Springing Right into Summer

We have had a very cool, wet spring in Delaware, but as usually happens, we have suddenly gone right into summer.  Less than two weeks ago, we still had the heat running in our house, and now for the last four days, the temps have been in the high 80’s!

My flowers have been moving right along, enjoying the moisture while they have it, but now that it has finally gotten warm, they are really growing quickly.  Here are some pictures I took showing their progress:

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Dame’s Rocket, a volunteer wildflower from a packet of seeds I planted 20 years ago!

 

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Green and Gold, or chrysogonum, a wonderful ground cover, is in full-bloom

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Virginia waterleaf is tucked in among my ferns which have taken off explosively!

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A close-up of my Virginia waterleaf

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My up-and-coming common milkweed patch! Hopefully, some random female monarch will miraculously find them again this year.

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Last, but not least, my bluebird box has five babies in it! Here is Dad delivering a yummy morsel. They are so loud now, I can hear them from my upstairs window!

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Momma bluebird waiting to make a delivery. She is SO cautious before entering the box.

 

April 1st: Spring’s Coming, No Foolin’!

I am always anxious for spring to arrive, and even though we had a mild winter here in Delaware, and trees and flowers are already starting to bloom, I’m still impatient.  Today I prowled around my yard and took some pictures of some perennials that are starting to grow, and of course, a picture of my beloved serviceberry tree that is getting very close to blooming!  A wonderful surprise was the appearance of three little milkweed seedlings from seeds that I planted last November and left outside over the winter.

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Blue lobelia

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Cardinal flower

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Virginia waterleaf

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Milkweed seedling

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Monarda (Bee balm)

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Serviceberry tree, almost in bloom!

 

A Work in Progress

It was a long time in coming, but spring in Delaware is finally here and may change to summer very quickly. The trees are in full bloom as evidenced by the yellow-green “dust” that is covering every surface these days. I find myself prowling around the yard at least twice a day to see what has developed since the last time I looked–my neighbors probably think I’m pretty eccentric.

Unfortunately, my Little Joe-Pye up and died last August for some unknown reason, so I have replaced them with a couple new Sweet-scented Joe-Pye and some New York Ironweed.  I am looking forward to seeing how they turn out.  The hyssop I bought last fall is doing great so far, and the native honey suckle is about to bloom.  This is the plant I used to replace the horribly invasive native trumpet vine, which by the way, is still trying to put out a shoot here and there.

So here are some pictures I took recently to show the progression of my flowers. The spring ephemerals are busily blooming right now, and I will miss them when they are done!

Woodland phlox

Woodland phlox

Foam flower tucked among the ferns

Foam flower tucked among the ferns

Wild geranium and Greek valerian

Wild geranium and Greek valerian

Jack-in-the-Pulpit--now I have two instead of one!

Jack-in-the-Pulpit–now I have two instead of one!

My shade garden with Virginia waterleaf, ferns, false Solomon Seal, and Green-and-Gold

My shade garden with Virginia waterleaf, ferns, false Solomon Seal, and Green-and-Gold

My serviceberry in all its glory!

I got this serviceberry tree last year for a Mother’s Day gift, but by that time it had already bloomed and had set its fruit, so I never saw it in bloom.  Then last August, something decided to devour its leaves, and I feared it would not survive ( see My Serviceberry Saga).  I have been anxiously watching the buds on this tree since January, and finally this past Sunday, it bloomed! Here are a couple pictures I took to commemorate the occasion:

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I also happened to be walking along the extremely wet side of my house after torrential rains the night before, and there was a spring beauty blooming in the grass!  I was amazed and delighted, because I had planted a few last spring that a friend had given me, but then took them out because they had Japanese stilt grass mixed in and I definitely didn’t want that.  It never occurred to me that one might have survived sans stilt grass. So here is a picture of my one and only spring beauty:

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Some Beautiful Quotes I Found

It was a rainy day today, but I spent the afternoon at the Delaware Nature Society’s Ashland Nature Center. Here are some lovely quotes I found there that seemed so appropriate for us:

“When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the universe.” John Muir

“Look deep into nature, and then you will understand everything better.” Albert Einstein

“A weed is a plant whose virtue is not yet known.” Ralph Waldo Emerson

“One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.” William Shakespeare

And finally, this almost brought tears to my eyes:
“And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom.” Anais Nin

This native aster is very common in the woods around here.  I transplanted this one from the wooded yard of a friend, and amazingly, it took!

This native wood aster is very common in the woods around here. I transplanted this one from the wooded yard of a friend, and amazingly, it took!

It’s OK to Be a Late-Bloomer

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This is Pink Turtlehead, otherwise known as Chelone lyonii ‘Hot Lips’.  I really like this flower because it blooms in August and September after all the showy summer flowers are done and it’s supposed to be a larval host for the Baltimore Checkerspot butterfly.  Not that I have ever seen a Baltimore Checkerspot in my yard, but you never know when one might come calling!  The second picture shows it alongside my Boltonia Asteroides, which is still going strong. image

Jack-in-the-Pulpit Update

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In a previous post this spring, I included a picture of a Jack-in-the-Pulpit with some berries that I hoped would ripen this summer.  Here they are!  The leaves have died away, but the berries continued to ripen–aren’t they a gorgeous red? In reading about this flower, I discovered that a plant is either male or female and can change sex from year to year, depending on growing conditions the previous summer.  This was a female flower.  Also, the females have two sets of leaves while the males have only one, an easy way to tell the sexes apart. If it is a hard summer and the corm is unable to store much energy, the plant will come back in the spring as a male.  Then if that male plant has a really good summer, it can come back as a female the next year.  All Jack-in-the-Pulpits start out as males for the first year or two to allow the corm to grow. Interesting, huh?