Thanksgiving Blooms

A tradition that Brother Tim and I have honored through the years is to take an inventory of what’s blooming on the fall/winter holidays.  So, for Thanksgiving, the below blooms are some bright spots that I’m thankful for.

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The yellow snapdragon in the pot just outside the front door is still blooming a bit in the wet, cool weather.  It hasn’t been cold yet and nowhere near frosting.  I went quite a few years having neglected Antirrhinums as garden flowers, but they are workhorses and they bring an optimism that few of the borderline hardy perennials possess.

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Not a great photo (it was pouring rain all day, so I was worried about getting the camera wet), but this is the seed-grown hardy geranium that I started last winter.  It is still trying hard to bloom after about five months of putting out flowers.

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The arboretum rose on the Jeff Tangen arbor is still blooming.  I couldn’t smell it through all the rain, but my memories of the fragrance are still strong from its summer-long blooms.

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I think the rain was affecting my photographic abilities.  Here is a late dahlia.  The flowers of dahlias change colors with the weather–they get mellower and more pastel as the weather cools.

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A better photo of the same dahlia flower.

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I think these are the annual form of dianthus, but they are sticking around through the cold and wet.

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Brother Tim and I both like the single-flowered Matricaria cultivars best.  These stalwarts are throwing a few blooms here and there.

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Probably the biggest surprise in the garden is the wonderberry blooms.  These plants don’t seem to have any clue that winter is just a month away.

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The strawberries are all breathing a sigh of relief for the cool/wet weather.

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Fuchsia “Machu Picchu” blooming in the greenhouse.  This has been a favorite of mine for  nearly thirty years.  The original plant came from Brother Tim many years ago.

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A few Streptocarpus flowers are poking up in the greenhouse.  The plants look ratty, but the color of the flowers is a welcomed contrast to the green, yellows and browns as winter approaches.

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Mom’s Cymbidium blooming big in the greenhouse.  There are three or four more orchids with spikes in various states of expansion.

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This Euphorbia from Brother Tim keeps expanding and blooming in the greenhouse as it goes.

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Fantastic flowering maple (Abutilon megapotamicum) from Brother Tim.  I pruned the mother plant last year and stuck all the trimmings into a pot and they rooted…so now I have two pots of these great plants!

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Another picture of this festive flower.

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Persicaria capitata has a few blooms in the greenhouse.  I want to try this plant as a hanging basket, as the leaves and growth pattern would be perfect for that.

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Another rotten photo, but this is documentation of the blooms of a scented pelargonium.

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Plectranthus blooming in the greenhouse.  The flowers are intricate, white with maroon mottling on the lips.

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A holiday cactus blooming in the greenhouse.  This bloom isn’t quite open–I should be able to get a better photo in the next few days.

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Another Machu Picchu pic–you can see some Botrytis on a leaf.  I noticed a lot of it around the greenhouse today, so will go in this weekend and do some clean-up and get another fan going for air circulation.

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A cheery Verbascum in the orchard garden.

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Not flowers, but worth noting:  Prime Ark blackberries trying very hard to ripen before frost.  I don’t think they’ll make it, but their effort is impressive!