Gardening, anyone?

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  • Jazzygirl
    Jazzygirl Member Posts: 12,533
    edited July 2015

    Good morning ladies, well do I ever have a hummingbird story for you this morning! I was out doing some work early in the back yard and gardens as the sun was coming up and got near my desert willow tree that is blooming. I noticed there was a little broad bill hummingbird there grazing off the pink blossoms. I was very close to the tree and bird when I saw this, and just stopped and stood like a statue watching the little bird having it's breakfast. This little fellow circled his way up from the lower part of the tree, and at one point was within less than a foot from my face enjoying the nectar from one of the blossoms. I could see every detail of it's tiny body, and then, my little friend came closer to circle my head, head so close I could hear it's hum loudly and feel the breeze from it's wings on my face. Talk about a gift from nature on this saturday morning.

    Here is a photo of the desert willow. I did not have anything to take a photo of that little bird, but think the memory of this will remain etched in my mind forever.

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  • TwoHobbies
    TwoHobbies Member Posts: 2,118
    edited July 2015

    Beautiful photos ladies. i walked a different route this morning to see what is blooming in the neighborhood. I have a bit of a lull in my perennials so I wanted to see what else is blooming. I do have yellow day lilies in bloom on the side of my house but the ones in front are more shaded and just budding. I saw a bee balmin full beautiful bloom just like the picture here

    We have hummingbirds and so I feed them. They like red but once they come to your neighborhood they will come back and enjoy many kinds of flowers and Jazzy, as you saw they are not very shy. I have a fuscia colored camera and had one starring at me in a similar manner a few inches from my face. It was attracted to the color of the camera. However the click sound of the camera did scare it off so I didn't capture that picture.

  • Jackbirdie
    Jackbirdie Member Posts: 4,693
    edited July 2015

    Jazzy- wonderful story! I think of these things as little (sometimes not so little, such as this one) gifts from nature. I just love hummingbirds, they were special friends to me during my surgery recovery. I still stop what I'm doing when I see them come to the feeder outside my big window. I've missed I don't know how many important points during Wimbledon during the last week!

    This sounds like a magical moment, and I'm sure you won't need any photographic record to remind you. But thank you for sharing. Made my morning

  • flaviarose
    flaviarose Member Posts: 442
    edited July 2015

    Brookside, I too love the wild daylily more than the cultivated ones. I'm about 10 minutes from Pownal Vt, a half hour from Bennington. Where are you?

  • flaviarose
    flaviarose Member Posts: 442
    edited July 2015

    Jazzy, great hummingbird story. I love when I visit the West, so that I can see the different varieties of hummers.

  • flaviarose
    flaviarose Member Posts: 442
    edited July 2015

    imageToday's harvest

  • BrooksideVT
    BrooksideVT Member Posts: 2,211
    edited July 2015

    FlaviaRose, we're so close! I'm in a little town nobody ever heard of, quite near Mt. Snow,and about 45 minutes from Bennington. My parents bought the place as a summer retreat when I was tiny. As a teen, I'd have lived anywhere in the universe except here, but eventually it called me and I've been a year-round Vermonter for just about 20 years.


  • Jazzygirl
    Jazzygirl Member Posts: 12,533
    edited July 2015

    Flaviarose- what a harvest on your counter top. The flowers and the veggies. You are truly blessed with the green thumb my dear!

  • flaviarose
    flaviarose Member Posts: 442
    edited July 2015

    Thank you :-)

    Brookside, we are close! All I can say is: New England winters aren't for sissies!

  • Rosevalley
    Rosevalley Member Posts: 3,061
    edited July 2015

    Beautiful story Jazzy! Love the vegies and flowers.

  • footprintsangel
    footprintsangel Member Posts: 43,890
    edited July 2015

    The Hot weather here in Washington put a speed on my tomatoes,

    they are ripening very fast. And OHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH

    so good.

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited July 2015

    Foots, You're so right. Nothing beats a home grown tomato.

  • Jazzygirl
    Jazzygirl Member Posts: 12,533
    edited July 2015

    My aloe vera normally blooms once in the winter and once in the summer. This summer, first time it has had two flowers!

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  • 70charger
    70charger Member Posts: 963
    edited July 2015

    my lillies are starting to bloom.image

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  • flaviarose
    flaviarose Member Posts: 442
    edited July 2015

    imagemy vegetable garden over-run with poppies

  • flaviarose
    flaviarose Member Posts: 442
    edited July 2015
  • flaviarose
    flaviarose Member Posts: 442
    edited July 2015
  • flaviarose
    flaviarose Member Posts: 442
    edited July 2015
  • TwoHobbies
    TwoHobbies Member Posts: 2,118
    edited July 2015

    I just love coming here and seeing the beautiful photos. Jazzy I've never seen an aloe bloom. 70charger beautiful lilies. I had a lot of lilies and the chipmunks dug them all up. I only have daylilies now. Speaking of that, I thought I had transplanted a lovely tall yellow daylily to my front bed, and today I see it blooming and its orange. That's OK except it is near my dolce blackcurrant heuchera, so it kind of clashes. Hmmm... This is like the time I bought a cantaloupe plant for 25 cents. It got tiny cantaloupes on it and I thought, oh how weird that they don't get that webbing look on them until later. Well later never came and I finally realized I had honeydew! The tag said cantaloupe.

  • DayLily15
    DayLily15 Member Posts: 144
    edited July 2015

    beautiful lillies charger70, i had a few once but the deer ate them :( bulbs and all.

    flavirose you could charge admission to day trippers. plus a take home bouquet id say.


    My Black Hollyhocks are early this year.

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  • Jackbirdie
    Jackbirdie Member Posts: 4,693
    edited July 2015

    charger and Flavia: what a fabulous treat to see all of these delightful pics. I love an overrun with poppies veggie garden! I've never seen such a beautiful one. It shall be my new standard of excellence for vegetable gardens!

    Jazzy- how special to see an aloe in bloom!

    And Two hobbies, very funny story about the melon. For some reason today I wondered what we are going to show each other when the winter months come. We should try to recruit some ladies from down under, NZ, and S. Africa, etc., so we can have beautiful summer all year long here.

    I have nothing to share today, but thought of all of you when I drove by several huge stands of naturalized foxgloves. They have exploded here on the Oregon Coast and are Just gorgeous. But I was late to a vet appointment and couldn't pull off the highway and do them justice. Earlier in the year, each year, we have naturalized lupines that cover the hillsides right up to the cliffs overlooking the ocean. I think of them as our Oregon bluebonnets.

    Edit: after I posted I saw your smashing hollyhock, Daylily. Nice!

  • Rosevalley
    Rosevalley Member Posts: 3,061
    edited July 2015

    Hollyhocks are stunning love the dark purple.

  • BrooksideVT
    BrooksideVT Member Posts: 2,211
    edited July 2015

    I let foxglove and mullein (they're both tall biennials) grow wherever they want in my veggie garden, then plant veggies and marigolds in the leftover places. If you haven't guessed, I like flowers better than veggies. I think I plant veggies only because I so enjoy the geometry of their rows and patterns. Of course, planting around the flowers kind of defeats the geometry thing.

    Just looked at my side garden and bee balm is finally in bloom. About half in full bloom, half still working at it.

  • flaviarose
    flaviarose Member Posts: 442
    edited July 2015

    imageSpeaking of letting things re-seed and grow wild amidst the vegetables - my garden has so many things that come up ever year that I can't bear to weed out.... borage, poppies, rudebeckia, dill, cilantro, peppermint, oregano, arugula, sweet william, chamomile, echinacea, foxglove, primrose.....

    and then there are the perennials: gogi berries, blueberries, currants, gooseberries, raspberries, strawberries, asparagus, horseradish, hazlenut, pear, peach, apricot, bush cherry, persimmon, peppermint....

    I love the borage - don't use it for anything.... and I love the vegetables, I love to go down to the garden and graze... this past month I've had snow peas and raspberries for breakfast every day.... I wish my husband liked zucchini.....

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  • flaviarose
    flaviarose Member Posts: 442
    edited July 2015

    Jackbirdie, I've never been to Oregon, but have seen pictures of the coast and it is stunning. I've been daydreaming of what would be the ideal place to garden year round, and I'm wondering if Oregon is it? You don't have the water problems that California does, right? Does it freeze where you are?

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited July 2015

    I love standing in the garden and eating snow peas. Not sure why people cook them, they're so good raw.

  • Jackbirdie
    Jackbirdie Member Posts: 4,693
    edited July 2015

    Flavia- Oregon has many climates and zones, but on the southern Oregon Coast where I am, it's pretty close to perfect. We do have plenty of water, enough sun, no hard freezes. The temp where I am ever gets much above 80. Sometimes it gets to freezing temps, or just under, for a couple hours at night. Wind is probably the biggest problem. I've lived here 5 years now. Born in CA, left when I was 30, and have done the East and Midwest. I felt a sense of home from the first here, though sadly, I'm not close geographically, to family. Here is a little taste of what's near me:

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  • Jackbirdie
    Jackbirdie Member Posts: 4,693
    edited July 2015

    while I was scanning through my photos, I found pics of the naturalized foxgloves, taken last year. The stands I saw today numbered in the hundreds, but this will give you an idea on color:

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    And here are some native azaleas

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  • Jazzygirl
    Jazzygirl Member Posts: 12,533
    edited July 2015

    The photos are just beautiful everyone.

    The black hollyhocks are really something special too Daylily. Never seen those but love hollyhocks of all colors.

    Flavia- a garden overrun with poppies is a good problem to have, yes?

    The pics make me want to take a road trip to visit all your gardens (and oh yes, you too!)

  • BrooksideVT
    BrooksideVT Member Posts: 2,211
    edited July 2015

    I'd love to have poppies invade my veggies, especially the lovely pink ones you have, Flaviarose. Love the absolutely luminescent borage photo! They used to grow in my veggie garden but have since been banished to the stream's bank. I never saw them in that light. My loss!

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