THERE’S ALWAYS A SILVER LINING

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YES, THERE IS AN UPSIDE TO THE BROKEN TREE TOP. Two neighbor girls go to Pathfinder School and the school has an annual wreath fundraiser, and their mom is part of the wreath making team.

On Saturday we gathered up four wheelbarrow loads of wreath making material. Check the link above for information about ordering a wreath or see them in person at the West Seattle Farmer’s Market,  Sunday’s in West Seattle Junction. The wreathes are really beautiful and support a worthy cause (see a photo here).

AT HOME IN THE COLD

A WALK AROUND THE GARDEN TODAY REVEALED SOME BRIGHT SURPISES. In spite of last week’s cold, freezing temperatures, many plants are just getting ready for the prospect of winter and others seem not to have noticed.

This combination of wild ginger, asarum caudatum and winter blooming cyclamen is vibrant green against fallen leaves and needles.

Heuchera ‘Marmalade’ is a warm and welcome color (even sporting some new growth) at this time of year and pairs well with lonicera nitida ‘Lemon Beauty’, below.

Nearby is a happy patch of saxifraga urbium ‘London Pride’ and fraise du bois, the little wild alpine strawberry, the seeds of which most likely hitch hiked with some of the saxifrage when it came from Grandma T’s garden.

Just now beginning it’s winter bloom is helleborus foetidus, the ‘Stinking’ hellebore. The lime green’flower’ bracts really light up a dark edge under a holly hedge.

Every season holds a little magic and fall seems to have two parts–the lovely color changes of leaves as the days begin to cool in September and the creeping cold by the end of November that signals a new round of plant activity. I actually look forward to this time of the year; I like the cold weather and the changes it brings, although the groundskeeper does not share my enthusiasms. My only complaint is the ever-shortening days.

Many plants, like iris foetidus get a chance to show off twice during the year; spring blooming flowers and bright, orange seedheads that spill open in late fall. The one drawback to this plant is it’s prolific ability to reproduce itself. It has a tendency to show up just about everywhere. Here it volunteered with rubus calycinoides, a creeping raspberry relative that produces small salmon colored fruit (edible). It makes a good groundcover under the red cedars and looks at home with asarum, ferns, and maianthemum. And, it’s completely drought tolerant.

This arabis procurrens, or rock cress was a bright, dainty surprise today. I think that this too came from Grandma T’s garden. It is an easy spreader and drought tolerant and will take light shade. I have it under hardy fuschias. The flower stalk is about three inches tall.

After blooming in early spring, pulmonaria kind of looses it’s oomph and flops for the summer but is revived with cooling fall days and rain and begins sending out new growth. The spritely green leaves splashed with white brighten a gloomy day.

And that concludes today’s tour.

THANKFUL FOR THE WARMTH OF FRIENDSHIP & FAMILY

A DAY TO SHARE THE BOUNTY of our garden and good fortune with family and friends. Everyone chips in with a dish or dessert, but what I cherish most is the laughter and warmth of friendship and family around the table.

IT’S COLD, FRIGID, BEAUTIFUL AND FAR FROM HAWAII

THE ONLY THING WARM THIS MORNING was the reflected light on the Olympic mountains from this morning’s sunrise . A cool 23° on the hillside above Puget Sound.

At first light every morning we have several visitors:

They generally don’t like to share the feeders with each other but have been forced to since we are hanging only one feeder at a time (one hags out, one thaws inside).

This was the scene on Monday afternoon before the wind came up big-time. Some time after dark we had gusts strong enough to snap off the top one-third of an Incense Cedar, seen below yesterday. I hope the tree will survive. The falling top missed my vegetable garden by just ten feet!

A little garlic shoot poking through the snow.

Brussels sprout stalks waiting for Thanksgiving dinner.

A couple of maple leaves hanging on make a striking contrast against the snow.

IF I COULD CREATE A GARDEN HERE…

I WOULD SURELY HAVE A FAIR SIZE learning curve. But what a challenge and fun it could be! A whole new way of gardening. We spent ten days on Hawaii, from Kona on the sunny, dry, leeward/west side, to Waimea along along the south slope of Kohala to the north and then to the lush, rainy, windward east side at Volcano, 29 miles from Hilo. Some vary distinct climate zones and vegetation.

On our way south along the east side we stopped for a couple of hours at Hawaii Tropical Botanical Garden a collection of more than 2,000 plant species. It was stunning, amazing, beautiful, tranquil, and lush with huge green leaves, tall, spreading trees and palms and curiously beautiful flowers. Nearly every plant had an identification tag; a big plus! A short pictorial tour is below.

A philodendron leaf

Heliconia champneiana ‘Splash’, one of dozens of heliconia varieties.

Fern fronds overhead

Heliconia longissma

Unknown, but beautiful.

Pink ginger with ti (cordyline) plant.

A very tall unfurling frond of a Mulefoot fern.

And last, an introduced pest, the mongoose. Introduced to kill rats, but instead eats native birds.

Our last four days here are at Waikiki where Tom is attending a conference. Pretty setting along the ocean, but it reminds me of Las Vegas with a beach! No gambling just a lot of schmancy shopping, with all of the big name fashion retailers, etc. and thousands of people walking the sidewalks window-shopping and the real thing, all day and into the evening.