Gardening, anyone?

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  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited June 2019

    My last fall blooms!

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  • Jazzygirl
    Jazzygirl Member Posts: 12,533
    edited October 2018

    ooh pretty Teka


  • M0mmyof3
    M0mmyof3 Member Posts: 9,696
    edited October 2018
  • Jazzygirl
    Jazzygirl Member Posts: 12,533
    edited October 2018
  • DodgersGirl
    DodgersGirl Member Posts: 2,382
    edited October 2018

    Jazzygirl— love the picture!!

  • Warrior2018
    Warrior2018 Member Posts: 380
    edited October 2018

    Adorable Jazzy

  • GmaFoley
    GmaFoley Member Posts: 7,091
    edited November 2018

    A day late but this is my DH being silly. Always loved this picture.

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  • rachelcarter35
    rachelcarter35 Member Posts: 368
    edited November 2018

    Bulbs are in the fridge and sweet pea, larkspur, stock, snapdragon seeds, Icelandic poppies and ranunculuses arrived in the mail yesterday. I have today and tomorrow off and plan to start prepping beds. I'm 6 weeks out from exchange surgery so am going to have to be creative with shovel and soil bags. Supposedly I can plant all of these this fall and have bloom during the winter. My goal is to have something to cut from my garden year round. I'm down to roses (here when I got here) at this point. Next year I'm going to do two rounds of zinnias and cosmos because the year before last at my rental I started them later and had them till the first frost. This year they were spent by late August. I'm hoping to be able to use my Christmas bonus to buy more flowering bushes to fill out my back hedge some more. This spring I planted an early camelia, lilac, peony, two hydrangeas, flowering quince and princess flowering bush. I'm hoping to have a wall of flowers all the way around the back garden. I bought the place one year ago and then got this DX. Plans are moving slower than expected but its so nice to know I'm hopefully (God willing) going to be able to watch this garden mature over the next 20 years. The sooner I get the bigger stuff in the sooner it will establish itself. I plan to fill in the shady side with a scented white rhododendron, a late blooming camelia and possibly an azalea I don't like most of them. On the sunny part I plan to put in a Lantana, a geranium I rooted taken from a neighbor's yard (with permission) hibiscus, potato bush. and probably a few more roses. The fence could have some vines too but that's down the road. DH has said I can have some of his lawn to triple our vegetable area in the spring. Tomatoes and peppers all summer has inspired him to let go of a section. When we moved in he would hear no part of it. I had giant plans for the front with fruit trees and a full on rose garden but that's just going to have to go in another year from now. My great aunt Joan lived in London in a brown stone on the edge of Kensington Gardens. Her back gate opened up into the public garden and she would leave it open to show off hers. It was a typical English garden with a square of lawn, a flowering hedge around the three sides and Roman urns on each side of the steps onto the lawn. There were articles and even a book with her garden featured. I'm using some of the same flowers she used. She had a wild pet crow. I need one.

  • GmaFoley
    GmaFoley Member Posts: 7,091
    edited November 2018

    Leaves, Leaves, and more Leaves.

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  • Jazzygirl
    Jazzygirl Member Posts: 12,533
    edited November 2018

    GMA- so pretty and very artistic too!

  • JaBoo
    JaBoo Member Posts: 520
    edited November 2018

    I bought 3 large bags of tulips and daffodils, so we werr planting them yesterday. I am already looking forward to seeing them in the spring.

  • rachelcarter35
    rachelcarter35 Member Posts: 368
    edited November 2018

    Something hopeful about putting bulbs in the ground as the days are closing down.

  • Jazzygirl
    Jazzygirl Member Posts: 12,533
    edited November 2018

    Still no frost yet

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  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited November 2018

    Very nice. What is the green shrub in the background?

  • rachelcarter35
    rachelcarter35 Member Posts: 368
    edited November 2018
  • Jazzygirl
    Jazzygirl Member Posts: 12,533
    edited November 2018

    Yes, I have to large rosemary bushes in the background. They grow wild here too. I am getting ready to prune these back, they get huge every summer and have some lovely purple blooms spring and fall.

  • Cpeachymom
    Cpeachymom Member Posts: 518
    edited November 2018

    imageBurning bush at the park.

  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited November 2018

    The common milkweed seed pods in our backyard.

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    Monarch butterfly caterpillars feed exclusively on milkweed.

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited November 2018

    Teka, Yay for doing your bit to help butterflies. They need all the help they can get. I don't think they come this far north in the PNW.

  • sparrowhawk
    sparrowhawk Member Posts: 179
    edited December 2018

    Another gardener who is getting better at not killing stuff. We recently planted a herb garden, but everything seems to be taking except the coriander (cilantro). It was growing well, then started flowering and dying. We've tried many times to get it going. Any tips?

    We have huge gardenia shrubs and jasmine which I love!

  • Wren44
    Wren44 Member Posts: 8,585
    edited December 2018

    Sparrowhawk, It sounds like your cilantro is acting like an annual. Cutting off the flowers might make it last longer. Or just plant seeds in succession a few weeks apart. Sounds like you might somewhere in the south or California. We have gardenias and jasmine here but not this time of the year.

  • JoE777
    JoE777 Member Posts: 628
    edited December 2018

    This site is a healing balm to soul and body. I hope to post some meager attempts of trying to provide monarch habitat of milk weed here in coastal Texas.

  • sparrowhawk
    sparrowhawk Member Posts: 179
    edited December 2018

    Thank you, Wrenn! I did cut off the flowers a while ago and I think it helped a bit but the plants didn't thrive for very long.

    You are right, I do live in the south - in the Southern Hemisphere! It's time for gardenias and lavender mostly now, and our native flowers which are very hardy in the hot weather.

  • Lucy55
    Lucy55 Member Posts: 3,044
    edited December 2018
  • Teka
    Teka Member Posts: 10,052
    edited December 2018

    My last pics for 2018.

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    A crow and gray squirrel waiting for breakfast.

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  • Lucy55
    Lucy55 Member Posts: 3,044
    edited December 2018
  • Jazzygirl
    Jazzygirl Member Posts: 12,533
    edited January 2019

    Happy New Year! Big snow storm here today. Four inches in the valley (many more in the mountains) and looked over while shoveling the driveway and sidewalk areas to see my chili ristra snow covered, and quite pretty in front of the snow covered rosemary bushes.

    Wishing you all a healthy new year!

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  • Blundin2005
    Blundin2005 Member Posts: 1,167
    edited January 2019

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    Best wishes for New Year 2019!

    My desk sits in front of a window to my garden. Today, I glimpsed these flowers on the trellis. I stop often while I'm working at my desk to gaze out the window, and more often while I was doing taxes! What a treat to see roses in bloom in January! But who knows what climate change will bring. The winds have been so strong I thought it was March!

    It was a good day to work in the garden today.

    Best wishes to all as always,

    Marilyn

  • MelissaDallas
    MelissaDallas Member Posts: 7,268
    edited January 2019

    Sparrowhawk, you aren’t doing anything wrong with the cilantro, that is just how it grows. It bolts really fast. I’ve decided it just isn’t worth bothering with since it is so cheap at the store. Dill does the same thing for me

  • TwoHobbies
    TwoHobbies Member Posts: 2,118
    edited January 2019

    Agree, Melissa. In my experience cilantro is kind of like lettuce. It grows great in early summer and then bolts in the hot weather.

    You southerners and southern hemisphere peeps will have to keep us northerners going till spring. Oh and apparently Oregon is stillblooming! I got nothing to show except indoor plants.

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