But, enough history, look at the gorgeous display of this peony at its best! The bloom featured in the top right photo is bigger than my hand and its otherworldly yellow glows above the medium green matte foliage. Gorgeous, isn't it? It is said by some to sometimes, in some places, display these fabulous blooms for up to 5 weeks!
I'd prefer to leave you in that floral ecstasy that I just induced without telling the rest of the story, but alas, Kansas weather has shown its ugly side and smashed my dreams and this peony beneath its unrelenting onslaught. I took the fully-blooming picture above at 6:07 p.m. on Tuesday, May 14. the following Wednesday night we had a rain- and hail-storm come through, accompanied by high winds and tornado warnings, and at 6:50 a.m. on May 16th I took the photo at right, documenting its "new" appearance, a ragged and nearly-naked bush, brilliant petals on the ground at its feet. Blooms for 5 weeks? Not in Kansas! Such are the boundless highs and the dismal fate characteristic of a Kansas gardener and his garden.Though an old gardener, I am but a young blogger. The humor and added alliteration are free.
Sunday, May 19, 2024
Brief Bartzella Bonanza
Wednesday, May 8, 2024
Ugly Ducklings Shine
I fretted away the away time, wondering repeatedly if I'd missed my yellow rose beginnings, but came back to a fully blooming bush as pictured here. Something finally is going well in the garden.
But wait, there's more. For the first time ever, after several attempts, I have overwintered an 'Austrian Copper' to see a bloom. Situated in a special spot where I can watch it, with better drainage than I've given it before, and I, at last, have a healthy bush with the promise of future bounty. There are not many blooms this year, but I'll take a healthy young bush any day.Saturday, April 20, 2024
Anticipation Abandoned
'Yellow Bird' |
The evidence of an answer to that question this spring, has been a resounding "no!" from the Kansas climate. The first bloom in my garden was the "Pink Forsythia", Abeliophyllum distichum 'Roseum', which I noticed had just opened blooms on February 29th. One day and a cold night later its promise of love returned was reduced to a fountain of brown, never to shine again. Then, in sequence, my beloved Star Magnolia (Magnolia stellata) teased me one day and crushed me the next, several forsythia teased a few cranky yellow blooms and then the rest froze and browned, and then the French lilacs, too embarrassed to carry the torch, refused to bloom at all. So, at this stage, magnolias, forsythia, and lilacs are, in sports parlance, 0-3, while the Witch of Winter is 3-0. The redbuds on my hills made it 0-4 in short order, also adding to the general woe and despair, and the red peach tree made me 0-5 for the early season.
'Jane' Magnolia |
Paeonia tenuifolia |
But did I yet mention that we've been bone dry, all through winter and spring, so dry as to make the ground as solid as cement and dry as far as I can dig? We need rain to even have grass yet! Should I will just roll over, cut my losses, sacrifice the troops, and wait until 2025? I need color; beautiful sunrises and hope can sustain me, but not forever. What say ye? (that last question asked in my mind with the voice of Gregory Peck as "Ahab" in 1956's Moby Dick, as he asked his first mate to follow him to their mutual death).
12/12/2023 |
Monday, January 15, 2024
So Long Absent, So Weak
And then two days later, a similar sunrise, a repeat of the joyous awakening of a Kansas day:
Anyway, if you wonder about the whereabouts of ProfessorRoush, I'm either sobbing intermittently about the plight of my poor roses, shoveling through the 2.5 foot drift that keeps reforming on the front walkway, or, just maybe, marveling in the knowledge that in about a month, it'll be 50ºF and sunny outside some Saturday in February and I'll be clearing garden beds for another year and finding the daffodils pushing up.