Bulb Report

Turns out that being a dilettante with tropical bulbs is very rewarding: Look how huge this elephant ear is!

Look at the pattern on the leaves–it’s almost like marbled paper (dilettante worlds colliding!)

 

The cannas are blooming too:

So red it’s blowing out the camera

 

And this wasn’t a dilettante project, but over the last year I’ve been gradually moving all the daylilies from the yard, where they just didn’t get enough water or really bloom, into pots, where they now get water AND fertilizer. (And I can take them with me when we move.)

Turns out that when you give a plant what it needs to thrive, it thrives … sounds like a metaphor to me.

Bulb Life

I went to exactly one class about forcing bulbs but I guess it stuck with me: In November, I ordered some exotic paperwhites and an amaryllis from the company the instructor recommended, Brent and Becky’s Bulbs. I got them planted up almost a month ago [why yes, I did consult my garden journal for the date] and the amaryllis is really popping:

I’m going to try to keep him going after he blooms—amarylli can live for years—so fortunately, Brent and Becky sent a lot of helpful literature on how to do that.

My pals Brent and Becky also had a few varieties of paperwhites I hadn’t seen before, with yellow centers (and one all-yellow kind, too!). This is “Winter Sun” on New Year’s Day; they’re all about a foot taller now and allllmost ready to go:

Brent and Becky might get some more of my money for the summer, since they have elephant ears and I’ve wanted to try those in the summer pots since seeing them in planters downtown …

It Only Takes One Visit

I spent Saturday morning in the greenhouse at the arboretum and the rest of the weekend being a Plant Lady. I was there with my sister-in-law to learn about forcing bulbs, but the class let us wander around their giant working greenhouses afterwards and it inspired me to step up my care of the potted plants at home.

Bulbs ready to bloom… in about five months. (I don’t know why I thought forcing bulbs was fast, but now I know. And I got sources for heirloom paperwhites that don’t need the long cold period.)

 

The greenhouses were massive, big enough to devote a corner to water plants:

 

This lovely thing was called a snail vine and was growing on a 12-foot tuteur. It had just been moved in for the winter and the fragrance was astonishing:

 

Back at home, I topped off the houseplants with fresh soil and fertilizer and put some smaller orchids in fancy pots with moss. Then I moved outside and cleaned up the sad, heat-baked containers. (I had a pretty strong start with spring bulbs but the summer planters weren’t impressive.)

I’m trying again for fall though–I went to the wholesale nursery and got some ornamental kale and pansies, and will pick up some decorative gourds on the next Trader Joe’s trip.

Claus’s Pots

We’ve been cleaning up the yard and I’ve been admiring my pots of spring bulbs. They’ve really taken off with the warm weather and it feels so fancy to have an array of color coordinated flowers so early in the season!

Well, it DID feel so fancy…until I saw Claus Dalby’s reveal of his spring seasonal bulbs:

 

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Oh, to have a giant garden and a greenhouse and a helper named Preben…

Dream Vs. Reality

I recently found the Danish gardener Claus Dalby, who seems to be kind of a Euro Martha Stewart (he has books and an Instagram and retail offerings and a YouTube channel). He’s also famous for his container displays, especially of spring bulbs:

I looked at Claus Dalby ideas during the last three snowstorms here (I even ordered his book!) and bought some pansies and primroses and bulbs at Home Depot last Saturday, planting them up in the cold wind.

Was the yard cleaned up? No. Was this anything like Claus’s lush display? Not really. But they looked a lot better on Saturday than they did yesterday morning:

It’s supposed to get dramatically warmer here over the weekend, so if the planters don’t float away in all the melted snow they’ll start to perk up again. Maybe I can even add more, if spring is actually here.

Spring Blooms

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I would describe my own landscaping as more “dry side yard with things stuck in it randomly” than “garden” and that had been bothering me more than usual during this year’s yard clean up. So Sunday we went to the botanical gardens here and it was pretty inspiring…to see what a team of landscapers and lots of money can do.

I kid, it also inspired me to move some things around and maybe plant a few more things so it looks a little less random. (It also inspired me to make tea when we got back since I was in full-on Mary in The Secret Garden mode.) And Sunday night I picked up that neglected shirt from last month. The collar isn’t attached here but it’s closer to getting done! I liked how the print mirrored the first pic of the cherry tree.

 

 

Around The Yard

I didn’t tackle any big house projects this weekend, so I got to enjoy the work I’d been doing instead. Here are the yard highlights:

The trumpet vine has really taken off this year. I have a half-remembered poem in my head from college that goes, “My heart is a vine; this house is a trellis.”
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All the daylilies are blooming. This one is extra-happy.
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The first bloom of the lavender is over and I have cherry tomatoes coming on in pots.
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The pots on the back deck aren’t edible, just decorative.
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And what’s this? A raccoon has been visiting  and leaving prints. I think he likes the yard, too.
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I Am Ignoring You, Predicted Snowfall

I see bulbs coming up in all the planters downtown, and the bulbs are not only up but blooming at my parents’ house. So I think it’s time to re-read my spring book, The Secret Garden. Here’s the scene where Mary is finding bulbs in the titular garden:

There had been a flower bed, and she thought she saw something sticking out of the black earth–some sharp little pale green points…she knelt down to look at them.
“Yes, they are tiny growing things[…]P
erhaps there are some other ones coming up in other places,” she said. “I will go all over the garden and look.”
She went slowly and kept her eyes on the ground. She looked in the old border beds and among the grass, and after she had gone round, trying to miss nothing, she had found ever so many more sharp, pale green points, and she had become quite excited again.

I Haven’t Talked Much About The Garden This Year

But I have one. It’s doing well, except for the zucchini (this is my fourth summer here and I never get a lot of zucchini–lots of flowers but only one or two squash. It’s a mystery.).

Here it is:

This year I added a birdbath, which is too deep for them to really bathe in but does get used for drinking. And there are sunflowers.

Get One Last Trip To The Farmers’ Market In

They’re winding down for the season, as is the garden. I’ll make it a two-poem week and post this one about the harvest. (Now I’m going to think “human brains covered in red oilcloth” when I cut up the last tomatoes to freeze.)

Harvest

by Louise Gluck

It’s autumn in the market—
not wise anymore to buy tomatoes.
They’re beautiful still on the outside,
some perfectly round and red, the rare varieties
misshapen, individual, like human brains covered in red oilcloth—

Inside, they’re gone. Black, moldy—
you can’t take a bite without anxiety.
Here and there, among the tainted ones, a fruit
still perfect, picked before decay set in.

Instead of tomatoes, crops nobody really wants.
Pumpkins, a lot of pumpkins.
Gourds, ropes of dried chilies, braids of garlic.
The artisans weave dead flowers into wreaths;
they tie bits of colored yarn around dried lavender.
And people go on for a while buying these things
as though they thought the farmers would see to it
that things went back to normal:
the vines would go back to bearing new peas;
the first small lettuces, so fragile, so delicate, would begin
to poke out of the dirt.

Instead, it gets dark early.
And the rains get heavier; they carry
the weight of dead leaves.

At dusk, now, an atmosphere of threat, of foreboding.
And people feel this themselves; they give a name to the season,
harvest, to put a better face on these things.

The gourds are rotting on the ground, the sweet blue grapes are finished.
A few roots, maybe, but the ground’s so hard the farmers think
it isn’t worth the effort to dig them out. For what?
To stand in the marketplace under a thin umbrella, in the rain, in the cold,
no customers anymore?

And then the frost comes; there’s no more question of harvest.
The snow begins; the pretense of life ends.
The earth is white now; the fields shine when the moon rises.

I sit at the bedroom window, watching the snow fall.
The earth is like a mirror:
calm meeting calm, detachment meeting detachment.

What lives, lives underground.
What dies, dies without struggle.