Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Sunday, October 22, 2023
Too Soon to Bloom
I like the new colors, truth be told, as much as the old classic red or white. I feel the vivid fuchsia at the top is just to die for, and the orange of paragraph #4 is one of the most unusual. The salmon to the right is a subtle hue, and the soft yellow variety below is much more rich-colored in person. Notice that I've long lost the variety names, if they ever existed, and merely describe them as the welcome color they are for the dreary months of winter. Here in the sunroom, I can look out windows at the dreary dying garden beyond and my eyes carry this color outdoors into the landscape.One wonderful part of gardening and blogging is that I'm always learning something and today I've learned that the Schlumbergera are divided into two main groups, the earlier-blooming Truncata, with pointed teeth, horizontal stems and flowers and yellow pollen, and the later-blooming Buckleyi, with more rounded teeth, flowers that hang down, and pink pollen. I appear to have primarily Truncata, since the pollen of all currently-blooming seems to be yellow and the flowers are all hanging down, and leaf shapes on the 7 plants not yet blooming seem similar to those that are. I'll have to search for the Buckleyi, now knowing there is a difference.
Sunday, October 15, 2023
Accepting Miracles
The title is the subject for ProfessorRoush today, a meme on my mind for all this past week. My week of miracles started a week ago on a warm Saturday as I was engaged in lots of late Fall work in the yard, mowing, trimming, bushhogging, putting up hoses, and fully engaged in the activities I lump into "Fall cleanup." My first glimpse of the miracles to come was this late crocus, Colchicum autumnale, a single, annually reoccurring survivor of the few toxic bulbs of the species that I planted years ago and long forgot. Old age and fading memories sometimes provide unexpected benefits to old gardeners beyond our creaky knees and grumpy exteriors.
And then, the same day, sitting down outside with Mrs. ProfessorRoush while we chatted with our grandsons, I spied this little sprig of life, a baby juniper bravely growing in the middle of a clump of River Birch, shaded from the sunlight it so desperately wants but also kept moistened and protected in the embrace of the birch. Can't see the miracle for the tree? Look closer!
If I left it here, to grow in the rotting organic debris gathered in the birch clump center, will it survive? Choke out the birch? Wither eventually, starved for light? The young scientist in my mind still wants to know so I'm going to leave it growing here in the true sense of "letting nature take its course" while I observe. A good gardener should always know when to accept miracles when miracles appear.
The sun and earth also conspired in the parade of miracles this week to give me these views of home and prairie as I came home late Tuesday. Sometimes the light on this corner of the globe overwhelms me, although perhaps poorly captured in these photographs, as it did on this day. The right angle, the right moment, and the grasses and trees and house were all shining left and right of me as I opened the mailbox and I just couldn't let the miracle moment go uncaptured.
Thursday, another miracle presented to Mrs. ProfessorRoush and I as we came home from supper, a moment of marriage so like many others until we pulled onto the garage pad and I noticed this unexpected bit of Spring transported to Fall, a blooming sprig of common lilac, isolated and alone among a dry and beaten hedge, but full of fragrance and hope for the next Spring to come. I robbed the bees by taking it indoors where, for a few days, I could smell lilac before it faded into time again.
And was Saturday again, a Saturday like so many others but as welcome as rain on the prairie after a summer of drought. My Saturdays are miracles every week, miracles brought by a dog wanting only love and a little game of frisbee to break up its long days of napping. Bella has lots of gray now on her muzzle but her soul is still that of a puppy and her love waits only for me. I'm convinced this dog counts the days of the week, knowing when it is Saturday and our weekly drive to McDonald's occurs and that I'll stay home and play instead of disappearing until darkness. This last miracle, Bella in my life, is one I treasure every day, a daily reminder of all the beauty and love and happiness that the world can hold.Sunday, September 17, 2023
A Walk Down The Road with Bella
Tall Goldenrod |
So consider this a short tour of the ditches alongside the road. Of course, this time of year, Goldenrod is everywhere. My plant identification is suspect as always, especially here given the number of native Goldenrods, but I believe the photos above and left are of Tall Goldenrod, Solidago altissima, although it could be Canadian Goldenrod, the former being a subspecies of the latter.
Heliathus annuus. I'm not anywhere near certain of the species name for this specimen, and I wouldn't have a clue at all without the marvelous kswildflower.org website.
There is a lot of White Sage, Artemsia ludoviciana. on the walk, everywhere in the adjacent prairie, its hairy-gray leaves befitting a plant adapted to drought and grazing.
Brickellia eupatoriopiodes, or False Boneset, is likewise a very frequent visitor to these hills, blooming in the worst of drought and leaving behind an interesting winter skeleton. It's taproot is said to reach 16 feet in depth when necessary.
Nearly last, but certainly not least, clumps of the the most "garden-worthy" of the prairie plants, Dotted Gayfeather, Liatris punctata, "dots" the prairie with low light purple spires. Butterflies love this plant, and often are above it in a swarm.
Wax Goldenweed |
And that is a walk down my late-September road everyone. Not as literary-worthy as Bill Bryson's A Walk in the Woods, but its none-the-less my own little "Walk Down the Road with Bella."