The beginning of August marks the end of the daylily bloom. Well, there are still a few stragglers but the big show is over.
The daylily is one of my favorite flowers. (I don't think I'm alone in this.) When we left Missouri, the daylilies came with us. My collection is rather small and mostly yellow but I love them anyway.
This one is such a happy color and the flowers are huge--they can be 5 or 6 inches across.
This one is a beautiful lemony yellow.
This one has such fun ruffled petals.
And this one has a bit of a blush.
I even like the looks of this one--the original species from which all others are derived--Hemerocallis fulva.
I may just have to add to the daylilies at Heck Creek next spring. With a daylily farm (http://www.blueridgedaylilies.com/) almost next door, I have no excuse not to. Maybe a pink one.
Monday, August 7, 2017
Saturday, August 5, 2017
How Many Mourning Doves Can Fit at the Bird Feeder?
One?
Three?
Six is the maximum observed.
Edited on 8/6/17 to add: I saw eight trying to get to the seed this evening, but the camera wasn't handy.
Three?
Six is the maximum observed.
Edited on 8/6/17 to add: I saw eight trying to get to the seed this evening, but the camera wasn't handy.
Monday, July 17, 2017
BRP and Mt. Mitchell
With out-of-town guests here the first of the month, we had to take a ride on the Blue Ridge Parkway. We headed north through Craggy Gardens to Mount Mitchell.
No one can take a ride on the BRP without noticing the grand skyscapes above the mountain tops. I'm always photographing the clouds even though I know I'm doomed to disappointment--no mere photo can ever capture the magnificence.
I photographed a few wild flowers, though I tried to keep the picture-taking to a minimum with our guests along. When Ralph and I go alone, he has to endure frequent requests to pull over just so I can look at flowers. But here are a few trail side blooms. I enjoy the small and delicate flowers as well as the showy blossoms.
Saxifrage and tiny bluets growing on seepy rocks near the top of Mt. Mitchell.
A fringed orchid.
Wood sorrel. Look at the colors in this small flower.
Not a flower, but interesting nonetheless, upright standing fir cones.
And the kids at the top.
No one can take a ride on the BRP without noticing the grand skyscapes above the mountain tops. I'm always photographing the clouds even though I know I'm doomed to disappointment--no mere photo can ever capture the magnificence.
I photographed a few wild flowers, though I tried to keep the picture-taking to a minimum with our guests along. When Ralph and I go alone, he has to endure frequent requests to pull over just so I can look at flowers. But here are a few trail side blooms. I enjoy the small and delicate flowers as well as the showy blossoms.
Saxifrage and tiny bluets growing on seepy rocks near the top of Mt. Mitchell.
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Saxifraga michauxii and Houstonia caerulea |
![]() | ||||
Saxifraga michauxii |
A fringed orchid.
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Platanthera psycodes |
Wood sorrel. Look at the colors in this small flower.
![]() | |
Oxalis montana |
Not a flower, but interesting nonetheless, upright standing fir cones.
![]() |
Abies fraseri |
And the kids at the top.
Labels:
blooming,
Blue-Ridge-Parkway,
sky
Location:
Mt Mitchell
Friday, June 16, 2017
Sheep Block
In my role as Mom, the pattern tester, I just finished piecing this 18-inch block for Robyn.
First step--selecting fabrics. Each piece is shape and color coded ...
Sections pieced ...
Sewing the sections together ...
Although not for beginning paper-piecers, Robyn's patterns include instructions that are clear and detailed. If you follow the instructions carefully, then at the end it all comes together and...
You have sheep!
First step--selecting fabrics. Each piece is shape and color coded ...
Sections pieced ...
Sewing the sections together ...
Although not for beginning paper-piecers, Robyn's patterns include instructions that are clear and detailed. If you follow the instructions carefully, then at the end it all comes together and...
You have sheep!
Tuesday, June 13, 2017
Saturday, May 27, 2017
Beard Tongue
We had a lot of this plant in our yard in Missouri and it grew well. We brought one small plant with us from Missouri and it seems well-adapted to the North Carolina clay.
Honey bees and other bees are frequent visitors. (Look how fast the wings are buzzing.)
And here is why the plant's common name is beard tongue. Take a look at the flower's stigma and style.
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Penstemon digitalis "Husker Red" |
The stems and new leaves are reddish in color.
Honey bees and other bees are frequent visitors. (Look how fast the wings are buzzing.)
And here is why the plant's common name is beard tongue. Take a look at the flower's stigma and style.
Sunday, April 23, 2017
Greening
Earth Day 2017. It's been raining all week. The hillsides are getting greener and greener. I snuck out between the showers to click a few photos.
This time of year always reminds me of Robert Frost's poem:
This time of year always reminds me of Robert Frost's poem:
"Nature's first green is gold, Her hardest hue to hold,
Her early leaf's a flower, but only so an hour ...."
The woods are full of dogwoods in bloom.
The dawn redwood is leafing out. I need to find a special place to plant this little tree this spring.
Spring is such a hopeful time of the year. I'm hoping the environment can survive the next four years of people in power who care more for money than the earth.
Sunday, April 9, 2017
The First Week of April
Of course, no photo can really capture the sky.
Between the showers the Pop, with a little help from me, managed to get almost all of the siding on the big storage shed. With its construction we now have all the stuff here and can stop paying for the storage unit. We're slowly trying to sell or donate all the things we don't need so we can get rid of some of the clutter.
Finally the wind has blown away all the clouds and we have sunshine.
This morning there's not a cloud in the sky. I can begin to see some color on the trees on the hill across the way.
And the redbud is flowering.
Robyn's daisy just can't wait--it's bloomed its first bloom indoors.
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