PeppermintPatty
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OMG, that is so true! Especially this last week in the yard mowing by hand since riding mower is the shop.
Thank you.Those are beautiful pictures PP!




Great apple blossom clematis pics. That’s gorgeous. I want one after seeing yours and reading about the wonderful fragrance. Clematis are one of my favourite types of plants.One plant I’ve really been appreciating this year is this Clematis armandii ‘Apple Blossom’. Apparently the vines can reach 25 feet and this year I think they have. I never give it any extra water beyond what little rain we get. So I guess that is why it is blooming so abundantly. The flowers are described as “intensely fragrant” and even to this nearly nose-blind person that is accurate. The flowers are pink in bud and when they first open m, soon turning white.
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Great apple blossom clematis pics. That’s gorgeous. I want one after seeing yours and reading about the wonderful fragrance. Clematis are one of my favourite types of plants.
They do require a lot of water. My BEST growing clematis places were right under the garage downspouts. Since the roots love the shade, they grow underneath the garage. They get plenty of rain from the downspout and I plant hostas all around them which die off at the end of the year so I can better maintain them. A great clematis combo.Normally with our low rainfall and water restrictions I have a hard time making them happy. Otherwise I’d grow more of them. Always happy to see yours. Hint, hint.
They do require a lot of water. My BEST growing clematis places were right under the garage downspouts. Since the roots love the shade, they grow underneath the garage. They get plenty of rain from the downspout and I plant hostas all around them which die off at the end of the year so I can better maintain them. A great clematis combo.





Ten feet is a bit far to expect clematis roots to travel but since it’s done well this year, it’s root system may have expanded enough to do better other years too.
That area looks very dry. It must take quite a bit of effort to keep that garden watered but clearly they do. Nice photos.
For the look and smell of a gorgeous clematis like that? Surely it would be worth it.I like the way you think. I may even give more than usual with the hose next year if the rain goes back to normal.
My Lycoris flowers are booming everywhere! I (literally) have several thousand plants, each plant has 3-9 flowers! I've been outside taking pictures. Of course, the camera doesn't look as nice as seeing them in person. Some of these pictures are from this morning, some from last week, and others are from previous years.....
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(view on North side of house)
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(view going down to the pond)
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(view on South side of house)
They were one of my Dad's favorite flowers! Notice how they don't have any leaves? For this reason they are also called Naked Lilies. (note: naked ladies is a different flower)
I've spent years dividing and planting them everywhere. They line the trails through the woods and around the fields. They are by the house, the barn, and along with driveway......they are everywhere!
....about 20 years! I have spider lilies, too, but they don't thrive or multiple as well for me. I have moved them around many times, looking for a place that they are happy. After about 10 years, this is all that I have.....That is a lot of bulbs! Have you been growing and dividing them for a long time to accumulate so many?
I’m growing Nerine bulbs and have gown a red spider Lily once but I don’t think it liked our long dry season.

We had a rain storm come through last night, and it broke all of the Lycoris! All that is left is one or two here or there. The rest are gone for this year. I guess I took those pictures just in time!
Wow! Those are amazing pictures!!!!Thank God for photography. Nothing in a garden is guaranteed except for change itself. I enjoy looking back at peak moments for plants no longer here or no longer as vibrant.
Speaking of which I recently came across these photos on my camera from several years ago. I have grown Echium hybrids mostly every year out along the front path as well as just inside the side garden. But I don't think I've often grown E. wildpretii. So I'm glad to have these photos of it. Aren't its pinky/red flowers striking? The Mr Happy hybrid growing between them has blue/lavender flowers and gets much taller. The other parent of Mr Happy is E. pininana, the tallest of the lot. But Mr Happy is very variable, and taking anything from one season to two to flower. Pininana takes longer and gets very much taller under good conditions (wet).
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A real Jack and the Beanstalk moment. My neighbors love seeing these.
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I've posted this one before but this is E. pininana growing in my friends garden just below Mount Sutra, one of the wettest places in San Francisco. They also have one of only five licensed and grandfathered in wells in the whole city. I think it's flowers are bluer than those of Mr Happy.
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This is so spectacular. You two look like shrunken humans in a giant Beautiful garden.Thank God for photography. Nothing in a garden is guaranteed except for change itself. I enjoy looking back at peak moments for plants no longer here or no longer as vibrant.
Speaking of which I recently came across these photos on my camera from several years ago. I have grown Echium hybrids mostly every year out along the front path as well as just inside the side garden. But I don't think I've often grown E. wildpretii. So I'm glad to have these photos of it. Aren't its pinky/red flowers striking? The Mr Happy hybrid growing between them has blue/lavender flowers and gets much taller. The other parent of Mr Happy is E. pininana, the tallest of the lot. But Mr Happy is very variable, and taking anything from one season to two to flower. Pininana takes longer and gets very much taller under good conditions (wet).
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A real Jack and the Beanstalk moment. My neighbors love seeing these.
![]()
I've posted this one before but this is E. pininana growing in my friends garden just below Mount Sutra, one of the wettest places in San Francisco. They also have one of only five licensed and grandfathered in wells in the whole city. I think it's flowers are bluer than those of Mr Happy.
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