Storms of Flowers

Amidst the storms in our skies – there are flowers in the garden.

When I as young and had about the same amount of time for the flower garden as I do now, I used to plant piles of annuals that  grew from seed. Riots of cool colors and white blooms.

In New Zealand my borders were legendary, wide and full and tiered.

Now when I walk my big American flower garden beds, I realise that my gardens have drifted into collections of flowering trees and bushes. The magnolias, and lilacs and hydrangeas, flowering pears and native apples and plums. Underbellies of lilies and softer ground covers.

Each year my borders here on the prairies start to resemble jungles more than country borders.  I think the vast prairies have influenced these unconscious  decisions.

Because there is just so much sky, and the eye drifts unimpeded; my Self needs more foliage and more strength to the plants to kind of anchor my bobbing balloon self in the summer. Annual flowers seem too flippant.

Have you noticed that in the winter when all the trees lose their leaves and the gardens go dormant and the house is once more exposed to the elements and eyes, my little balloon self bobs away from home. The trees anchor me.

Today I am digging up all the daffodils, many did not bloom this year, they need dividing. It is the wrong time of year to dig up bulbs but I was never one for rules. More for time. It is overcast and wet – they will be ok. I will cover the rows for  wind protection.  I will dig them and carefully divide them then line them up in one of my vegetable gardens. Like a picking garden but only daffodils.  The trees and bushes have over-grown them, they need sun and fertiliser.

And it is Saturday – so after chores I can work on my jungle beds – like a little holiday.

Yesterday everyone had a good day. The first batch of meat chicks arrived and are ensconced in the turkey house with their warm table mamas. They are nice healthy birds. Alex was working on the chicken tractor, doing the maintenance that will keep it moving across the fields for another few years.

It was warm – we had sun and only one of the promised showers.  It will be windy today and even warmer.

I hope you have a lovely day.

celi

Weather

Saturday 04/15 10% / 0 inWindy with sunshine. High around 80F. Winds SSW at 20 to 30 mph.

Saturday Night 04/1550% / 0.07 inPartly cloudy this evening. Scattered thunderstorms developing after midnight. Low 61F. Winds SSW at 15 to 25 mph. Chance of rain 50%.

 

 

34 responses to “Storms of Flowers”

  1. most beautiful pictures Celi, but the sky does not look blue and clear it looks more like a thunderstorm about to let loose its rage….

    Yes you do flit off in the winter months, much like the plants and flowers that hibernate but also like them you pop up every year refreshed and beautiful

     

    Sent: Saturday, April 15, 2017 at 2:37 PM

  2. I garden in Zone 7, in the suburbs outside DC, but I regularly lift and relocate daffodils when they are blooming, so I can see what they will look like later, with no problems — they sail right on, as long as you allow the foliage to live its full life in the new location. This does not work for tulips, however; those I lift when their foliage has completely faded, and I may store them in pots under the porch for the summer, since they really want to be completely dry when dormant. I am thinning my daffs now; would you like some?

  3. Those clouds look threatening and too close to the ground ….the magnolias are grand, I hope they survive this weekends windy storms. Laura

  4. I plant daffodils in pasture fields, along fences
    or on the hillside where its too steep to mow
    cows won’t eat them. makes for a bright, unexpected spot of color

  5. This is the first year I have thought of growing anything but food in our garden spot. I’m sure it’s because it has been such a long winter. My white weary eyes are longing for color of any sort. So we have lots of flower starts in the basement garden~ just waiting for true spring. My daughter is delighted! She is a color fiend.
    I have never seen any color of magnolia but white. Even living in the south for almost my whole life I’ve never seen any other magnolia but white. Now here I am discovering that these lovely trees grow all sorts of other colors! Amazing!

  6. I love how you are aware of your need of more substantial and grounding plantings to hold you in place. What a beautiful read this was. I often wondered why I gravitated to shrubs rather than flowers and now I understand. As another gypsy, the anchoring seems to help. Your skies are incredible if not scary. Glad you have the chicken tractor again in good repair. Have a lovely weekend yourself.

  7. What awe-inspiring storm clouds, almost solid, and so dark. The blossom looks wonderful against it. I’m wondering if your garden needs some assertive flowers, like peonies, hollyhocks, delphiniums, stocks, agapanthus, and so on. Things that will grow happily left alone, but have wonderful flowers and big presence…

  8. Lovely and poetic prose today, my friend. I welcome the beauty and intense power of storms, and the same of flowers – both lovely and invasive. I think it is what I love of nature… the wild and untamed of it all. And perhaps that is what we are too…

  9. My friend bought jonquils at Trader Joe’s and was told not to put any other flowers in the same vase, as jonquils will kill other flowers. Is this true?

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