Showing posts with label November Flowers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label November Flowers. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Weekends Only

IT'S OFFICIALLY WEEKENDS ONLY in the garden and I hate it. It's barely light when I leave in the morning and dark when I get home. People don't understand why I don't want to do anything on the weekends. They don't realize that I have to appease my withdrawal symptoms, sate my curiosity, get my hands dirty. Play, play, play in the garden. That's all I want to do on the weekends! 

The lure to the garden is also fueled by this temporary lag in rainfall. Yes, there is sunshine and birdsong and falling leaves and a few lone flowers just waiting for me to notice them. Why would I want to be anywhere else, I ask you. 

Nandina berries are ready for Christmas

The winter berries are plump and polished and wooing the birds and me with my camera. 
The Aronia is looking mighty nice too. The robins will get those berries soon.
I took these Aronia photos a few weeks ago. The leaves are completely gone now but of course I can't take a photo when it's dark.
Such a pretty plant
Cotoneaster lacteus is also full of berries
The birds don't care for these berries so they'll last until spring
When they drop, they make a royal mess all over the place. 

Choisya ternata is in full bloom. 

In summer I basically ignore this plant. Its time to shine is now!

Check out the fresh foliage on Acanthus mollis, unscathed by the cold weather.

Dwarf Nandina dons her winter finery. 

Abelia x grandiflora is still looking fab. Don't you love those rosy bracts?

Even a few lingering flowers

They didn't get the memo announcing winter. 

There you have it. I hope you all have a wonderful Thanksgiving. You know where I'll be.

Monday, November 11, 2013

November's Flowers

HI PEEPS. THE WEEKEND weather was not too bad. I was able to spend both days doing what I love, spending time in my favorite place on the planet. It doesn't get any better than that, does it? 

There was just a hint of white on the roof a few weeks ago but at the time of this writing, my garden is still without a significant (aka "killing") frost. Hooray! This means there are still die-hard plants holding on to a single blossom or pretty foliage. Here are some of them: 

Violet Viola odorata 

Double Impatiens walleriana 

Impatiens balfouri 

Impatiens rothii 

Impatiens omeiana 

Nicotiana 'Tinker Bell' 

Lamium maculatum 'Purple Dragon' 

Lantana camara 

Salvia microphylla ‘La Trinidad Pink’ 

Salvia 'Hot Lips' 

Salvia microphylla 'Maraschino' 

Clematis 'Polish Spirit' 

Clematis 'Ernest Markham' 

Clematis 'Ville de Lyon' 

Clerodendrum speciosum delectum 

Begonia grandis 

Scented Pelargonium  'Hazelnut' 

Bacopa 

Kiss-Me-Over-The-Garden-Gate 

Fuchsia 

Fuchsia 

Buddleia 'Lo & Behold' 

Dahlia 

Phlox 'Eva Cullum' 

Hydrangea 'Lemon Wave' 

Choisya ternata 

Choisya flowers up close

Heuchera 'Paris' 

Santa Barbara Daisy Erigeron karvinskianus 'Profusion' 

Golden Feverfew Tanacetum parthenium 

Oxalis 'Tri-Color'
Earlier this past summer, I was picking the yellow blossoms to keep pink the predominant color.
But I finally relented. 

A bazillion flowers now! 

Hollyhock blossom

Persicaria 'Red Dragon' with  Red Penstemon buds

Rosa 'Rhapsody in Blue' 

A lone Carpet Rose blossom

Rosa 'Jacques Cartier' 

Leycesteria formosa 'Golden Lanterns' 

Coreopsis ‘Mercury Rising’
I sure hope this plant winters over. Talk about a work horse.
It's been in bloom since I bought it last May. 

Verbena rigida 

Another workhorse, Alstromeria. Check out the health and vigor of this plant.  

Alstromeria buds 

Alstromeria 

Abelia grandiflora bracts

Abelia grandiflora blossoms and bracts 

Finally, I had to show you this photo.
Acuba, green with yellow spots. Aging Pear tree leaf, yellow with green spots.
Isn't nature grand?