Showing posts with label hyacinth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hyacinth. Show all posts

Thursday, March 15, 2018

Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day - March 2018

Hyacinth

Happy Ides of March! After record warm temperatures on Monday, it's definitely feeling like spring. A lot of winter blooms are still going strong, but spring is ready to shine. I seem to acquire a lot of blue and purple flowering plants, and this week the bulbs have been really glowing in the sunshine (and not phased by the rain either).

Thanks to Carol at May Dreams Gardens for hosting this monthly roundup of blooms. There are plants blooming somewhere every month but now they're really taking off.... at least in the northern hemisphere. 

Hyacinth
Crocuses are starting to fade
Crocuses
Grape hyacinth popped out suddenly
Newly planted corydalis
Rock cress just starting to bloom
Helleborus x hybridus 'Black Diamond'
Helleborus x ballardiae Gold Collection 'Maestro'
Fading camellia 'Yuletide'
Fritillaria meleagris
Newly planted Saxifraga 'Touran - Deep Red'
Sunset maple
Cyclamen coum
Sunny daffodils

Daffodil
Forsythia in front of pieris japonica
One of my baby osoberry bushes has a bloom!


Indoors, one amaryllis is blooming for the second time this year. Also my Christmas cactus has had a few blooms at a time since January but I keep forgetting to get a picture. 


What's next? Flowering currant and Oregon grape are so close, plus a lot more daffodils.




Tuesday, March 28, 2017

In bloom this week: March 28, 2017


Now that it's really starting to feel like spring, I can brag that here in western Washington, we have the longest spring in the country. Average high temperatures are above 50 degrees but below 70 degrees for about four months. We get a lot of rain too, but that just helps the flowers grow! Every time I go outside, I find more flowers.

First the bushes - my favorite bush, the native flowering currant, plus forsythia and (behind the forsythia) pieris japonica keeps on blooming:




Spring bulbs - crocuses, anemones, hyacinth, grape hyacinth and daffodils scattered all around the yard:


Plus, hellebores that have been blooming since December:



What's next? Oregon grape always takes longer to go from buds to blooms than I expect, so the Asian pear tree may beat it:




Sunday, March 19, 2017

In bloom this week: March 19, 2017

Forsythia! - and pieris japonica

Spring officially arrives at 3:29 am tomorrow and it's finally starting to feel like winter is over, with a glorious sunny day today. Average last frost for my location is March 24, although I won't trust that this year.

My favorite area right now - hellebores and crocuses in bloom and aquilegia is growing

Crocuses
Anemone blanda
Hyacinth, so close


Unknown bulb in the bottom corner of the yard, finally not covered by weeds

Cheerful daffodil

This may be cheating since I just planted these, but I'm enjoying them and hope they'll spread.

Snowdrop

Fritillaria meleagris - see the colored bloom on the right

Here's a couple of weeds, but I'm even happy to see them after a long winter.

Purple dead nettle

Dandelion at dusk

What's next? 

My favorite spring shrub, our native flowering currant

Saturday, March 11, 2017

In bloom this week: March 11, 2017


Crocuses are finally starting to bloom! These were a surprise, they're in the bottom corner of the yard where we planted bulbs our very first spring in this house, 13 years ago. We didn't realize how many large invasive plants were in that area that quickly grew over the bulbs. Now that the area is cleared out, apparently some of the crocuses managed to survive.

I planted more crocuses around the yard over the last couple of years and those are getting close to blooming. The squirrels really love to dig them up, but I've been sprinkling stinky cat litter around all of my bulbs and that seems to help.

Crocuses and aquilegia

The pieris japonica and hellebores continue to bloom, they are definitely the winners for long lasting flowers this winter. I'm slowly, finally, starting to find the early spring plants blooming.

Helleborus 'Cinnamon Snow'

Unknown variety of cedar

A pretty weed - lamium purpureum, purple dead nettle

Finally found one flower on the hazelnuts!

What's next? It's so hard to tell, the flowering currants are close, but I'm betting on the forsythia.

Forsythia

Hyacinth
Flowering currant