Home » Discussion Forums » Blog Post Discussion » I love this time of year
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41536 is a reply to message #41534 ] |
Fri, 22 April 2011 21:12   |
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Oh man, those last two. *fans self*
Smooshes!
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41537 is a reply to message #41534 ] |
Fri, 22 April 2011 21:33   |
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Try taking the photo of the pale lavendar pansy when the sun isnt shining directly on it ie on a lightly clouded over day.
The bright sun is too bright for the camera sensor and over powers the colour of whatever you are taking and washes it out. Its one of the perils of digital photograph.
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41538 is a reply to message #41534 ] |
Fri, 22 April 2011 21:41   |
EMoon Messages: 664 Registered: March 2009 |
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We can't grow tulips here (and those are gorgeous tulips) but we can grow iris. I have purple, white, yellow, peach, but NOTHING like that one of yours. Wow. We also have water iris in the water garden--a gorgeous blue and a brilliant yellow. Both would like to own the water garden.
E
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41543 is a reply to message #41534 ] |
Sat, 23 April 2011 02:13   |
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Fake Frenchie Messages: 506 Registered: November 2008 Location: France |
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I love this time of the year too. For your pleasure:
This the first time that we have had flowers on our rhubarb.
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41545 is a reply to message #41534 ] |
Sat, 23 April 2011 03:00   |
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Diane in MN Messages: 2731 Registered: October 2008 Location: Twin Cities, MN, USA |
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Oh, yellow peonies! I love peonies. I don't have any, because I don't have any appropriate full-sun locations, but even though their season is short they are so worth it. I don't have any iris, either, because of placement issues, but I like many of them, and I like yours a lot.
We haven't had much spring-like weather, but this year there are blooming daffodils--yes, plural--from a planting that I thought had frozen to death some years ago. If the rain stops, I should go out and take a picture of them just to prove they're really there. Although I will not complain about the rain, even though the ground is so wet it's spongy, because I managed to get grass seed down in time for it. Maybe the annual mud elimination effort will have some success this year.
"The point of books is to have way too many but to always feel you never have enough . . . " Louise Erdrich
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41550 is a reply to message #41543 ] |
Sat, 23 April 2011 10:09   |
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AJLR Messages: 2566 Registered: September 2008 Location: England, UK |
Senior Member [Moderator] |
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| Fake Frenchie wrote on Sat, 23 April 2011 07:13 | I love this time of the year too. For your pleasure:
This the first time that we have had flowers on our rhubarb.
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Strange looking things, aren't they, rhubarb flowers. Mind you, letting them flower does take their energy away from producing the leaf stalks that you want to eat. I gather that, like a lot of plants, they're more likely to flower when they're stressed. So unless you're intending to take up flower arranging (or already have that pastime) or have already had your fill of rhubarb compote, you might consider removing them, then giving the plant a nice long drink and a good thick mulch of something organic. And I apologise for missing the point if you've spent years trying to make it flower.
"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41558 is a reply to message #41550 ] |
Sat, 23 April 2011 14:21   |
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Fake Frenchie Messages: 506 Registered: November 2008 Location: France |
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| AJLR wrote on Sat, 23 April 2011 16:09 |
| Fake Frenchie wrote on Sat, 23 April 2011 07:13 | I love this time of the year too. For your pleasure:
This the first time that we have had flowers on our rhubarb.
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Strange looking things, aren't they, rhubarb flowers. Mind you, letting them flower does take their energy away from producing the leaf stalks that you want to eat. I gather that, like a lot of plants, they're more likely to flower when they're stressed. So unless you're intending to take up flower arranging (or already have that pastime) or have already had your fill of rhubarb compote, you might consider removing them, then giving the plant a nice long drink and a good thick mulch of something organic. And I apologise for missing the point if you've spent years trying to make it flower. 
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We have a lot of rhubarb (we have another rhubarb patch 2m x 3m), so I think I let them flower til they die. Then, I will give it "a nice long drink and a good thick mulch of something organic". We give ou rhubarb away, we have so much. But, thanks for telling me that it was stressed. I will fertilize it when the flowers die.
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41559 is a reply to message #41556 ] |
Sat, 23 April 2011 14:23   |
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blondviolinist Messages: 1070 Registered: October 2008 Location: Midwestern United States |
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Oh, that's so fun!
I was pretty sure I couldn't grow much of anything, but after reading Robin's blog for long enough, I've finally gotten a bit braver in the plant department. I now have three (count them, three!) plants which I haven't yet killed. And two of those have lasted over a year. Granted, they're easy plants to grow (an impatiens, an amaryllis, and an African violet) but still... plants I'm responsible for that somehow are still green!
[Updated on: Sat, 23 April 2011 14:24] "Purity of heart is to will one thing." Kirkegaard
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41568 is a reply to message #41562 ] |
Sat, 23 April 2011 18:08   |
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Corellia Messages: 107 Registered: June 2010 Location: Norway |
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I've spent the last four days trying to get a little part of grandma's garden in order. The garden itself is huge, and would probably require a team of twenty strapping young men armed with spades and chainsaws to get to a semblance of order. I don't think grandma has done any gardening since the beginning of the eighties...
I've managed to rescue 2.5 flowerbeds so far. The Symphoricarpos rivularis had completely usurped one of the beds, and had to be dug up, by hand... It's weird when you're suddenly really happy that you only have to weed stinging nettle for a while.
I seem to have become attracted to reclaiming overgrown gardens, I did the exact same thing last year, at my former home, except the garden there was completely overgrown by roses. Part of me keeps thinking: "I'm glad I don't have to prune roses this year", while another part is thinking (or rather shouting): "Grandma's garden needs more roses!". I love roses! (Even while pruning Rosa rubiginosa, which is lethal!)
[Updated on: Sun, 24 April 2011 06:08]
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41574 is a reply to message #41571 ] |
Sat, 23 April 2011 23:10   |
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blondviolinist Messages: 1070 Registered: October 2008 Location: Midwestern United States |
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I don't know *how* I haven't managed to kill mine yet. It was a thank-you gift, one of those cheap WalMart "grow-your-own" bulb things. The pot it came in doesn't have any holes for water drainage, so I'm shocked that I haven't over-watered it. Supposedly you're supposed to let the leaves die in the autumn or something, and then stick the bulb in a cool dark place for a while, so that it'll flower when you bring it back out? Well, I stuck mine in a dark place, but there wasn't any *cool* place available that wasn't going to get well below freezing. I then promptly forgot about it for a month or more. I brought it back out and left it on the windowsill, where it sat for weeks doing *nothing,* and a few days before I was going to toss it in the trash, it suddenly sent up new leaves and started growing like gangbusters. (I don't know if I'm going to get more flowers out of it, though. Nothing looks like a flower stalk.)
"Purity of heart is to will one thing." Kirkegaard
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41584 is a reply to message #41572 ] |
Sun, 24 April 2011 09:18   |
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Melissa Mead Messages: 990 Registered: October 2008 Location: Albany, NY, USA |
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| katinseattle wrote on Sat, 23 April 2011 22:14 |
| Melissa Mead wrote on Sat, 23 April 2011 16:43 |
I, um, think I just killed my amaryllis. It's yellow. And brown. :sigh:
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Did it just recently bloom? Or have you let the foliage grow for a while? They do die back, like any bulbs. Theoretically, if you've let the foliage grow to feed the bulb, once it dies back, you let the bulb rest for a while. It'll bloom again when you replant it. I'm trying this for the first time myself, so have only theory to go by.
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No. The poor thing was just starting to sprout, and I put it outside where it could get some sun and the cats couldn't get at it, and it got cold.
Member of Carpe Libris: http://carpelibris.wordpress.com/
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41585 is a reply to message #41584 ] |
Sun, 24 April 2011 10:16   |
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If you have a yard, stick it outside in the ground all summer. If it makes another attempt, it will be able to store up much more energy. Repot and bring inside BEFORE FROST.
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41594 is a reply to message #41580 ] |
Sun, 24 April 2011 13:20   |
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AJLR Messages: 2566 Registered: September 2008 Location: England, UK |
Senior Member [Moderator] |
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| Fake Frenchie wrote on Sun, 24 April 2011 10:38 |
| AJLR wrote on Sat, 23 April 2011 23:41 |
| Fake Frenchie wrote on Sat, 23 April 2011 19:21 | We have a lot of rhubarb (we have another rhubarb patch 2m x 3m), so I think I let them flower til they die. Then, I will give it "a nice long drink and a good thick mulch of something organic". We give ou rhubarb away, we have so much.
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Goodness, yes, that is a lot of rhubarb acreage. Still, at least it's a good healthy thing to eat. My grandmother used to make a rhubarb cordial - it was very powerful stuff!
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Can you give me the recipe for the cordial?
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I'll see if it's among her papers, in our loft. I'm not sure if it was something she ever wrote down. I wouldn't say, mind you, that having some of it was a totally positive experience. 
Have you come across the Rhubarb Compendium site? A mind-boggling number of recipes there.
"Never let a computer know you're in a hurry."
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| Re: I love this time of year [message #41625 is a reply to message #41534 ] |
Mon, 25 April 2011 02:18   |
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Marina Messages: 245 Registered: January 2009 Location: Near San Jose CA |
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I do so love spring flowers.
I bought, and my gardener planted, something like a dozen bags of various bulbs last autumn: mostly daffs, with a large number of tulips of various colors and styles. There was also a crocus mix. I let him plant most of the tulips where he liked, and he did a great job. It's been wonderful seeing all the daffs, all over the yard, and the tulips (and for a short time) the crocus coming up. I did purchase two tree peonies, and hope next year they'll flower. Put them on the north side of the house, so I live in hope. Ordinary peonies need more cold than my plot can provide, drat it.
My earliest-planted wisteria bloomed this year, next to the redbud 'Forest Pansy', but the hawthorn stick is only putting out leaves, no flowers, and the branches aren't. My roses, however, are Very Happy right now.
We have also installed some new callas--apricot/rosy and very black, there might be a new canna or two, astilbes for the legion of shady parts in the yard, and I have been Busy Buying Heucheras/Coral Bells, for the absolute full shade areas, which have been bare dirt for too long.
I think I have bought Too Many Heirloom Tomatoes for this yard's sunniest spots. Oops. I have bought a few white hydrangeas of different styles, for my MiL's Mother's Day gift, now planted.
Next year: more odd and colorful tulips, and IRISES.
A. Marina Fournier
❦If you want a golden rule that will fit everything, this is it: Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful or believe to be beautiful ❧ William Morris❦
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