As promised, I did put on my wellies and go out and take pictures on the
May long weekend. So pretend this is six weeks ago - here is what was
going on in the garden. The euphorbia was in full bloom, the cornflowers were coming on strong, the Japanese maple had leafed out, and even the (clashing) calendula were up and at 'em.
For the first time, I looked closely at the euphorbia through the macro lens, and really saw the flowers, which are actually sweet little yellow stars! (Click on the photo to get a bigger version.)
(Aside: jump forward six weeks to weeding in the sun next to defunct euphorbia bloom stalks...the seed heads explode in the heat! pop pop pop. Explains why the little buggers get everywhere.)
Also on deck, the alyssum, isn't it sweet? It is normally an annual, but is sort of perennial here, or at least it seeds itself prolifically and then tries to bloom in all sorts of unexpected seasons. It seems to like the gravel paths up by the raised beds. Please note the water droplets.
The triffid that poses as an early-blooming clematis was working its charm. Note blurry splotches resulting from pointing camera upward.
The variegated iris that Mum planted for me a couple of years ago is coming along nicely - it had multiple blooms this year. The stuff behind is some sort of mallow-variant, it will have tall spikes of dark pink flowers later in July. On the right at the back - phlox, flowers in August. To the left in front is the leftover foliage from the hyacinths; the silver starry petals is artemesia, and the needle-leaves are some early, self-sowed nigella. And yes, that is a whopping big thistle right in the middle. It is not there now!
Further over by the big oak tree, there are a bunch of bearded iris. These photos made me realize that either the burgundy iris or the raspberry rhododendron has to go - yikes that hurts the eye. The pale pink cranesbill geranium and blue cornflower aren't helping, either.
The rhodo is somewhat beleaguered - the oak drops branches on it every winter, I forget to water it every summer, and there's a mexican orange next to it that is overly vigorous. So maybe I should put it out of its misery. It does look pretty with the tiarella, though...
Finally, over past the euphorbia, next to the raised beds, the rock rose and the lbf* were a very satisfying combination.
(*lbf = "little blue flower" - help, Mum? Lithadora?)
No cats here, right? Happy Queen's Birthday! It is raining.
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