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Backyardnotes

~ All things botanical in photos and words—in my West Seattle garden and elsewhere; seeing and creating art and assorted musings.

Backyardnotes

Category Archives: Spring bulbs

WIND, RAIN, WET, COLD, AND A FEW SUNBREAKS

12 Monday Apr 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in Native plants, Spring bulbs, Spring flowers, tulips, Weather

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Tags

aples, Garden Art, pears, Sisters, tulips

OKAY, SO IT’S NOT TOMORROW MORE THAN A WEEK LATER since the last posting, but there is still more to see around here! The weather has been so cold, wet, windy for days. April Fool’s Day  I visited my friend Betty on Whidbey Island.  The weather was forecast to be sunny and near 60 degrees, but what we got was cool and windy with miserly bits of sun. Crossing Puget Sound from Whidbey Island to the Mukilteo landing on my way back home I saw this huge, spectacular storm cloud to the south. By the time I reached Seattle I had driven right under its northeasterly path and dumping rain.

Friday was uninspiring and more rain right through the weekend. Saturday was saved with the annual dyeing of the eggs; a group effort by myself, my daughter and her two children. Lifted our spirits on an otherwise dreary day. And Sunday’s weather cooperated just enough for the morning egg hunt next door to take place and our little hiding and seeking of the eggs just before dinner. Nephew Ryan loves to hide the eggs and Simon and Sophia are challenged to seek them out.

Most of the week following Easter was cold, wet, cold, wet, and cold. Finally the weather turned on Friday, and Saturday afternoon after a cool and very breezy morning. By Sunday we had sunshine for most of the day.

In spite of the weather, life goes on in the garden; flowers bloom, perennials keep pushing skyward, creeping out of winter’s slumber. I am concerned that we will have relatively few pears this year because when it’s cold and rainy, pollinating insects don’t do much flying–bees in particular. Our pear is an espaliered tree with grafts; Bartlett, Comice and Rescue. We planted the pear and an espaliered apple (Spartan and Akane) in 1996. The three year old trees were already in training when we bought them. We used split cedar rails for a support fences. The trees are a bridge between the tiny lawn and the vegetable garden. It was a nice solution. Last year we had around forty pounds of pears and about twenty pounds of apples (not a great yield).

The apple tree is just now blooming. The blossoms are so sweet and tinged with pink

The pear is nearly done flowering.

In the rest of the garden plants are poppin’! Lots of tulips, some mangled by rain had shortened lives, but most are doing fine. One of our favorites is this one that we call the native tulip. These tulips were planted sometime long before we moved here in 1992. We dug up and replanted many of them before building the new house and dug more after building when we had a plan for the entire yard.They are spread around the west side of the house. They seem very sturdy, have beautiful color that light up in the sun and the flowers last several weeks.

Tulipa bakeri ‘Lilac Wonder’ is a great tulip for naturalizing, has vibrant color and is long lived. Tom chose these in 1997 and their numbers increase every year. When the sun shines they open wide.

Here is a nice contrast in colors, the white tulip was part of a red and white combo, but only the white tulips were in the mix! Anyway, they look beautiful with the budding apple blossoms and anthriscus sylvestris ‘Ravenswing’. Anthriscus is a prolific self-sower if not deadheaded before the seed ripens and if treated like a weed you won’t keep it where it’s not wanted. It is quite lovely and a good fill plant.

How about a little garden art? We have a few pieces here and there, some hidden, some in plain view; some pieces we purchased, a few inheirited and given to us as gifts. Art in the garden is very much like planting–right plant in the right place. Although sometimes repeated moving may take place until the right place is the right place!

Surrounded by spring blooms now, Ho Tai will be shaded under a summer rose with a view of Puget Sound.

St. Francis of Assisi used to stand guard over Grandma T’s house plants on the enclosed back porch. I inheirited him and this is his second place in the garden. He used to stand under the birdbath but the racoons kept knocking him over and he had to have some repairs made. He seems happy here under the white camelia and among the bluebells, lilies and amemones.

Yesterday mom and I went to visit my sister Debbie at her 2 acres of gardening space in Sbnohomish and this piece was in her yard. It looks just right under tall trees, rhododendrons, and maianthemum and native bleeding hearts at its feet. One reason for the visit was to split up some hostas that had come from our grandmother’s garden. Since they are just now poking out of the ground, the time was right for splitting up.

Deb has a new garden bench. It replaces one that came from my garden about nine years ago; made from old barn wood it finally fell apart. Her new bench sits on a small knoll behind the house under tall old maples and red alders. She plans will be planting a red climbing rose on each side. It should look great next year. How about a short tour of her yard in the next post?

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SPRING ARRIVED WHILE WE WERE AWAY

01 Thursday Apr 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in Native plants, Spring bulbs, Spring flowers

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SUNBREAKS ON THURSDAY AFTERNOON but too much wind for photos, then rainy and gray Friday. It’s fun to take a look around to see what has burst into being while we were gone. The garden has exploded into green and colorful blooms. March is nearly gone!

Saturday began with a walk to Lincoln Park with the neighbors t0 started the day right. We watched a gray whale feed in the shallows, about 25 feet offshore! Lots of folks taking in this unusual sight so close. It had been in the cove for an hour or more judging by all of the comments overheard.

Once back at home the challenge was to decide which chore needed to be done first. All vines needed tying up attention and the tree peony needed staking–there are five flower buds this year, the most ever since transplanting in 2001. A little weeding, some pruning, and then time for photographing since the wind was very light, so light in fact that the sailboats heading north after the morning’s southbound race had dropped their sails and were motoring.

My garden is really several small gardens, each distinct in the amount of sun, shade and types of plants. There are six ‘gardens’ on the east side of the house and seven plus the vegetable garden on the west side. In a 100’x 50′ lot I’ve managed to find room for lots of plants! And isn’t there always room for one more?

After Saturday’s lovely weather nothing but rain and wind through Tuesday with a nice break yesterday.So, here is what grew and bloomed while we were away.

Anemone oregana from Grandma T’s garden. A hitch hiker with some cyclamen corms The leaves die away and the plant goes dormant over the summer.

The last of the three camelias, this one is on the south property line; no idea as to the cultivar. Must be at least fifty years old.

Corydalis ochroleuca. I love the little white flowers and lacy, ferny leaves. Spreads, but easy to remove. Likes any situation.

Frittalaria meleagris, also known as checkered lily. Like most bulbs, goes dormant.

An old rhododendron that lived here long before us and therefore a legacy planting! Vigorous and lots of blooms.

Ribes sanguieum, red flowering currant. This is a native plant and this particular one came from Grandma T’s garden as a little volunteer, not more than a foot tall. Twelve years later it is more than eight feet tall. The humming birds love this one and its blooms stay a long time.

Sanguineria canadense, bloodroot. A dainty, bloomer but short lived flowering–today it is gone.

But wait, there’s more…tomorrow!


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A SUNNY AFTERNOON ON THE THIRD DAY OF MARCH

03 Wednesday Mar 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in March flowers, Narcissus family, Spring bulbs, Spring flowers, West Seattle garden

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Tags

fava beans, narcissus, sunshine

MARCHING INTO DAY THREE with the first blooms of the fava beans! Hooray! I thought that they had taken a pretty hard hit with the week of cold weather in December, but they came through pretty well after all. I went through my archived photos from February and March back to 2002 and did not find any evidence of blooms this early. Hoping for a bumper crop.

And last highlight of today’s post is this showy, double narcissus scavenged from Grandma T’s garden. I have no idea as to the cultivar. I was able to find about 8 or eight bulbs and they are slow to reproduce and did not bloom the first year after planting. We planted them below an espaliered pear since the summer watering is minimal and the bulbs will not have too much water when dormant.

Now it’s outside to enjoy the afternoon sun!

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MARVELOUS MARCH

01 Monday Mar 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in March flowers, Spring bulbs, tulips, West Seattle garden, Winter flowers

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avalanche lily, erythronium, trout lily, tulips

MARCH IS HERE WITH A WHISPER TODAY.  A photo (or two or three) posting a day is the goal for March!

The bright spots today are the first sunny blooms of Erythronium tuolumnense Applegate. These lovely avalanche/trout lilies were collected from Grandma T’s garden about ten years ago. She may have collected them in the wild or received them from a friend. They are slowly colonizing the area under the lycesteria formosa and go completely dormant by June. A piece of arum italicaum came along with the erythronium and it is a spreader and can be a pest, but the darker green foliage and white veining is a nice contrast.

Also new today is the tulip Heart’s Delight, a kaufmaniana tulip and another hellebore just beginnging its bloom.

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FEBRUARY’S FABULOUS PARADE

28 Sunday Feb 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in Spring bulbs, tulips, West Seattle garden, Winter flowers

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Tags

compost, crocus, February, hellebores, tulips

BACK IN NOVEMBER my neighbor had some trees trimmed and pruned. The tree trimming company shreds/chops all of the trimmings and offers the chipped wood gratis, so I asked for some and ended up with about four yards of wood chips to spread around the garden. The chips are good mulch material, don’t pack down, conserve on water, and attract worms and other creatures that break down organic material slowly, thereby improving overall soil health. The chips are not especially attractive to everyone (my husband), but I kind of like the bright green of emerging plants atop the earth colored chips. It won’t be long before the chips are barely noticeable. I spread some of the material throughout December and most of the remainder after we returned home last month. Some of the chips went on the paths between the raised beds in the vegetable garden.

Before covering each garden bed with the chips I spread compost and broadcast a mixture of alfalfa, bone, and kelp meals, all slow release fertilizers. So, everything in the garden should grow happily throughout the coming year.

The compost bins

Since our January weather has been so mild and warm, many bulbs are showing more than a month early like these Early Harvest tulips. Planted in the fall of 2008 they bloomed in mid-March of last year. This year they were beginning to bloom the first week of February.

The camelia ‘Freedom Bell’ began blooming in mid-January, also about a month early. This is a small camelia,  a slow grower up to 6-7 feet in 10 years. We planted this one about 12 years ago and so far about 6 feet tall.

There are some things that I just look forward to seeing every year. Each little thing is a herald of its season and what will unfold as the season rolls along. I love the little catkins that dangle from the twisted, curly limbs of Corylus avellana ‘Contorta’ also known as Harry Lauder’s walking stick or corkscrew hazel. The actual flowers are the tiniest red petals at the end of what appear to be green leaf buds. The catkins just look cheerful as they sway in the breeze.

OH, the mid-winter blooming hellebores! Most of the hellebores here came from Grandma T’s garden and have multiplied. Like columbine, hellebores seem to freely hybridize so there are color variations in the flowers of new plants.

helleborus orientalis

A yellow hybrid purchase in 2008

The rain returned last Tuesday and continued off and on through Friday. The crocus had about two weeks of glory before succumbing to the rain and falling over. These are giant crocus, ‘Pickwick” inter-planted with white ‘Peter Pan’ and white arabis. They are about 4-5 inches tall and have mulitplied nicely since planting in 1997. They run about 15′ along the edge of the driveway. Tulips are planted behind and will bloom over the next w months. So many plants resuming growth and blooming it is hard to keep up!

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