Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Easter flowers

So, with all of the warm weather, there are lots of flowers blooming at the same time, rather than spread out over different weeks. 

This is the same red Anemone I included in the previous entry, but this is a close-up of just the flower.  My most loyal reader, my sister, questioned me in a email, believing it is a poppy, but it is not.  I cannot get poppies to survive in this location.

So, I point you to a blue flower with the same foliage.
This is certainly not a poppy.  I have not gone digging through all of my invoices and ordering materials, to determine in more detail where I purchased these or what more I can add to the mystery.  I have had other activities like spring clean-up and practicing for Easter Sunday to keep me busy.


With the warm weather, even the shorter plants, such as this iris, have barely gotten out of the ground before they bloomed.  They are in such a rush to get that bud opened that they never really stretched out their stems. It is a good thing I had not planned on cutting flowers to take inside.

Even more dramatic is this blue Iris brought back from Mom's garden in Ohio. For a comparison on height, you can see the four inch tall Grape Hyacinth next to it.  These usually have 18 inches of stem on them.

There are several of these scattered among the boxwood which is destined to become a low hedge.  Some are too close to the boxwoods, and will need to be moved in the fall, which is when Iris prefer any changes in residence.

The Viburnum x pragense is now blooming.  If you compare this picture to the other viburnum, you will see it is very lanky in growth, with long narrow leaves.  The flower clusters are denser and have a rounded top to them. 

This shrub was pruned by some of the deer, which nibbled off some of the outer blooming buds on the lower parts.  Thankfully they either got bored, or something distracted them before doing substantial damage.  It will recover very quickly once its puts out new growth.

Finally, though it might not technically be a "flower," the fancy Jack-in-the-Pulpit, or Arisaema sikokianum, is blooming in the North garden.  It might be fair to call it a flower since it has a clump of red berry looking seeds on the top after they mature?  This is the second Jack-in-the-Pulpit to bloom; the native clump I brought up from the side of the ravine because it was about ready to slide away has not even come up out of the ground yet.

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