Monday, November 15, 2010

Garden Bloggers Bloom Day: November 2010

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Flame acanthus is enjoying another round of color after I cut it back a little last month
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These wooly caterpillars are really into the indigo spires salvia
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Copper canyon daisy
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End of the Mexican bush sage
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Diamond frost euphorbia
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The butterfly weed is back after being stripped of every leaf by caterpillars in August
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Gregg's mist flower with sweet potato vine
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Coral nymph salvia (I thought the lemongrass next to it was dead from a freeze when I planted this guy in spring, but it snuck back in over the summer...definitely not complaining since I do love to make to make thai soup with lemongrass when it's chilly)
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Firespike (some of the foliage has gotten a little wilty from the low 40's nights)
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Rock rose
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Still so excited about my pink turk's cap! Although it picked a strange time to start blooming.
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Golden thryallis
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Okay, these aren't blooms, but don't these pyracantha berries look amazingly colorful? Saw a mockingbird making off with one this afternoon.

For more gardens around the world today, visit May Dreams Gardens, where Carol hosts Garden Bloggers Bloom Day.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Fall in the garden

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The copper canyon is blooming alongside artemesia, indigo spires salvia (which the bees and fuzzy caterpillars are loving), and flame acanthus.
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The tropicana canna foliage is beautiful, which makes up for the fact that it didn't bloom this year.
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Another non-bloomer for the year: plumeria...time to move it to the shed.
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The Mexican sunflowers are still producing flowers, but have become scraggly and are mostly gone to seed. However, when I pushed them back, a pale pink Turk's cap bloom was hiding underneath. This plant came from a cutting from my mother's garden and was a small transplant this spring. And it just started blooming in November...very confusing.
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The pyracantha berries are bright red now.
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And all the veggies in the back and front square foot beds are ready for some fall weather. All the seeds in the front two beds are up now, more or less, with the radishes (last photo) in the lead at week 3. Maybe I should have used more transplants in the front, but I'm hoping all the seedlings survive this stage!

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Pyracantha glory

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Someone planted this pyracantha bush in what is now a partially shady corner of my yard, so it's gotten a bit leggy; but it's in all its berry glory this time of year. Sometimes I get a flock of cedar waxwings traveling through that snack on it, which is a seasonal birdwatching highlight...except for the presents they leave behind on the deck.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Seed madness

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Next week my kitchen table will be cleared of fall garden chaos. This week, I'm just embracing it.

Do you ever find yourself daydreaming over a stack of seed packets, envisioning what the garden will look like in a few weeks (veggies) or months (wildflowers)? As usual, I've got more seeds than I know what to do with, but I love this time in fall when the possibilities seem endless. Later I can worry about keeping everything watered correctly, covering things if we get a freeze, checking for insects...right now, I can dream a little dream of orange poppies, Tuscan kale, heirloom fennel.

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Also did a little seed collecting from the cosmos and other flowers. And made some little seed envelopes from wrapping paper scraps (got the idea here).