Tuesday, May 19, 2009

May by Guest Photographer

My friend Karen is a much better photographer than I. Happily she came to visit when there was lots in bloom and took these photos for me.

Mountain Laurels

Snowdrift, I think. I wish I didn't always lose the plant labels.
From Karen200905


From Karen200905


Meadow about hip high
From Karen200905



Coral bells in the front bed. I grew these from seed labeled Heuchera americanum. Since the native has non-descript whitish flowers and these range from pink through salmon to red, I got duped. Still, these are pretty.

From Karen200905


Herb bed with chive blossoms
From Karen200905



Roses

Westerland, gaudy but one of my favorites.
From Karen200905


Autumn Sunset, a sport of Westerland. These are both Kordes roses. I have very good luck with them, hardy and though they get some blackspot, it doesn't seem to incovenience them.
From Karen200905



Summer Wine and Siberian Irises
From Karen200905


From Karen200905



I've kept planting climbers along my neighbor's board fence. This fall I dug out Rambling Rector, an alarmingly vigorous white one and moved it to a friend's yard. In its place I planted an Alchymist, another Kordes rose.

Either Morning Has Broken or Sunsprite - whichever, it's a cheerful color.
From Karen200905


The Impressionist -
Once in a while Heirloom Roses produces a new rose that makes it worth doing business with them. They send pathetically small, barely rooted cuttings and the shipping from the West Coast is staggering. I had to have this and it has fulfilled it's promise. It's getting some size and will be trellised to my front wall. I think one of the parents is Distant Drums, a really ugly rose.

From Karen200905

Friday, May 1, 2009

May 2009

May
The first flower on my pawpaw. Maybe next year the smaller tree will bloom and I'll get fruit. I finally got to taste one at a garden festival. It's creamy, sort of like banana but with a hint of something else. The blossoms are rather erotic looking, like something Georgia O'Keefe would paint.

From TTH200905


From TTH200905



Some of the established native azaleas:
From TTH200905


From TTH200905


I wouldn't stake my life that these are straight natives but instead are some of the commercially available hybrids:
From TTH200905