• About
  • ART CARDS
  • THE DRAWING ROOM
  • DESIGN WORK
  • GALLERY I
    • GALLERY II
    • GALLERY III
    • GALLERY IV: THE ANCIENT PALETTE
  • Label Design

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: Winter flowers

MARCH, DAY TWO

02 Tuesday Mar 2010

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

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Spring flowers, trillium

AS EXPECTED MARCH BRINGS SOMETHING NEW EACH DAY. Today the first of the trillium are showing off and more are breaking ground. These trillium are planted under two sixty (+) year old red cedar trees and may have been planted along with the trees by the previous owners of the property. They are interplanted with sword ferns (another nw native), slow to spread and are much like the ones found wild in northwest forests. I am not sure if they are grandiflorum or kamtschaticum cultivars. There are about two dozen and they slowly fade to purplish color. Anyway, they are another herald of spring that we look forward to seeing. Tom is especially partial to them.

Another sweet and dainty little late winter flower is Omphalodes cappodocia ‘Starry Eyes’. It is a slow spreader; at least in this garden. How can you not be happy looking at this? The overall height is not much more than 2-3 inches.

And the last photo for today is the first bloom of Runnuculus ficaria ‘Bronze Hussy’. Bright, brassy, yellow flowers above dark, purple-brown, heart shaped leaves. They are reputed to be a vigorous (synonym in the plant world for pest) spreader. But under the ‘bare feet’ of miscanthus sinensis (Maiden grass) they have slowly increased from 2 plants to about 5 over ten years! They would make a lovely early spring ground cover since they go dormant after a couple of months, not to be seen for another year.

Share this:

  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • More
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

MARVELOUS MARCH

01 Monday Mar 2010

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

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

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.

Share this:

  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • More
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

FEBRUARY’S FABULOUS PARADE

28 Sunday Feb 2010

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

≈ Leave a comment

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!

Share this:

  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • More
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...

A NEW YEAR IN THE GARDEN

16 Tuesday Feb 2010

Posted by backyardnotes in Vegetable garden, Winter flowers

≈ Leave a comment

I PROMISED Renée that I would try to keep a current accounting of what is happening; new year, new ambitions, and new surprises in the garden.

We spent the first eighteen days away from gray, rainy and cool Washington. Ten of those days were spent in Death Valley National Park, California, where the average daily temperature was 65 degrees and evenings cooled to the low 40’s. DVNP was spectacular; we look forward to returning next year to see what we left unexplore.

When we returned, many winter bloomers were well into flower. The earliest winter flowering plants in my garden is Helleborus foetidus, the so-called stinking hellebore. It may be a little smelly but I find it lovely in the winter garden. It generally starts to flower in mid-December, has dark green foliage and the light, bright green flowering cymes are bell-shaped and nodding, some having red rimmed ‘petals’. The flowers last several months and they are are prodigious seeders.

The original plants came from Grandma T. and as new plants have sprouted I have moved them to more difficult areas of the garden since they do not seem to fussy about location.

We have had a very mild winter courtesy of El Nino so many plants are up early and flowering ahead of schedule. One bulb that has always showed in early to mid-January is this lovely crocus, the bunch flowering Zwanenburg Bronze, always the first crocus here; a reliable multiplier and very long blooming, into February.

Three years ago we saw this lovely Hamamelis x intermedia (witch hazel) at the Bellevue Botanical Gardens, mid-winter. The petals are wispy and bright yellow; so cheerful in our gray day winters. The variety is Westetede. It has an upright, vase shape to fifteen feet tall and nice fall color. It was not happy in the original planting location, so I found a new home for it and happy days! Another hamamelis that we planted about fifteen years ago is ‘Diane’, a very deep red flower and stunning fall color.

In early December just days before the really cold weather hit, I combined all the pea seed that a friend from art class had given to me and soaked them for a few days and then broadcast them over one entire vegetable bed and covered with shredded fall leaves (February-March is the traditional time to plant them around here). I had close to a pound of seed, many varieties. I figured there was little to lose since all of the seed was in the neighborhood of six to ten years old. By the end of December many had sprouted but had not peeked their little heads out of the leaves. By late January this is what they looked like:

Also in the winter vegetable garden are fava beans that were planted in October and will be ready to havest in early June, some chicory/raddichio which came from seed that I purchased in Rome in 2000 (the seed is still viable); the variety is Castelfranco and the leaves are speckled with red. These plants however are from a few heads that I let go to seed and then sprinkled them around the garden. This is a favorite trick of mine; I like to let a favored lettuce and cilantro go to seed and then sow/throw/broadcast aroun the vegetable garden. The seeds germinate when they feel like it,  many in late fall (see the red oak leaf lettuce next to the fava) and then I transplant them into beds for the winter. The seeds that germinate in very early winter provide a head start on spring lettuce. For me, cilantro does best sown in this way. I usually have beets, chard, brussels sprouts, broccoli, sometimes cauliflower like the variety Cheddar, endive, escarole, and lots of other winter greens.

Finally, these dainty little white cyclamen at the base of Viburnum plicata tomentosum ‘Summer Snowflake’. The flowers appear first and then the leaves. The flowers stick around for a good two months.

Share this:

  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • More
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
Like Loading...
Newer posts →

Archives

Recent Posts

  • OUT WITH THE OLD POND, IN WITH THE NEW WATER FEATURE
  • WINNING SUBMISSION AND NEW DIRECTIONS
  • WHISPERS OF SPRING
  • NOT EXACTLY CANNING…
  • A GIFT OF WINTER APPLES

Art

  • ABC Typography
  • Annerose Georgeson
  • ArtPlantae Today
  • Drawing in Color
  • Fonts
  • Gage Academy of Art
  • Kapitza
  • Kathleen McKeehen
  • Katie Lee
  • Late Start Studio
  • New York Central Art Supply
  • Painting of the day
  • PastelPointers blog
  • The Postman's Knock
  • Wagonized
  • Wordle

Birds

  • Bird Note

Blogroll

  • A Gardener's Table
  • A Way to Garden
  • Annerose Georgeson
  • Backyardnotes\’s Blog
  • cold climate gardening
  • Homeward Bounty
  • The Fresh Loaf
  • West Seattle Blog
  • West Seattle Herald
  • WordPress.com
  • WordPress.org

Bugs!

  • BugGuide
  • What's that bug?

Butterflies

  • North American Butterfly Association

Canning & Preserving

  • A Gardener's Table
  • Canning Across America
  • Fermentista
  • Food in Jars
  • National Center for Home Food Preservation
  • Phickle.com
  • Well Preserved

Creative & Handmade

  • Aunt Peaches
  • BackyardDesigns
  • RedClothespin
  • Whirlygig Fashion

Design

  • ABC Typography
  • Before and After Magazine
  • Clients from Hell
  • Communication Arts
  • Font Bros.
  • Fonts
  • Kapitza
  • My Fonts
  • The Graphics Fairy
  • The Postman's Knock
  • Typographica.org
  • Wordle

Font Love!

  • Emigre
  • Font Bros.
  • Fonts
  • Hoefler & Co. Typography
  • Kapitza
  • My Fonts
  • The Postman's Knock
  • Typographica.org
  • Wordle

Food & Drink

  • David Lebovitz
  • Indian Simmer
  • Jeffrey Morgenthaler
  • Punk Domestics
  • Rose Levy Beranbaum
  • Serious Eats
  • Tapas Bonitas
  • The British Larder

Gardening

  • A Gardener's Table
  • cold climate gardening
  • Cornell Plant Pathology Vegetable Disease Web Page
  • Hellebores
  • Hosta library
  • Johnny's Seeds
  • Naylor Creek Gardens
  • North American Butterfly Association
  • Not Dabbling In Normal
  • Territorial Seed Company
  • Wells Medina Nursery
  • West Seattle Nursery
  • What's that bug?

Inspiration

  • Toom-ah? What Stinkin' toomah?

It's About Life

  • Toom-ah? What Stinkin' toomah?

Let's Eat!

  • Anson Mills
  • Five and Spice
  • food52
  • Northwest Sourdough
  • The Artisan
  • The British Larder
  • The Cook's Thesaurus
  • The Fresh Loaf
  • Wild Yeast

Painting & Drawing

  • Annerose Georgeson
  • ArtPlantae Today
  • Draw a stickman
  • Drawing in Color
  • Gage Academy of Art
  • Kathleen McKeehen
  • Katie Lee
  • Painting of the day
  • PastelPointers blog
  • Wagonized

Plant love

  • Flower World
  • Hellebores
  • Hosta library
  • Naylor Creek Gardens
  • USDA Plants database
  • Wells Medina Nursery
  • West Seattle Nursery

Shops

  • BackyardDesigns
  • RedClothespin
  • Whirlygig Fashion

Vegetables

  • Johnny's Seeds
  • Territorial Seed Company

West Seattle

  • West Seattle Blog
  • West Seattle Herald

Categories

Blogs I Follow

  • grow it cook it can it
  • Red Road Diaries
  • A Gardener's Table
  • Backyardnotes
  • WordPress.com

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 63 other subscribers

apples Art birds black radish brussels sprouts cabbage camelias camping canning clematis compost cranberries crocus dahlias Daikon radish Death Valley desert Drawing fall fava beans food friendship gardening Gardening garlic hamamelis harvest hellebores herbs hiking hostas iris lavender mangoes mixed media mustard greens narcissus nature New Orleans nicandra painting pears peas peonies peppers pesto Pickled asparagus pickles pickling planting plants poetry poetry exchange poppies preserving Radishes rain roses Sandhill Cranes seedlings Sisters snow Spring Spring flowers sunshine tetons tomatoes Travel trillium tulips vegetable garden volunteer plants volunteer seedlings wildflowers winter cyclamen winter flowers

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 63 other subscribers
  • paws49's avatar
  • Shea's avatar
  • Jordan Latour's avatar
  • morningstoryanddilbert's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • GiantGag's avatar
  • masqua's avatar
  • Chris P's avatar
  • blodeuedd13's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • neihtn2012's avatar
  • apten0dyte's avatar
  • PhilipY's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • chefnedra's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • gwenniesworld's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • LFFL's avatar
  • Garden Fairy Farm's avatar
  • Michael Armstrong's avatar
  • Marcos C.'s avatar
  • pobept's avatar
  • iRoswell's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • James Radcliffe's avatar
  • Zach's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • photographyartplus's avatar
  • elenalevon's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • Earth Is Ascending's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • urbanwallart's avatar
  • CAC Illustrations's avatar
  • Unknown's avatar
  • myfoodandflowers's avatar
  • Natalia Maks's avatar

April flowers Art Canning & Preserving Cooking & Eating Fall Flowers Fun in the Garden Growing Harvest Inspriation Jellies & Preserves March flowers Spring Spring bulbs Spring flowers Summer! Tomatoes Travel tulips Uncategorized Vegetable garden Weather West Seattle garden Winter Winter flowers

No Instagram images were found.

BYN_IG

No Instagram images were found.

Blog at WordPress.com.

grow it cook it can it

Red Road Diaries

Musings from the back roads

A Gardener's Table

Celebrating the Harvest

Backyardnotes

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

WordPress.com

WordPress.com is the best place for your personal blog or business site.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Backyardnotes
    • Join 63 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Backyardnotes
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d