Saturday 10 August 2019

Before the Winds







Welcome to my little slice of Six On Saturday, hosted by the inimical Mr P.

Today, we're expecting winds to reach 50 mph, during which I won't be in the garden.

Here's Six things photographed before the winds come.






1.  Achillea

I've been featuring my achillea lucky dip collection as they've bloomed - first the whites, Pearl & Snowball, then Cerise, whose name says it all.  This week's achillea is yellow.


In addition to staggered blooming, they also vary in structure.  The whites lack the typical achillea foliage, stems lounging a good 24+" across the ground & other plants.  Both Cerise & my yellow (nameless) achillea have the familiar fernlike leaves seen in field yarrow, plus excellent posture.  Cerise is short & bushy, but the yellow achillea is 4 statuesque feet tall.


They weren't shipped with labels, so it's purely accidental that the yellow achillea got planted amongst the ricinus & cannas.  What the camera doesn't capture, is once you step back, the flowers look like floating glow orbs.


2.  Russian sage.

Another thing my camera doesn't properly show is how the light plays on the Russian sage.


I got this for its scent but am spellbound by its changeable appearance.


3.  A gift less cherished.

A few months ago, I pawned off graciously gave some of last year's dried chilli crop to the mother of one of my son's friends.  She, in turn, sent back an entire crate of garden produce which was most welcomed except for the beetroot.  I, myself, love beetroot, but none of the cooks in my house do, so it got passed in turn to a neighbour who scorned repaid my kind gesture by giving me begonias he'd grown from seed.

These aren't the old lady begonias mentioned last week that I've come to love.  No, no, these are the ugly as dirt who in their right mind would grow these hideous things begonias.  This is the same neighbour who tried to give me his reeking voodoo lilies, by the way.


I planted them & watered them & checked them for slugs, who apparently found them too repulsive to eat.  They're still ugly as dirt but they look healthy enough.  And my neighbour enjoys seeing them when he walks by.


4.  Green pukkin.

You  may remember that I'm growing white pumpkins for the first time this year.


The Halloween traditionalists are pleased that I found a baby orange pumpkin in the patch.


5.  Tithonia bud.

Me, though, I was tickled to find this in the garden.


'Find' is perhaps misleading.  I've camped beside the plant, refusing food until the first sight of colour.  (Cake isn't food, right?)  It looks like a little cat face, its whiskers painted on. 

It grows in a circular bed in the middle of the lawn, totally exposed.  Our last storm wasn't as severe as today's is supposed to be, & the tithonia weren't so tall.  Even so, they laid themselves down on the zinnias.  I made a sling out of old cloth to gentle encourage them upright.  Perhaps that'll keep them safe today.


6.  Salvia Amistad.

This salvia started the summer as a plug plant, elbowing its place amongst the ricinus, cannas, daisies, thalictrum & perhaps some other stuff as well.  You can see it in the 3rd achillea photo, poking up between the two yellow glow orbs.  (Yes, you can have too many plants.)

In other SoS gardens, Amistad bloomed & left, so it incited great joy in me over the last several days to see this . . .


. . . eventually became this.


The colour combo plus the geometrics of the buds all leave me feeling very calm.  A short lived calm followed by a tickle in my belly because the bloom looks like a cartoon sea gull screaming at someone who stole its chips.




There's my Six for the week.  God willing & the creeks don't rise, the wind might leave something for me to report on next time.


Thanks for dropping by.  Hope to see you again real soon.


Now, shoo w/you, off to visit Mr Propagator for more SoS blogs.

16 comments:

  1. Your achillea is rather pretty too Lora! but I think that those of MG are more dense on the flower. Not so different from her color.
    I have never managed to take good pictures of Russian sage. Focusing on them is difficult and they don’t do justice

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I agree about the achillea. The colour's similar but the shape is different. I'll see if that changes. As to the sage, I wonder if a video would capture their look, since to me, it constantly changes w/the wind moving it through the light. I'm so delighted w/it now when it's young, I'll undoubtedly be giddy when it gets larger.

      Delete
  2. I never have any luck with achillea which is a pity as I like them a lot. They always end up straggly and flop over. That corner of your garden is lioking great. I hope those begonias don't follow your blog!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Not sure the answer about achillea & you, altho as I said, some of mine flop & some stood proud. It helps if they're packed in w/other plants, too. Not sure why I dislike those begonias so much. Actually have a physical dislike reaction to them. Early childhood garden trauma!

      Delete
  3. I can see the seagull, yes definitely but couldn't make out the cat face. Thanks for sharing. I have 6 to try and Facebook again this week and a fledgling blog waiting for attention.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'll be making the SoS rounds, so will look for yours again. Sometimes it takes me a few days, as there's so many of us now, which is great. As to the cat, if you focus on the yellow part of the bud, there's small stripes on the petal which are the whiskers & above that, a darker oval shape which is the eye. There's a green sepal-y thing that comes over the petals to act as the nose. My inkblot test would probably make a psychologist weak in the knees.

      Delete
  4. You have packed a lot into your garden! And your posts always leave me with a smile - cat face indeed :-D I tried growing Achillea, but failed miserably although the wild stuff grows well enough! Who knows what that's all about!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I must have the right soil for achillea, cuz I've done nothing for it. Not sure how its needs differ from the wild stuff, tho. Another garden mystery. And the catface has opened partially!

      Delete
  5. Because you don’t like the Begonias they will most likely flower better than anything in your garden. Sod’s law. My Amistad is huge and I cut it back at least twice over summer. Of all the salvias it seems to be the most prolific and a magnet for bees.
    I sent away for some pretty achilleas last year and I’m having much difficulty in getting them to be even vaguely noticeable in the garden which is odd as they are supposed to be hardy. Yours look really healthy.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's great news about the salvia. I look forward to what it does next year, when there aren't ricinus to hold it back. Thanks for the warning about the begonia. I'll have to decide what to do when winter comes . . . So sorry about your achillea as they're lovely.

      Delete
  6. I trialled an achillea last season, and was very impressed when it survived and even lasted through the winter! After seeing the lovely colours that are available, I'm tempted to plant more! I love reading your humorous posts!I eventually saw the cat!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They're hard workers in the garden - good foliage, long blooming time, great colours & good at finding their place in densely planted beds. I'm so glad I got mine! Be sure to let us know if you add more colours. I'd love to see them in a future SoS.

      Delete
  7. Tickled pink by your prose and the way you write, just the sort of things I think, but daren't write.....great plants...y salvia isn't yet planted out but waiting for a far too tall and floppy Achilles to hear it's sentence.....

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Which salvia is in waiting? Some of my more floppy achillea will be lifted & passed on to less suspecting gardeners.

      Delete
  8. I'm a nut for tithonia buds. Spend too much time photographing the fuzzy lovies.

    ReplyDelete