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Bumble bee on salvia
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This is the time of year that I love, spring has sprung, the first roses are in bloom and offer fat promises of more to come with their buds, the peonies which are my next favorite flower after roses are just breaking loose (of course we had rain yesterday--needed but it sags the peonies)and all the salvia and cat mint display a waving carpet of purple and lavender next to dusty miller in the rose garden. The bees love the salvia and we have ever so many again feasting on the purple potion. They make quite a racket with an incessant mmmmmm and buzz so loudly that it makes me laugh, especially when they want me to get out of their way as I monitor for a weed or unwanted growth around the roses. I have heard that salvia plants are banned in some places because they are used to make hallucinogenic substances. I have no idea if this is really true or not but if it is, that might account for my wacky B Z bees. I used the salvia as fill in the middle of the rose garden and periodically I have to whack it back or it would take over. Even more invasive is the cat mint. Last year I dug half of these out to share and this year here they are again. I really enjoy these perennials and their show.
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Salvia next to cat mint at sunset approaching
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I really miss blogging but outside work beckons, well demands my attention and so there I spend my time. Michelle asked me to post some blooms on Facebook which I did happily. But as ever, once I get that camera going, I cannot just limit photos and find I have way too many to download and deal with. So in the midst of effort I will post some of these lovely sights here to the blog. The rose garden is a sight to watch from our living room window, but I find myself called there from morning to evening and it is never just a minute or two. The red knock out roses are in glory already--I had some concern as all put out red mahogany growth and then we had a frost. Well, we were leaving for our trip and I had only time to snip them back with a solid lecture (yes I talk to my plants), "OK wise guys and gals, you know you are spurting growth too early for Minnesota. But if you insist you will just have to toughen up because I cannot spend time with you fixing your frost bitten tips. So if you think you are big enough to bloom so early, you can just figure it out." Several locals rushed to cover their roses when the frost came but I did not. And it appears they took heed and have not complained. The knock out roses have earned their keep because they winter without any special treatment. That is another secret to my Minnesota roses, I refuse to baby them and bury them over winter. They get a heaping of mulch and clippings and they survive the snows.
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Red Knock Out roses, by Bill Adler, WI hybridizer |
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Another champion Apple Jack rose, an Iowa Buck rose with Bon Chance
below it..Apple Jack adds to the feast of bees and the smell is
noticeable the minute we open the door
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Close up of an opened nearly spent Apple Jack bloom with
many more buds to open yet
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Front of the house from beyond rose garden taken as sunset
approaches....notice the two dots from reflection on the camera lens. I am intrigued
with this photo. See the red knock outs at one end and the big
Apple Jack anchoring the right
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Red Knock Outs Blue globe, dragon fly with
vigilant smiling lady bug stick
First pink peo
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Front rose garden looking down the cul de sac
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The dreamy creamy peonies are the first to bloom out
along the back garden fence |
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Even the tiny hens and chicks are running wild this year
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First pink peony just yesterday. I love these peonies even
with the black ants swarming them to open their petals.
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Even as a child I adored the big peony bushes off our front porch. And I thought Mom a big grouch because she refused to allow me to bring a bouquet inside admonishing me about their resident ants. I learned soon after moving to Minnesota that she knew where of she spoke as I brought a huge pail of peonies inside. I could barely set them on the table before the ants came out and about.....oh me! Mom was right. I have heard that they can be sprayed to rid the ants but I am a natural gardener and do not use chemicals because we have so many beneficial insects and birds that I fore go anything harmful. If it is bad for a living creature it is probably bad for me too. Now if and when those nasty demonic Japanese beetles arrive as they are bound to do here, I become quite violent. I pluck them early morning and down into the death jar they go where they swarm and try to swim atop each other in a jar of detergent. You see I do have a mean streak protecting my roses. But it's all natural.
Let me close today by introducing you to Van Gough, one of my cherished garden gnomes. He was given to me by an elderly lady in CA who made him for my rose gardens there. She was almost 989 and still doing ceramics; each year I bought something from her at a craft show in April or so at the Auburn Fair grounds. Well, Van Gough is so named because he lost an ear, long ago who knows by what critter. It was in pieces and could not be restored, but he still keeps his pleasant demeanor and annually he gets to set with the newest of our front Alberta spruce trees. Blogger wants to post him sideways so I have removed the tree and try to show Van Gough alone here so you can see the detail of her work and perhaps his missing ear which he does not seem to mind at all......he has adjusted, as we all must do when life gives us what we do not expect.
My apologies but I cannot get this photo rotated...Tilt
WTH Blogger?
I think I have a couple of cousins of that delightful little gnome! If only blogger could become one that offers music and scents! Ha! Ha! Your lovely blossoms would be so aroma filled!
ReplyDeleteThanks Karen. One of my neighbors says that she puts her window down and inhales deeply when she drives past this end of the cul de sac and that it has never smelled so good. Pouring rain today though, unexpected
ReplyDeleteGood post, nice pics. Having been there, I can easily orient the photos. Our gardening efforts are mostly limited to mowing and weed eating these days. Even that is beyond me most of the time. Without the riding mower, I'd have to hire someone to do it. Carol tinkers a little with some plants but she has given up those all day sessions we used to think were fun. We've had an unseasonably cool May and today is downright cold. The morning's low was 44 and windy. Of course, I had turned off the pilot light on the furnace and had several windows open, plus removed the covering from the cooler vents. I think this might be one of those years when we go from too damn cold to too damn hot with no time to acclimatize between seasons. Tom
ReplyDeleteHi Pat, thanks for the garden tour around your house. It seems that Minnesota for all its cold winters does produce lovely spring blooms. We don't have any roses in our yard and the single peony has bloomed and gone now until next spring. Also, I jeer bring any outdoors flowers inside because of the bugs that tend to hide until the plants are indoors. Whenever, I do put flowers on the table, they are store bought bouquets which while costly usually seem to last a couple of weeks with trimming and water changes. We are currently on our PA family road trip with a wedding here on Sunday and then home by Tues.
ReplyDeleteOur Siberia weather front persists. Normally the warmest part of the day and the outside temp is 59, inside 61, and it is windy. I am in sweats and a bathrobe and almost shivering cold. Last night's low was again 44, real unusual for this late in May. I was thinking of firing up the wood stove but SOMEBODY has burned trash in it and it needs to be cleaned out. Actually, maybe SOMEBODY wasn't that responsible as stuff may have been put in there and just took off from embers of the previous fire. We did get a slight bit of precipitation but only enough to spot the dust on the vehicles. T
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