Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Wordless Wednesday: When Oak Trees are Weeds

Oak Trees Can Be Weeds if They Grow in Your Garden


When Oak Trees are Weeds
Oak Tree Seedling that Sprouted in Rose Garden, © B. Radisavljevic

If An Oak Grows in a Rose Garden, It's a Weed


When Oak Trees are Weeds
Oak Seedling Becomes a Weed in Rose Garden, © B. Radisavljevic

It looks like a squirrel missed an acorn it buried. It will be fun trying to dig this up. Anyone want a free oak tree?  

***

Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting

I Hate to Say Goodbye to My Irises

I have been enjoying irises in bloom since February, and I hate to see them go. Yet I can see more iris flowers dying each day. I'm glad there are still a few more buds that haven't bloomed yet. Below you can see what's left of a pale purple iris. The bending chard about to flower points to it. Above the chard a blooming Lamb's Ears plant reaches for the sky. 


Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Fading Iris, Bolting Chard, and Sages and Scabiosa in Background, © B. Radisavljevic

If you peak carefully behind that irsis, you can see the beginning of my tricolor sage starting to bloom. This is the first year it's bloomed for me. The large clary sage behind the iris shouldn't bloom until next month, but you never know. Learn more about clary sage and see it in bloom in my garden. Those blue flowers at the very back left are scabiosas, also known as pincushion flowers. I've often planted them in my gardens because they are perennial and seem to thrive.  

I took the photo below in a different flowerbed on the front corner of the lot. It shows the remaining light purple irises in all stages of development. You can also see the miniature roses that have started to bloom. They are later than my other roses. The yellow flowers are gazanias. They are closed today because it's overcast.

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Irises Budding, Blooming, and Fading, Next to Miniature Roses, © B. Radisavljevic

Lamb's Ears in Bloom

I'd like to show you how fast Lamb's Ears grow. The shot below was taken at the end of February. Notice how short it is compared to the irises on the right, the lilies of the Nile in back, and the star jasmine in the background. The entire bed will change by May.

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Lamb's Ears Next to Sidewalk, February, 2017. © B. Radisavljevic

In April I finally got around to thinning both the Lamb's Ears and the jasmine. They were smothering my Spanish sage and Sweet Williams. See Garden Tasks Finished before Storm.

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Lamb's Ears Next to Sidewalk, April 6, 2017. © B. Radisavljevic


Now it's May 10, same year. Look at how the plants have grown. It amazes me how fast the Lamb's Ears shoot up and start blooming. It seems they grow half an inch a day in April. The star jasmine is also beginning to bloom. The yellow calendula to the right of the Lamb's Ears blooms all year. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Lamb's Ears Next to Sidewalk, May 10, 2017. © B. Radisavljevic

I do love Lamb's Ears because it works well as a groundcover when I need it to smother weeds. It's also easy to pull when its fast growth becomes a problem. It looks like more will have to come out soon. All these Lamb's Ears plants have spread from other plants. I started with just one plant at this house. As it spread I planted a few of it's children in other beds. But many children also grow several feet from any I have planted. 

Lamb's Ears also have a certain graceful beauty. They lurk during the winter, but in spring they rise toward the sun and bloom. The bees use them for forage. Here's a close-up of the little flowers. Their gray leaves and fuzzy texture add contrast to the green of other plants to add interest to the garden all year round. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Lamb's Ears in Bloom, May, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic


Books to Help You Grow Great Chard and Kale



The Chard and Kale are Bolting


The kale was just starting to flower a month ago on April 6. Now many of those flowers are seedpods. I will try to collect some, though there's probably no need. I never planted this kale. It sprouted from a seed from the mother plant across the yard. By collecting the seeds I'm more likely to get the seedlings where I want them.

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Kale Flowers and Seedpods, May 10, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic


Here's a close-up of the flower. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Kale Flowers, May 10, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic


One branch of this kale plant had started leaning over the sidewalk. Couldn't resist snapping this photo of it. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Bolting Kale Branch Hanging Over Sidewalk, May 10, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic


Although the kale is already making seeds, the chard is just starting to flower. In the last couple of weeks the stalk has risen and you can see the flower buds on this chard plant forming. Just two months ago the main stalk and the leaves were red. (This is rhubarb chard.) As it begins to flower both have turned green, but you can still see a few traces of the red. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Budding Chard, May 10, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic


When I went to the backyard on the same day to take a photo of the chard by the rose garden, I discovered my might I have two micro-climates on this same property. The the chard in the photo above grows in front and gets afternoon sun because it faces west. The chard plant beside the rose garden gets morning sun from the southeast. It also has the shelter of the fence and the roses from the north side. In any case, small flowers are already starting to bloom on the plant by the rose garden. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Flowering Chard beside Roses, May 10, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic

It's the same small yard and same variety of chard, but one plant flowers slightly ahead of the other. 

I will leave you with one last photo from the front flowerbed of the chard and a blooming Lamb's Ears plant side by side. You can see how red the chard started out on the bottom part. You can also see how high the Lamb's Ears got in comparison. 


Related Posts


1st Iris This Year


Irises Are Garden Survivors

Wednesday, May 03, 2017

A Walk Through My Rose Garden in Early May

Roses Close-Up


These are two of my favorite rose colors. See more photos of these and roses of other colors on my earlier post, Roses Are Not Just Red.


 A Walk Through My Rose Garden in Early May


 A Walk Through My Rose Garden in Early May



I like these roses so much I've even made greeting cards featuring them. You can get them at Zazzle and keep them handy. You never know when you might need to use one. 


Mom Planted this Rose Garden


I inherited it. No other flower is planted in the back yard. Mom planted no roses in the front yard. I've always wondered why she wanted to keep all the beauty in back where only family and friends could see it.

When she died and I inherited the house, I was depressed. It was early March. The roses were dormant. By April the roses were blooming again and I was sorry that Mom couldn't enjoy them anymore. They helped cheer me up, though.

They are always in bloom on Mother's Day, and they remind me of her. She never had a rose garden before she moved to Paso Robles. Maybe a few rose bushes, but no rose garden.

Some of My Rose Gifts from My Rose Photos on Zazzle




A Brief Walk Through the Rose Garden


Along the fence beside the street, one sees this view. It's the most unruly part of the rose garden. The gardener never really gets it under control. 

 A Walk Through My Rose Garden in Early May




As you will see, Mom's favorite rose was the small Cecile Brunner climbing rose. It would like to overwhelm and cover up all the other roses. You can see what's left of a chard I planted in front of the roses, too. It's bolting.

The view below is what you see if you go to the corner past the last rose bush on the right of the photo above. I am looking back at the corner where the back and side fence meet behind the tree.


 A Walk Through My Rose Garden in Early May




In the middle of the garden, to the left of the photo above, you see more climbing roses. These have taken advantage of a pine tree that died and used it as a trellis.


 A Walk Through My Rose Garden in Early May


Here's a closer look at the pine tree and the roses around it. This is also the southeast corner of the rose garden.


 A Walk Through My Rose Garden in Early May





The photo below shows the view in front of the photo above, along the south side of the fence.


 A Walk Through My Rose Garden in Early May



Below is the last rose bush in the garden. It's along the south fence closest to the house.


 A Walk Through My Rose Garden in Early May




Do you have roses in your garden? Which of my roses do you like best? I'd love to have you leave a comment.








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