I enjoy displaying seasonal photos in the sidebar on my website and have been doing so for a couple of years now. It frustrated me that I couldn’t easily caption them or credit the photographer. I finally decided I would do a post every month highlighting these photos. So, here we go:
These daffodils are descendants of those originally found on our property. One of the first things I did as a gardener there was dig up and divide the clumps of daffodils that were no longer blooming. Even in late April, the trees have often not leafed out. This bloodroot grew so well for me at the old house that I divided it up and used it as a ground cover under a shrub. Cornelian cherry (Cornus mas) blooms earlier than forsythia but takes longer to get really showy. Some cultivars are bred to be more floriferous and some are bred to have larger fruit, for the fruit is edible. Weather can be very moody during mud season. Advection fog occurs when warm air moves over the snow pack. You can see the fog condensing on the bare tree branches and dripping off. Read the story of the Crocus Bank. The daffodils were growing on my neighbor’s property when she moved in. I dug them up for her and we divided them between us. The hellebore was an unnamed seedling from Seneca Hill Perennials. We have raised chickens for over twenty years. We let them out of their yard to scratch because the grass isn’t green yet and they have cabin fever, too. Or should I say coop fever? These self-sow along the stone wall. Did you notice they have blue anthers? The grass doesn’t turn green until the soil has thawed.April Featured Photos on Cold Climate Gardening
April 3, 2013 – Posted in: What's up/bloomingIf winter is slumber and spring is birth, and summer is life, then autumn rounds out to be reflection. It’s a time of year when the leaves are down and the harvest is in and the perennials are gone. Mother Earth just closed up the drapes on another year and it’s time to reflect on what’s come before.
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Looking forward to seeing so many of these blooms soon as spring has come.
Love te double bloodroot! I have not seen that before. I will have to go looking for it this year!
So many beautiful photos. I especially love the crocus bank and the cornelian cherry, a shrub I wish I had. Spicebush is another nice alternative to forsythia, though much more understated.
If spicebush is Lindera benzoin, I just planted one last year. I’m looking forward to seeing it bloom this year!
I also really admire the double bloodroot – we have a lot of wild ones growing here and there in the woods, but they are all single. You photos are making me homesick for spring, which apparently has business elsewhere this year…
Love your long shot images, Kathy. And I do enjoy the transition from Winter to Spring as the grass begins to green.
Such wonderful shots, Kathy. Kudos to all of the photographers. I love seeing your spring blooms and hearing their history.
Love your spring photos, especially the double bloodroot. It is really beautiful.
Ooooh, love that double bloodroot! I’ll have to put that on my wish list. The other photos are lovely as well. Enjoy your spring!