Love the burgundy lily marstec. It's just regular basil that i bought in flats at the nursery, lol could be Frankenbasil!!!!
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Love the burgundy lily marstec. It's just regular basil that i bought in flats at the nursery, lol could be Frankenbasil!!!!
I am doing this next year
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It's not my garden but the farmers around here are having a hard time getting the wheat off because there has been so much rain. A waiting game - and hoping the rain stays away.
I "borrowed" a slip of English Ivy from the garden at my MIL's nursing home. She's largely bed ridden but she used to be an avid gardener. I plan to plant it and maybe it will grow in her room. Right now it's growing roots in a coke can on my counter.
Vesper - when I read this, I thought you must live just down the street from us! We have stinky weed-smoking party people just 2 doors from us, too! And then the guy just beside us KILLED his front lawn one night and then just let it turn to weeds. Luckily he's just moved and we have new neighbours.
maybe you ladies and gents can help me out here, dh bought 3 Monarda Hybrid 'Pink lace'(bee balm) plants, he left them in the pots.. and just asked that i continue to water them.. which i did, until last week when we had that long heat wave.. well i missed watering them for a few days.. apparently i killed them. or at least thats what it looks like.
is there a way to bring the back, are they finished for the year or completely. the plant itself is still green, but the buds aren't flowering anymore. do i cut them off to bring them back..? or what. they are a perennial.
if that happened to me, i'd chop off the dead buds and give it a good soaking.. dip it into a bucket of water until the dirt is completely saturated and it won't hold anymore water.. take it out and let it drain... check it the next day, or even later that day, and if the leaves have perked up again the plant is still alive.. good luck! :)
@bluerose-you have strawberries! Summer goodness-how amazing.
@PattySmyth-lovely backyard; your hostas are thrilling! I'd give the blue spruce shrub? and evergreen moving notice into a corner where no one is likely to walk.I have issue with such trees near back of our house-tricky walking barefoot on grass to hang up the laundryon the lines without going ouch at least once.
My acidanthera is blooming again. I posted a pic of it here last year, how can it be that another year has gone by already. Anyway, it's like seeing an old buddy come alive after storing it over winter. These guys have a long growing season, I started them indoors in mid Feb and they're blooming now.
I wonder lately where did all the tiger lilies go, it's so rare to see one. I m having this fantasy of me spotting one at garden closeouts one of these days.
I've been enjoying beautiful weather in Vancouver all week. Here are a couple of plants that I would love to grow but are too cold for my zone:
Acanthus aka Bear's Breeches and (Mophead) Hydrangeas...
This is such a wonderful thread! :clap2:
I set up my rain barrel finally last week. Today it rained and I got 200 liters plus overflow in one shot lol . I think I am going to get another one :P
There is a 2ft woody stem type flowering plant that has sticky green/yellow flowerheads which open to reveal med. purple/fuschia flowers. I've been seeing bumblebees (4-5) in the morning around those plants and the lavender. Talk about excited bees-they were still around after 6pm when I was sweeping the walk.
Then after a pause in weeding outside yesterday, I saw my first honeybee sighting around a squash blossom. Have seen honeybees in the spring but not much during the summer (other flowering distractions?).
Miniature red rose bush of Mom's has that splotchy black mess on the leaves. Some regular rose bushes in the back are either with that splotch on the leaves or bugs have been dining on the leaves. Trimmed off what I could.
Noticed a pear tree had two small branches of brown leaves with shrivelled pears on the ends. Took those branches off as the others have ripening pears. No idea how the "freeze dried brown" look happened but the tree did sustain a limb loss in the late July wind/rainstorm.
Took note of a young mulberry tree on the property perimeter-oh, taunting berries up high! With the humidity returning, I might have a chance on Saturday to get a ladder out and pick a handful or two before the heat turns the berries into mush. That is what quickly happened to the cherry trees in June-week of heat made a mess of the cherries.