What’s blooming Monday, May 12 2014 

Daffodils, mostly the late whites and pinks now: peasant’s eye, Mount Hood, Thalia, Bell Song (a gorgeous white with a short pink/buff cup) Katie Heath, Lemon Drops, Pueblo, Sailboat, unknowns.  A few dots of yellow still.

Tulips, mostly peach/apricot, a few reds/pinks, a gorgeous yellow: tulip sylvestris

Violets by the thousand

Pussy toes

Bluets

Bleeding Heart (white and pink)

Muscari (Blue)

Virginia Bluebells

Gill-over-the-ground

Forget-me-not

Creeping Phlox

Trillium

Strawberries

Magnolias (white and pink)

Redbuds

Early Azaleas

Blueberries

Red Flowering Quince

Early purple iris

Forsythia

Peach

Cherries

Gooseberries

Clove currant (extremely fragrant yellow flowers)
Currants

No apples yet here, I do hope we get a few apples….

I’m surely missing lots of things!

Happy Accidents Saturday, May 10 2014 

We were most surprised the other year by these tulips…they were supposed to be pink! But they certainly do work.

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White butterflies Thursday, May 8 2014 

In between the crocus’ bright, almost Mardi Gras, colors and the blazing, neon orange daylilies in July; the fence-line is mostly green.  Except for a week or two, when my few daffodils bloom.  They aren’t the most aggressive daffodils, so I doubt they will be able to hold their own with the daylilies, as the big yellow daffodils do on the bank. It is likely that in order to keep the effect, they will have to be replanted periodically rather than divided.  But they work for the space: pure white, fragrant, only 12-14 inches tall and delicate in form.  Sailboat, the taller of the two, and Pueblo, more fragrant, are the two varieties. I am not inclined, I think, to try for a more solid effect.  The white butterflies in the bright green space is perhaps more interesting.

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Trillium grandiflorum Monday, May 5 2014 

Very, very slow this year…and for the last few years somewhat unhappy in their original location, not sure if it is the mass of hemlock roots, the overabundance of leucojum, or the bishop’s weed, or all three.  The question is whether we chance trying to move some more of them.  They don’t like that.

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Off with the fairies Sunday, May 4 2014 

One of the joys of Esperanza’s lawns is the amazing number of things that grow in them: lawn grass, of course, other grasses, sedges,violets, bluets, mosses (including sphagnum moss), escaping spring bulbs such as scilla, snowdrops, trout lilies, etc, pussy-toes, daisies, and on and on.  The variety runs throughout the summer.

Now, I will admit that a pure, emerald green carpet has a definite elegance.  The west lawn is primarily such a lawn, running smoothly down the slope to the west below the apple trees.  I might point out that, being as it faces west, it also nicely shows off the low light angles of sunset.  Said low angles make green lawns even greener.

So, there is a place for such showpieces.  But, three-quarters of our lawn is not that.  It is this fascinatingly diverse array, perhaps a bit out of hand in some areas, I will confess, making mowing a bit hard.  Still one can look for hours at the plants and animals in it.  I easily do so now, and (perhaps even more importantly) I easily did so as a child.

What child is going to be interested in the perfect green carpet? Yes, it makes an ideal place to play On (as the west lawn is ideal for rolling down) but not a place to be absorbed by, to play In.  I’m not particularly good with little children, I’ll freely confess.  But, still it seems to me, that our modern astro-turf lawn must be a very boring playground with little to stimulate the imagination, in comparison to even the simple clovers, mosses, and dandelions that we exterminate with such vigor.  Where are the leprechauns, the lions, the mysterious toadstools with their caterpillars and gnomes? Where is the wild bank of thyme in its eternal breeze?

The date of spring Saturday, May 3 2014 

Two years ago these species tulips were up in March, last year in mid-April, this year they just opened today.  Go figure.

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Experiments with daffodils Wednesday, Apr 30 2014 

As with crocus, I am fascinated by daffodils. I cannot have enough of them. One of my current frustrations is trying to figure out the best way to divide the clumps.  Now, I know, I know, in the fall.  You try finding them without digging things that don’t want to be dug.  Or better yet, try digging in the clay soil after it has baked all summer.

So last year, I tried moving some of them ‘in the green’.  I haven’t killed any that way (a plus) but they didn’t all bloom this year (a negative).  One cluster that I did try this with, however, has bloomed quite well.  This is a relief, because it was a set I lifted and divided because I did not want to lose it. It was an overcrowded, single clump.  To the best of my knowledge, only two other single or double bulbs were on the property. This made me nervous (eggs all in basket syndrome) because it was and is a particularly nice antique example.  An early long trumpet, with thin twisted petals; it is a bicolor with stable color (not changing as it matures) ivory petals and a deep gold trumpet.  Too many modern daffodils, in my opinion, have very heavy, triangular petals and almost a coarse look to them.  Not this one.

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Not Snow Friday, Apr 25 2014 

One of my favorite spring flowers is bloodroot (sanguinara canadensis).  We have a rather happy patch in a clump of ferns/wintercreeper at the base of the old pear tree stump.  When I looked a few days ago, only a few buds were up, today I came home from work and the patch was a sparkling white.  There are few other flowers that grow here that have that level of bright shine and absolutely pure white color (or non color!).

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Spring? Friday, Apr 25 2014 

What spring?  It’ll get around to it at some point I suppose.  In the meantime, the peas are coming up, the daffodils are blooming (though not with great abandon this year, too dry last year and the year before I suspect), the trout lilies are sloooowwwly multiplying. They are an odd little volunteer patch near the gingko, for several years just a few leaves, now the patch is about a yard across, with probably a hundred plus little leaves (each leaf representing one growing point). We have no idea how they got there, but they like it.  Last year, one bloomed; this year four bloomed.  They take their time growing. But the flower, a lovely clear yellow, shaped liked a delicate tiger lily but less than an inch across is worth the wait.  The bloodroot is up, but not quite blooming yet.  The scilla and chiondoxa are just about finished.

The red maple contemplated blooming this year, a few red tassels up there.  The forsythia got frozen.  Forsythia is a waste of one’s time.  The birds love its dense tangle, but I think we average one year in four for decent blooms here.  Absurd.

 

Photo of the Day Wednesday, Apr 23 2014 

Iris in the flagpole garden last year.  I hope I don’t bother it with my reorganization this year.  I shouldn’t, the iris (blue) and the Oriental poppies (true red) are in the center, I’m fiddling with both long edges of the arc.

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