish, there was also a gray one hiding behind it’s mom.

View from Wyalusing Rocks

I had an appointment with my Rheumatologist in Tunkhannock the first day I was back home, and while driving back up RT 6, I decided to “play tourist”. I stopped at a couple of scenic overlooks along the road and took a bunch of photos of the Susquehanna River, farms and surrounding mountains. The above photo was taken at the Wyalusing Rocks overlook, and shows the river curving through the valley. Here is a link to some tourist info for Bradford County, PA. More info about our area can be found there.

View From Marie Antoinette Lookout

The photo above here is from the Marie Antoinette lookout. There is a lot of great stonework, and you can see for miles around.

View From Marie Antoinette Lookout 2

This is the view from the other end of the lookout area, showing more of the stonework and more of the river and mountains.

View From Marie Antoinette Lookout 3

This photo shows some of the farms in the valley. I will be using these photos as inspiration for some new art quilts and quilted postcards.

Back at home, I have been taking walks through my gardens with the camera.

Mound Garden Echinacea and Hostas

This photo shows the Mound Garden in the back yard with the Echinaceas and Hosta in full bloom. So far these plants are doing well in the dry weather.

Echinacea with Bees

Here is a close shot of one of the more popular flowers with a couple of visitors on it. The honey bee tried to chase off the bumblebee, but I caught them both sharing the flower for a bit.

Baby Corn

It might be hard to see them, but there are some sweet corn plants in the veggie box. I think some critters helped themselves to many of the seeds…. not many plants came up. This bed has always been very dry, so I hope with the hay mulch I won’t have to water very often and hope these plants will take off.

Front Door Garden 2

Back around to the Front Door Garden, and more Echinaceas, Asiatic Lilies and Hemerocallis (Daylilies). I also have some Gladiola bulbs planted in the bare spots in this garden for late summer color and flowers to cut and take indoors.

Pair of Daylily Flowers

This is a closeup of a pair of Daylily flowers.  Many of the Daylilies lost their buds due to the late freeze we had, or that is what I think happened. I have found lots of shriveled or deformed buds.

Hemerocallis Ice Carnival

This is my favorite Daylily variety… The white color shows up really nice in the evening, even as the flowers are fading after their single day of bloom.

Hemerocallis Pandora's Box

One of the few flowers this plant will have this season. Most of the buds died, but this variety is supposed to be a rebloomer, so maybe I’ll get a few more late summer. The photo makes it look bigger than it is… this flower is half the size of the other varieties.

Raspberry Petunias

I love pink, and I really love these pink Petunias- Raspberry Swirl, I believe. I have one plant in one of my large square planters along the front walkway.

OK, this is getting long….. I have more flower photos, but will save them for a later post. I may be wilting in the heat, but the flowers are still blooming!

Flowers Anyone??

Saturday, June 19th, 2010

It’s been over a month since posting, and a lot has changed in the gardens and even the Mountain Laurel bloomed along Water Road. This time of year, I don’t get too much quilting done because the gardens keep calling to me. With the size and number of them, I am giving hay mulch a try this year to keep the weeds from taking over the gardens and my time.

Weeds Taking Over

Weeds Taking Over

This is what the garden outside the front door looked like mid May. Most of the weeds were dandelions, wild carrot, and other tap root types. Ken found a weed puller gizmo  made by Fiskars that worked very well at popping these nasties out roots and all. It was a lot of work, but I got this bed under control in about a week.

Weeds Gone

Another area of the same garden above after most of the weeds were removed. I was left with bare soil and not a lot of color since the early bloomers were done. I added a few annual flowers and soon the next crop of weeds were poking their little heads out of the ground. Last year, it seemed like all I did was weed….no fun.

Front Door Garden with Hay

I decided that it was time for mulch… I can’t afford to purchase bark or other mulches, so decided to use something we have lots of…. Hay and old grass that has been lying around in piles and in bales in a field. I had been afraid to use the grass and hay for fear of adding more weed seeds, but read a book on the subject that says that if I keep adding more as  the first layer breaks down, I should have very few weeds. (I also didn’t really pay attention to the fact that there are already millions of the same seeds found in the hay and grass already in the gardens… not adding anything new) The above photo shows the view from my front door after a few annuals have been added for a bit of color. The hay and grass looks so much better than bare earth, and will keep the moisture in along with keeping weeds down.

Back Yard Weeds

This is what the back yard gardens looked like from the deck. I had been keeping the section middle right in the photo pretty well weeded because that is where many of my early bloomers are. I would pull a few weeds every time I checked out the new flowers. The garden on the mound was getting really sad.

Back Yard Gardens with Hay

After a lot of weeding, lugging, placing of hay, and planting of more annuals, it looks much nicer. The flowers in the foreground are in the planters on the deck. The view is even more pleasant to look at now that I have added more flowers since this photo. When they start filling out, I will post new photos. Working with the hay as mulch is great, especially in large areas where there is nothing planted. I just covered with a deep layer of the hay, and wherever I want to plant, I just pull aside the hay, plant the flower, and replace the hay around the plant.

Bale of Hay

This is just one of the bales I had Ken deliver to my gardens from the field. This particular bale is still waiting to be spread in the Lilac garden, but another nearly 5 bales have been used so far. I got some help with moving 2 bales to the areas of the gardens it was needed. The rest has been my task. I now have the bales fairly close to where I am using it, so there isn’t as much lugging involved. It is lots of work and has caused a few nasty fibro flares, but it will allow me to actually sit and enjoy the gardens more during the summer.

Wall and Mound Gardens

This is a sweeping view of the gardens along the stone wall, and mound garden in the back yard. I was standing at the end of the stone wall nearest the group of Black Walnut trees. I have divided some of my Hosta  and other perennials to fill in empty spaces, and have Impatiens in the shady areas and Petunias in the sunny areas. Each year I work toward filling the gardens with mostly perennials. When we owned the greenhouse, I would plant literally truckloads of leftover annuals in the gardens each summer. After 4 years of dividing the perennials I have and adding a few new ones, the space left for annual flowers is much less.

Blue Siberian Iris

Now for some photos of some of the flowers that have bloomed in May and the beginning of June. With the abnormally warm early Spring and late hard freeze, many flowers bloomed really early and some not at all, leaving very little color right now before the summer boomers start. The Siberian Iris really put on a show! I have many clumps in various shades of purple-blue from very deep to very pale. I began with two varieties- one from my mom’s garden in NYS, and one deep colored one I purchased. I also bought a white one, and the are all cross pollinating and seeding in many spots. I have a rainbow of shades now. The flowers were beautiful, but with the heat they didn’t last very long.

Blue Iris and Peony

One clump of the  Iris is next to the old fashioned white Peony. They look great blooming together.

Peony Pink Luau

Speaking of Peonies, This is my favorite so far…. Called Pink Luau… I bought it a couple Falls ago and this is it’s first year to bloom. Another beautiful deep salmon pink colored one did not bloom this year because the buds froze during the last freeze we had. I have been collecting many varieties with less petals that the old fashioned ones. They hold up much better in the rain. I got photos of this and other varieties through all stages from bud to shattering. There will be Peony flowers in coming quilts, I am sure.

Campanula Sarastro

This really pretty deep purple Campanula is one of the few flowers in bloom right now. Most have faded before the Phlox and Coneflowers begin for the summer. I almost lost this plant last year, but after a season of babying it, it is thriving this year.

Garden Mt Laurel

This was one of the biggest surprises this year…. I bought this plant last Spring and the deer decided to munch nearly every leaf off it. I got a great show of blooms even with just stubby stems. The Mountain Laurel bloomed way earlier than usual this year. It is usually in peak bloom right now, but the flowers are already gone. They were blooming before the end of May.

Water Rd Mt Laurel 2010-1

This is a photo of some of the Mountain Laurel blooms I have been watching form along Water Road. They ended up nearly pure white this year. I think that the heat while the buds were forming caused the color to be faded. Last year with cooler temps. they were a soft pink. The buds in this photo show more pink than most of the clumps did.

Baby Pteradactyl Fern

Back to the home gardens…. This is a photo of my tiny “Pterodactyl Fern”. The mom of this plant was over a foot tall, but so far this baby has stayed quite small. Last year it came up very late, in August…I thought it had died. It’s official botanical name is Dryopteris linearis pterodactylus. I am wondering if the size may be due to the Black Walnut trees that are the shade for this garden. I have many plants doing very well, but find I need to move a few to other gardens. The best shade I have is under the Walnuts, but the Lilac garden is maturing enough to give me a few more shady spots to try things in.

Funky Shade Plant

This plant is one that is not usually up and growing until now, and it has been blooming for some time now. I believe it is a Piniellea or something like that for a name…. brain fog…. I need to look it up and get a name tag with it. The Lamium are filling in very nicely around the Hosta, Ferns and these under the Black Walnut shade.

Nibbled Strawberry Plant

This Strawberry plant looks better than many of it’s bed mates. The deer or rabbits have been snacking on them. Some plants only had stubs where there were leaves. I have sprayed them with “Liquid Fence” deer repellent and they are putting out new leaves. It is a good thing they are everbearers, or I would have no berries at all this year.

Blackberry Flowers

My newly planted Blackberry bush with it’s flowers and berries beginning to form. So far the deer have left this alone- I sprayed it when I planted it. One I planted last year was eaten nearly to the ground before I sprayed.

Pink Lilies

This is the only stem of of these light pink Lilies to bloom this year. Probably another victim of the late freeze. All of the buds on the other plants shriveled while tiny.

Flame Pink Phlox

This is the first of the Phlox to bloom…. a dwarf variety that I can see from my kitchen window.

Bodacious Returns Daylily

I think this is another freeze victim…. The first flowers on this Daylily are on very short stems, and a lot of the buds on the taller stems are brown on the tips. The later blooming varieties seem to be fine. Some plants were at just the wrong stage of growth when things got colder than usual for May.

Flying Flower

This is the last photo for this post…. This guy flew into the kitchen and I found him on the edge of the windowsill one morning. He looked interesting folded up, but really neat when he opened his wings. What a great surprise!

I plan to get back to the studio more, now that the weather is getting hotter and not so great for garden work. The hay should keep my work to a minimum out there, too. There will be more flowers coming, too. Hopefully not over a month till the next post…

Color in and Out of The Studio

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

I finally have gotten back to my studio for a little bit, scattering lots of colorful fabric pieces. I began a new project of making covers for various sizes of notebooks, journals, and brag books, from mini to more standard sizes. I have been using some of the fabrics I dyed last month along with sunprints on hand.

Pretty Pile of Book Covers in Progress

The colors remind me of some of the photos I have been taking of t he Spring flowers in my gardens.

Snow Glory Group

The first flowers to pop up in my front yard garden were the Snow Glories, My favorites because of the bright shade of blue- like a summer sky.

Deep Midnight Blue Fat Quarter

This fabric has lots of shades of blue, including shades similar to the Snow Glories.

Winter Aconite Blooms

These little Winter Aconite flowers opened up even while the foliage still looked frozen. These hide in my shade garden in the back yard, near the stone wall and bloomed even before the Snow Glories.

Japanese Pine with Snow

Even this plant does not have flowers, it looked so pretty with it’s last coating of snow for the season… almost flower-like. I love the look of the branch tips against the blue sky.

Blue, Green and More Dyed Fat Quarters

These fat quarters were scrunched in the same container. The shades of blue and green  with touches of yellow and fuchsia remind  me of gardens full of blooms.

Pulmonaria "Mrs. Moon"

These little beauties sometimes sneak into bloom and are nearly done before I see them in my back yard garden. I caught them just as they were opening their first buds. I love how they change from pink to blue as the flowers age.

Yard of Bright Dyed Fabric

The above yard is one of the brightest that I ended up with, using fuchsia, cerulean blue, and yellow.

White Daffodils with Yellow Centers

These Daffs seemed to bloom much sooner than usual with the warm, summer-like weather we had early.

Double Daffodils

These were not in my flower beds, but I wish I had some… They were in bloom on Easter Sunday…. So beautiful!

More Fat Quarters

This group of fabrics show another bright fat quarter with a soft mauve one and a pair that were done with the same colors.

Almond Tree Blossoms

These are still open, but I caught them at their peak for the photo. The almond tree is covered with these pink flowers this year.

Light Blue Fat Quarter

This fat quarter isn’t exactly the shade of the skies in my photos, but it is pretty and soft.

White Grape Hyacinth with View

I caught this little clump of white Muscari, or Grape Hyacinth, while in bloom. They are in my huge Maple tree garden and I usually miss them while in peak bloom. I was able to get the distant view of the mountains in the background.

Jenna in Easter Dress

This little “flower” is the hardest one to photograph… she doesn’t stop moving- granddaughter, Jenna.

Mini Composition Cover- Lavender Geranium

Here is one of the finished covers. This one is for a mini composition book. The size is just right for tucking into a purse and makes a really pretty way to dress up a little memo book to keep lists, ideas and more. Available in my Andrus Gardens Gift Items Studio on Artfire…. Link to Geranium Cover.

Rejected Photos and Morris Arboretum

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Today I received a very nice hand written note informing me that my photo, “Waterfalls”, was chosen for “The Eye of the Quilter” exhibit that will be at International Quilt Festival in Houston later this month! The exhibit will be a group of photos taken by quilters that give an idea of what inspires our quilts.  We sent digital images, and those selected will be printed and framed for the exhibit….. It should be a great selection of photos…. Here are the two photos that were not chosen…


Yellow Rose 1


Inniswood Arbor

Top is a photo of “Lemon Puff” yellow roses, and the lower one is a view from inside an arbor at Inniswood Gardens, Columbus,OH. The opening of the arbor frames the view of the gardens beyond.

Now that it has been two weeks since our trip to the Morris Arboretum, Philadelphia, PA, I am finally getting some of those photos posted… I took well over 300 photos…. here are just a few highlights…..

Morris Arboretum Nest

A nest in an exhibit high in the trees that lets you see things from a bird’s eye view in the treetops. To give an idea of the size of the nest, we could walk in through the side and look up, out the top…. There were many walkways high up in the trees, a really neat experience.

Morris Arboretum 1

After we walked out of the treetop exhibit, we wandered  through a formal rose garden complete with a fountain in the middle. This gazebo was on one of the outer corners of that garden. There are many beautiful huge, old trees of all kinds through the arboretum, like the one here.

Morris Arboretum Fernery 1

One of my favorite places…. The Fernery…. This beautiful conservatory greenhouse has been restored to it’s original state. It is beautiful from the outside, but inside……

Morris Arboretum Fernery 3

Morris Arboretum Fernery 2

Ferns, ferns, and more ferns….. It was such a beautiful, calming, cool place to be. The photos above just aren’t like being there….. There were ferns of all kinds, moss, and other plants tucked into every corner… There were many paths to walk, ponds, waterfalls, fish, and more…. Lots of my most favorite family of ferns- the Maidenhairs…. many different versions were here.

Morris Arboretum Cool Tree

I forget what type of tree this was, but it was another really hige one…. The tree branches hung down all around it, many to the ground… I should have gotten a photo of Ken while he was nearer to the main trunks…


There are lots of interesting garden structures…. Here is one at the Swan Pond. We saw one swan, napping along the edge of the water… There were a number of geese and ducks happily swimming in the pond while we were there.

I did take lots of flower photos, but won’t over do things with them… Here are a couple of pale pink late blooming Anemone flowers… They are great shade flowers that grow about three ft. tall.

Ginkgo leaves!!! I love Ginkgos, and as we were walking along, I noticed some of the leaves from this tree on the ground before I found the tree. There must have been a nasty storm the day before, because there were small branches and lots of  leaves scattered about. Here are some leaves with the bright blue sky behind them. This tree was the biggest Ginkgo I have ever seen…. Arboretums are so great…. they have such a wide selection of trees, and some really huge, old specimens.

Here is one of the last gardens we wandered through…. I love the gates that are at the entrances….. This garden was filled mostly with plants with foliage or flowers in shades of orange. Alongside this garden was another narrow one with a long pond filled with fountains, separated from this one by a wall of climbing runner beans and other blooming vines. Like walking from one room to another…

This was just a tiny number of photos I have to play with now….. There was so much to see…. I am thinking that next year, we need to visit again maybe in the spring…. Then another trip to explore the gardens in Columbus, OH area. There is so much more to see…..

Back to Flowers

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

It's been a while since I showed any new flowers here, so here goes… The Echinaceas are in full bloom now, along with a few other pretties.

Out my kitchen window, I noticed this flower opening… I have not had white Echinaceas here for a few years, and was surprised to find this seedling blooming in white with a touch of yellow at the tips of the petals. I am so happy… My yellow one died a few years ago, and so did my white ones. I love seeing what new colors pop up from so many varieties crossing with each other.

A closer shot of this flower…

OK, Here is an even closer shot- see the tips of the petals? I think  it may be a seedling from the apricot colored ones called "Harvest Moon".

At first glance these Echinaceas look like regular purple ones…. but check out the leaves… They are spotted with lots of white on them. The variety is named "Sparkler" the flowers are a deeper shade than most of the purple ones.

This variety is one that was sold with part of the sales going to breast cancer research. The name is "Hope" It has a much larger center than most Echinaceas. I even caught a visitor on this one.

More Echinaceas…. These are from a big group of plants that have seeded themselves over the years. Some of the flower petals droop more than others. It has been fun watching the Goldfinches this summer. They have been trying to pick seeds from these flowers even before they have a chance to form them. This photo also shows the really tall Thalictrum, or Meadow Rue towering over even the ornamental grass, with it's delicate lavender flowers. Most of the plants in this area of the garden are nearly armpit high… It will be even better when the tall Garden Phlox begin to bloom. I even allowed a few wild Milkweed plants to stay here for the Monarchs. They usually end up popping up where I have the shortest plants growing, and I have to pull them or leave them looking out of place.

Last photo for tonight… Annual flowers in a planter- White and deep purple Angelonia with bright pink geraniums. I never thought I would be buying geraniums to plant around my home, but these were on a bargain rack at Lowes at half price. Beautiful plants, just not in bloom… With a little TLC, they are pretty now. I do like the color..

Now I just need to keep attacking the weed populations… Photos are great…. I can shoot around the weeds and no one knows how bad they really are:)

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Now the Garden Photos…

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

After spending a few days in my own gardens, I thought I would get back here and show off a few of the over 600 photos I took after QSDS.

 

 

 

At the Columbus Park of Roses, there were so many varieties of roses in all colors and sizes. I visited the park on Sunday evening after class was over and my class things were in the van. The first is a mini rose in multi  shades of orange and yellow.

 

 

This variety- “Cinco de Mayo” was really pretty with it’s ruffled looking flowers. They are almost single and this was a great cluster of them.

Pink Roses

 

 

 

 

I am not sure of the variety of this one, but it was pretty in many shades of pink in each flower. Many of the flowers at the park showed a lot of wear and tear from a rain storm a few days before I went there.

 

At the center of the park was this fountain surrounded by the roses. I loved the fact that each variety of rose was labeled with the variety name. There were many benches throughout the gardens similar to the one here.

 

 

 

This was one of the most perfect flower clusters…. This pale yellow was beautiful and these were not affected by the rain.

 

 

The rose park in open from dawn till dusk, and since I got a late start I was still snapping photos with very fading light. This one was taken with the flash on, and it came out great. I love the pale colored flowers against the almost black background.

On Monday, after getting lost in Columbus trying to find the Dick Blick art store (I did finally find it- I’m not a city gal), I found my way eventually to Inniswood Metro Gardens. It is a very large garden that  is free and open to the public like the rose park. This is the building at the entrance to the gardens. It has a lot of interesting features.

 

 

 

Not too far from the entrance were these large pots of Hosta plopped in a shade garden. The plants are probably nearly 4 feet wide- beautiful!

 

Just hitting a few highlights, here is a photo showing a couple of waterfalls with the plantings around them. It was a beautiful, sunny day and not too hot- just perfect for visiting.

There were lots of architectural features through the gardens. Here is one of my favorites- an arbor over a walk lined by the curved stone wall with stone benches built into it. There was a small flowered Clematis blooming on the arbor.

 

This gate was not too far from the arbor (I don’t think… I did get a bit lost at times). I love the design with the leaves. Each leaf had a name of someone who had contributed to funding this part of the gardens. It must take a lot to keep everything looking so great.

 

 

 

I guess some flower photos would be in order…. Here are some coreopsis flowers with a yellow Shasta Daisy, and I just happened to catch the bee at work.

 

There were lots of Echinaceas in bloom. Everything seemed to be blooming sooner than here at home. There were orange ones mixed with the traditional lavender ones here.

 

 

Another favorite bit of architecture…. I love the opening in this arbor, you can see what is growing inside and it makes you want to go in for a closer look.

 

There are lots more photos of flowers from here, but here is the last one for now. Others will surely be popping in here and there as I pull them out to use in the future. These Hellebore flowers were really interesting…. I am not sure if they were brown to start with because most bloom very early Spring, but they didn’t look dried up. The centers were chocolate brown with beige petals.

 

Thankfully upon returning home, I found most of my flowers had done well. These are spilling nicely out from their planter that has become very mud splattered from all the rain while I was gone.

Stormy View

 

 

 

 

This has been a common sight…. We did get 2 days on the weekend without rain!! It is totally hiding much of our view in this photo.

Blackcaps

 

 

 

 

I got home just in time for the first blackcaps, or black raspberries to ripen- Yum!  These bushes are going to be pulled after the berries are gone- they are covering my water garden and there are more bushes in other places. It will be much easier to pick without all the old canes and new growth that I have cleared already.

Last photo before this post takes the whole page….. This Hemerocallis (Daylily) flower was Huge!! I guess it lives up to it’s name- Bodacious Returns. It should rebloom later in the summer after the buds it has now are done.

As anyone can see, I have gotten a lot of new inspiration from my trip to Columbus and back at home. Now to just get myself back on track and back into the studio…. It has taken longer to recouperate from the trip than I hoped for, but it was worth it!

 

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Another Walk, More Treasures…

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

My camera and I went walking on Water Road again yesterday to see the progress of the opening Mountain Laurel flowers.

A few more florets have opened, and I caught a baby fern in this shot. The buds are pretty pink and the flowers open to the faded pink with those neat markings.

Here is one section of the road I have been walking on. This is the view one would see driving along…. Not super impressive until you get out and up close.

A baby Maple tree with it's reddish new leaves that turn greener as they mature. I wish the weather would cooperate so I could start sunprinting with some of the Maple and other leaves- too humid, rainy and windy…

Ever felt like this poor flower cluster??? I think this shows just how I feel when my fibro decides to flare- Smashed down by a tree (or branch in this case). The flowers are still opening dispite being nearly buried.

Something more to keep my eye on…. Not sure what these little plants are. They are growing on a clump of moss on a pile of rocks. Looks like it might be a vine-like grower.

Ferns are unfurling everywhere, now. This group looked so soft and feathery.

A baby fern hiding among the other plants and dead branches and leaves.

How's this for overcoming obstacles!! This little guy is growing in a crack in the rock, and some days I think it is hard living where I do….

Final fern photo of today…. Not sure of the variety, different from the lacy wood ferns. Check out the upper left of this photo- a leaf from the Anemonella I found blooming earlier.

The tiny flowered wild roses can become very invasive, but this plant has pretty pink flowers instead of the usual white. I like the pink much better..  OK, I love the color pink..

Back home….. Here is a Daylily we bought in Georgia- I had not seen this variety up here in PA. It is very different from any others I already have and they are super hardy and easy to grow.

Baby cobweb chicks I got on our way home… I had been looking for these for quite a while- mine all died in a weed infested rock garden.

This pretty flower is another on a plant we picked up at one of the garden centers we stopped at. I hadn't seen the lavender available here- just the blue. This plant is now in it's new home in my biggest flower bed.

So far not much going on in the studio still…. today is a bit rainy and dreary, so a good time to hibernate in there while I can't "play" in the gardens. I am getting a lot of great photos to play with for when my creativity returns….

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My Walk on Water Road and Back in the Gardens

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

As promised, here are photos from a walk along Water Road to see the Mountain Laurel. I was sure to have freshly charged batteries in the camera, parked the min van and started discovering lots of treasures.

Here is one of the blooming Mountain Laurel plants along the road. I was surprised to find that these plants  must have been here for many years, even before the road was widened to two lanes. When I found the bases of the plants, there were shoots coming from knurly, cut off stubs. The plants had been cut off during the road work and re-grew to bloom again. It is amazing how tenacious some plants can be.

  Some wintergreen berries on tiny plants growing on moss covered rocks. Something I wouldn't have seen without really looking.

Now I have another mystery to solve…. This is a plant with tiny white flowers that I am not familiar with. There are a number of these plants along the road on the high side.

This is the other side of the road- there is a steep drop-off. The plants growing close to the road were covered with dust from traffic on the gravel. A bit of a spooky road during winter when icy.

Here is a view looking down the road, with steep banks going up on one side and going down on the other. It is a beautiful road to travel, almost covered over by tree branches in some spots and distant view across the valley in others. When the trees are bare in winter, you can even catch a glimpse or two of the Susquehanna river. A beautiful area to live for sure.

  Back home, I kept snapping photos. Here is a plant I had to bring all the way back from GA. I love the color and shape of the flowers of Plumbago. When we owned the greenhouses, we raised these from seed.  They are a late summer blooming annual in PA, but hardy in many areas of the South. I love the florets for sunprinting. This was the last one available at the garden center I found it at, now at the center of a planter for easy plucking.

A couple plants that got planted before we left for our trip. Pink Verbena and airy Euphorbia.

My coral Peony flowers opened up! I love the color! They are quite bright and much different from any other I have seen. They only have a double row of petals, so hold up nicely in rain.

This Peony plant was supposed to be a yellow tree Peony that turned out to be a bright pink fairly single regular one. It has been beautiful for years, but got moved today. You can see the evergreen branches in the background of a Balsam Fir that was a little Christmas tree planted many years ago. It has now almost covered the whole plant, so I cut the flowers, dug it up and planted five chunks in various locations. It is probably the worst time to move a Peony, but it was in a really hostile location.

This Goldflame Spirea is so beautiful when the leaves are unfurling in the Spring. They start out hot pink and change to bright gold, then deeper green as the summer progresses. It will also bloom with pale pink flowers.

This little hardy Geranium is a very hardy little plant. I love the lacy foliage and delicate flowers for my sunprinting. I hope the weather will begin to cooperate so I can get my outdoor studio tent set up soon.

My blue Siberian Iris have been seeding themselves all over. This is one of the babies that is a very deep color. The original plant was a lighter shade of blue purple. I love these Iris and wish the flowers lasted longer.

This is tha garden shown in the previous post after I got the grass mowed. It looks much neater, but still needs weeds removed. Three clumps of the blue Iris are in this bed.

Right outside my front door are these flowers that are beginning to bloom. The white Campanula flowers are great to use as cut flowers.

The poor baby plants that got water but no fertilizer while we were away. After getting a drink of some liwuid fertilizer, they are starting toshow a bit more green color. The tomatoes and squash should recover. The plants in the pots look much better, after having their dose of long time release fertilizer- What a difference!

This is my next major project….. The front of my huge Maple tree garden has been neglected for too long. Under the berry brambles is a water garden that has overgrown with water plants so the water barely shows. I used this area for veggie plants year before last, nothing last year. I did start to remove some old brambles, but didn't take the time to get a long sleeved shirt. Not a good idea- lots of scratches…. Always wear long sleeves when battling brambles. I am going to leave some of the black raspberry plants that are loaded with fat little green berries, until after I can pick them.

I plan to try doing a little each day in the gardens. It is hard not to over-do for me. I get started and keep going until I can't stand the pain or nearly pass out…. not recommended…. Hopefully by the time my veggie plants regain health, this area will be ready for them.

My sewing studio is also calling…. My flower photos are still asking to be part of my quilts. It is hard to figure out how to get done all that needs to be done. 

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