Following an unending winter, this
spring had to be the coldest on record since moving to Virginia over 20 years
ago.
First, many of my perennials and shrubs failed to emerge/break bud this spring.
Then, just as the spring flower buds
were about to burst open with color and fanfare, we received several days of
freezing temperatures. My wisteria, for
one, normally overflowing with pendulous lavender blooms that exude buckets of
sweetness was reduced to one, yes one - that is an easy count, blossom.
The daffodils were fair at best. The lilac flowers…non-existent. I am still holding comment on the fate of all
my irises.
The money plant proved to be a true
champion. This plant displays lovely
deep purple blooms that last for weeks.
And, fortunately for me, it is growing
all over my gardens. Not by my design,
but by the plant’s character. Once
established in the original planting bed, this plant relocated (via wind
blowing the decorative seed pods) just about everywhere.
growing among my spiderwort |
growing among my daylilies |
hiding my chicken yard decoration |
growing next to a poppy which is growing in a walkway |
growing among the candytuft |
growing next to my cut-off miniature barberry...and growing, in what seems to be, a million other places |
I am glad that I had maintained my
reluctance to pull the rebel plants out last fall.
Those purple flowers are sheer joy in
this iffy spring.
hummingbird clearwing moth arrived just as I was taking this photo |
Now, the purple rhododendron and
magenta azalea are near full bloom. Both
are gorgeous.
this azalea is very brittle and the dogs always managed to break a branch or two or three...this is the biggest and the best it has ever looked since I planted and babied it close to ten years now |
Spring is turning out to be just fine.
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