AUTUMN
DECEMBER 2012

July 15, 2010

GARDEN BLOGGERS' BLOOM DAY - July 2010


 July has been hot and humid here in Massachusetts, reaching 100 degrees at times. The gardens have seemed to burst forth like fireworks, weeds and all.


 Some weeds still remain since I saw the wild rabbits and our free ranging hens enjoying them. I like a more *wild* garden anyway, or perhaps that's just my excuse :)






Today is Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day so come talk a walk with me.
The Rose of Sharon have bloomed.

The Butterfly Bushes are going strong and new shoots have sprouted up everywhere. Want any?


  Four different varieties of Rudbeckia are still in bloom. The smaller petal kind is blooming near the Burning Bush (Euonymus alatus).

The medium size is growing and spreading along the dry creek.

The larger size with the glorious dark brown centers, the rounded ones look bright and cheery along the garden path 


and the cone-shaped ones stand tall and regal within the garden fence .


The Hollyhocks (Alcea) are a beautiful shade of pink and we look forward to making our Hollyhock dolls .


My favorite sunflower, the Mexican Sunflower (Tithonia rotundiflora), has shown its first flower.




The monarda, both pinks and reds have had delightful hummingbirds visit them.



The False Sunflowers did not have a very good year and some were ravaged by aphids and then susceptible to powdery mildew. I don't know why I didn't order those ladybugs as planned, or at least try to be rid of them with a soap solution. 
But there are still plants that are doing well. They had some of these visitors yesterday .

Some of the Echinacea had a hard time with the heat and the edges of the petals dried out.
The bees didn't seem to mind though.
Others did fine, although they were a bit shaded by taller plants.

The Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) is flourishing . . . 
and it never ceases to amaze me how Mother Nature has put together her flowers, many made up of thousands and thousands of tiny petals.

A few Lavender flowers remain after I harvested most of them. How delicate and yet how pungent.

The Russina Sage (Perovskia) has begun to flower. The silvery green foliage looks good on its own but I love its purple hue when in bloom..

I love the lilies, so natural  and bright, with their carefree "attitude".



Queen Ann's Lace (Daucus Carota) makes a delicate appearance.

Many of the Hosta are in bloom, or just about ready to blossom. We have multitudes!

Most everything else is still blooming, or getting ready to bloom, as it was two weeks ago.

The vegetables in the raised beds are growing well. It is the last of the peas until fall.

There's all shapes and sizes of tomatoes, albeit still green.





We can pick our first cucumber tomorrow. hooray!

The bush beans ( at the top of the picture) are getting ready to flower.

There is always one or two mystery vegetables each year. I'm thinking a pumpkin or a gourd.

We have a few things we still need to plant in the garden, as well as taking the rest of the Wisteria out of the long raised bed. We are planning to make a sturdy shade structure on the grass and have already moved some of the vine, but there is plenty more to go. I need the room for more vegetables so I need to get to this task very soon.
And lest I forget, I am totally in love with this perennial. I thought it was a perennial sunflower but I'm not too sure. It was given to us last year. This is the second year and it is huge! It can be used as a summer hedge.  It is much taller then me and I am five nine.
I am partial to yellow anyway. It excites me and make me happy. 
Isn't it just glorious?  
Now I'm trying to think where I might plant a hedge :)


"In my garden there is a large place for sentiment.  My garden of flowers is also my garden of thoughts and dreams.  The thoughts grow as freely as the flowers, and the dreams are as beautiful. " 
~Abram L. Urban

July 14, 2010

THEIR OWN SPOT

 Children love to have areas like hideaways, cubbies, forts and teepees to hide and play in and use their imaginations. 
We had many fallen branches in our woodlands and decided to put them to a fun use. It took two of us to get it started . We used a step ladder and put three branches together, tripod style, and secured them at the top. We used duct tape, not a natural material I am embarrassed to say, but we needed something strong and that would stand up to the weather.
Once the three legs were standing on their own, we just added to it every time we came across more branches in the woods. 
We built it five years ago and it's still in great shape. The pines have grown and it is more nestled in now. I like seeing it standing there at the edge of the woodlands


Children play in it

 hide in it


and run right through it
It's fun to watch and see how they use it.
It didn't always have a back *door*, but the children needed one, so we took a few branches down to make an opening for them. Sometimes we hang cotton fabric or a silk as a front door, back door or both.
  Sometimes the dog, or the hens, sit in there to get out of the sun and wild rabbits rest after they have satisfied themselves with clover and dandelion greens a few feet away. (The white speck in the top picture is a rabbit's tail). Birds often alight on the branches and sing to us. 
 The teepee has been great for everyone. Perhaps you can collect fallen branches and make your own teepee. You'll be happy you did.


 Next on our agenda is to make living willow structures , probably a tunnel and a dome, but it won't be planted until next March.


happy day!

ONE WORD WEDNESDAY


 ~  helpful  ~


(Please feel free to join in One Word Wednesday. Leave a link in the comments). 
   happy day!

July 12, 2010

WORDS

My weekly posting of WORDS. . .
which will just include a quote during the summer months

"It is not by accident that the happiest people are those who make a conscious effort to live useful lives. Their happiness, of course, is not a shallow exhilaration where life is one continuous intoxicating party. Rather, their happiness is a deep sense of inner peace that comes when they believe their lives have meaning and that they are making a difference for good in the world."
- Ernest A. Fitzgerald

July 10, 2010

A FEW DROPS LEFT


 She inspected the paints, noticed some were almost empty, and decided to play with them, dropping a speck here, a drop there, and shaking to make tiny drops, like splattering. 

 Then she used her fingers to make long streaks with some colors. The yellow paint came out in a big blob, so she used her hands to spread it all around.

She really didn't have a plan in mind, she just went with the flow and every step was fun and ended up being great to look at . 

Another creative spark, as I call them.
  Any creative endeavor is never a waste. It will go in her art stash to use in a future project, perhaps a background or for cut out letters or shapes.

Free flowing art . . .
it would look great in a frame as it is right now!

When is the last time YOU played with paint? We should all take a lesson from the children. . .
  Go with the flow and see where it takes you
 Try it!  Above all, enJOY!
And remember . . . the process is always more important than product :)

YOU NEVER KNOW

If a 3 1/2 year old has a green marker outside on a deck, and a white dog is nearby, 

what do YOU think might happen?

Did you guess correctly?


He matches the door now  :)

The little artist definitely takes after her mother, who also takes after her mother, ME! 
 We wrote on anything and everything. 
Perhaps that's a sign of a creative spirit?