
Aquilegia and Zizia aurea in front of Acorus gramineus ‘Ogon’ in my rain garden.
Aquilegia and Zizia aurea in front of Acorus gramineus ‘Ogon’ in my rain garden.
Pink hybrid primula
Pulmonaria ‘Trevi Fountain’
Crocus tommasinianus and Acorus gramineus ‘Ogon’
Sanguinaria canadensis
Christina at My Hesperides Garden hosts Garden Bloggers Foliage Day each month. I missed it yesterday, but better late than never:
My snowdrops and crocus finished their show a week or two ago, but the daffodils will take their place very soon. We bought our house at the end of March, many years ago, and I remember the day we closed on the house we drove by, and the front garden was full of waving yellow blossoms.
Stinging nettles (Urtica dioica) and comfrey (Symphytum officinale) grow in a half-barrel in my garden, providing an enduring source of fertilizer.
The fertilizer barrel woke up last week as well. For two years now, I’ve grown stinging nettles (Urtica dioica) and comfrey (Symphytum officinale) in a half whiskey barrel to produce homegrown liquid fertilizer. Concocting this homebrew is not for the weak of stomach: It reeks. But the nettles provide a terrific source of nitrogen, and the comfrey provides nitrogen, potassium, calcium and phosphorus, which helps promote root growth and blooming/fruiting. My garden plants love it, and the tea feeds the soil.
Red stems and budding green leaves of Salix ‘Hakura-Nishiki.’
And my willows are leafing out. I’m new to growing willows but love the fact that I can whack them back in early spring and they’ll produce lots of lush growth each year. I’m not whacking them this year; I only planted them last fall, so I plan to give them a season to get settled in. I have, however, cut a few twigs to make willow water, which promotes rooting in cuttings. I’ll talk about that in a separate post.
I hope you northern-hemisphere types are enjoying spring wherever you are.
No plant is more glorious in springtime, I think, than the saucer magnolia (Magnolia x soulangeana). It’s impossible to look at these blossoms and not smile.
Snowdrops (Galanthus sp.) blooming above their carpet of unraked leaves.
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