Showing posts with label GBBD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GBBD. Show all posts

Saturday, November 15, 2014

Garden bloggers bloom day: November 2014

Washington Monument

Despite a few evening clouds, it was cold and clear last night in Washington, DC and we finally got our first good freeze of the season.  I've had a couple of very light frosts already, when overnight lows were in the 30's, but without any damage to my plants.  Last night was the first time it went down to the freezing point, 32 degrees F (0 C), or perhaps slightly lower.  When I went out this morning to survey the damage the first thing I noticed was the sickly sweet smell of frostbitten vegetation.  That's the part I always forget.

Monday, September 15, 2014

Garden Bloggers Bloom Day: September 2014

Seemannia hybrid
Seemannia hybrid

Bit by bit, the garden is recovering from a brutal winter.  It may not look like much from above: there are a couple of empty spaces where palms used to grow, the hardy banana (Musa basjoo) hasn't grown nearly as big as it did last year (see Everybody loves my big banana), and the figs were killed to the ground and are coming back from the roots, but hidden underneath all that foliage are some plants that are just now hitting their peak.

Garden, mid-September
View of the garden from our roof deck

Friday, August 15, 2014

Garden Bloggers Bloom Day: August 2014

Okay, enough with the long blog posts for now!  It's time for a quick-and-dirty blog post with pretty pictures and not much else.  These are some of the plants I had blooming in my garden today.  For more information about any of them, feel fee to post questions in the comments section!  For many more photos, click here.  For more Garden Bloggers Bloom Day posts from all around the blogosphere, visit Carol at May Dreams Gardens.

Spigelia marilandica
Spigelia marilandica, second bloom after deadheading a few weeks ago

Spigelia marilandica
Spigelia marilandica

Asclepias tuberosa
Asclepias tuberosa, also reblooming after deadheading

Asclepias tuberosa
Honeybee on Asclepias tuberosa

Clerodendrum bungei
Clerodendrum bungei, one of my beautiful monsters

Lobelia cardinalis
Lobelia cardinalis, still going strong

Aralia elata
Aralia elata has been dropping tiny white flowers all over everything for a month

Liriope muscari
When was the last time you took a close look at the flowers of Liriope muscari?

Begonia grandis 'Early Bird'
Begonia grandis 'Early Bird', my own early-blooming selection of the species

Hosta plantaginea
Hosta plantaginea, "August lily", night-blooming and wonderfully fragrant

Datura wrightii
Datura wrightii, last night

Datura wrightii
Datura wrightii, this morning

Datura wrightii
One more because I can't get enough of those daturas!

Ipomoea
Morning glory (Ipomoea sp.), growing as a weed

Sphaerorrhiza sarmentiana
Sphaerorrhiza sarmentiana (Gesneriaceae), blooming on my windowsill at work


Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Garden Bloggers Bloom Day: July 2014

Lagerstroemia
Lagerstroemia (unknown crape myrtle cultivar)

It's the middle of July in Washington, that hot, steamy time of year that prompted me to dub it the "DC Tropics".  It doesn't help that we've had several days of rain, cranking up the humidity to decidedly tropical levels!  But this is when my garden starts reaching its peak, and the tropical, subtropical, and other heat-loving plants start looking their best.  Below are some of the plants that are blooming today.  For the full set of photos click here.  For more Garden Bloggers Bloom Day posts from all around the blogosphere, visit Carol at May Dreams Gardens.

Sunday, June 15, 2014

Garden Bloggers Bloom Day, June 2014

Rhododendron

Because today is Father's Day, my first foray into "Garden Bloggers Bloom Day" is dedicated to my dad, Martin E. Boggan.  My father had a major stroke last November (see "The Roots of a Gardener") but he has come a long way since then, and recovered in ways that we never expected.  Sadly, he is currently in a nursing home and unable to see his rhododendrons in their spring splendor.