Wednesday, March 13, 2019
Monday, March 11, 2019
Winter is on the run in the Southwest. Friends are posting snowy shots of walks in the dunes at Petoskey State Park. Visions of spring in Portugal and Spain are still dancing in my head. The plants were familiar---from a vinca that is taking over the world in Northern Michigan to interesting succulents. Bougainvillea were not blooming as yet. But then a lot was. I am going to share a few.
From left: Golden Chalice vine growing on a pergola was absolutely spectacular; at center, an interesting bulb-like flower (any ideas what it might be?). Now Bergenia I know---a crop of it blossoms in the Memorial Garden in Bay View every year.
From left: Golden Chalice vine growing on a pergola was absolutely spectacular; at center, an interesting bulb-like flower (any ideas what it might be?). Now Bergenia I know---a crop of it blossoms in the Memorial Garden in Bay View every year.
Sunday, March 10, 2019
No, I haven't been lazy...we've been abroad on a wonderful OAT trip to Spain and Portugal. Oddly, what could have been a cool and rainy two weeks turned out warm and sunny (Yes, I packed the wrong kind of clothes). Meanwhile back in AZ, it was colder, believe it or not. The two countries were amazing places for gardeners to reflect and renew. Shared here is a tribute to the fusion of nature and modern architecture in the City of Arts and Sciences in Valencia designed by Santiago Calatrava and Felix Candela. Who says steel and iron need to look cold and uninviting?
Sunday, February 17, 2019
Saturday, February 16, 2019
Valentine's Day has come and gone. It is snowing like mad in the Upper Midwest. It is so damp in Arizona that the groundcover in my flower bed is starting to rot. So,
here's a lovely early spring favorite to cheer everybody up. Bleeding Heart, turns out, loves lots of water. Unfortunately the Arizona heat, not so much. As with daffodils, until the Bleeding Heart's bluish foliage begins to turn brown, don't be tempted to cut it back. The plant needs that foliage to keep storing food reserves for next season. In the Victorian plant lexicon, these spring beauties can mean everything from compassion to passionate love, but in the Eastern cultures where the plant originated, it means just the opposite---spurned or rejected love. The plant also can symbolize bonds stronger than death or too much sensitivity. A bit ambivalent, to say the least! So despite its heart-like blossoms, those mixed signals don't seem to make it a very safe gift to say "I love you".
Wednesday, February 13, 2019
Tuesday, February 12, 2019

Monday, February 11, 2019

Sunday, February 10, 2019
Saturday, February 9, 2019
Gray skies are back. It was in the forties overnight. Time to break out the wild spring pops of color. From primrose to heather and azaleas, the hot pinks are coming. Only 40 more days until spring. John and I use dwarf creeping phlox as to-scale ground cover on the hillsides of his model G-Scale railroad. The texture of the leaves is perfect after the blooming season is over.
Friday, February 8, 2019
Thursday, February 7, 2019
