Sunday, April 5, 2020

April Flowers


These flowers look like Chrysanthemums wildly out of season.  Their name, Grecian Wind Flower, identifies them as anything but a native flower.  These plants like it hot and dry so we placed them in front of the south facing house wall.  Their source was a mail order operation and the tiny scrap of a plant delivered here appears to find its new home satisfactory to its needs.  We hope that it continues to expand creating a beautiful ground cover.


This import from Turkey is named Glory of the Snow.  Actually we purchased both the regular form and giants.  Since this plant is self planted it may well be a cross of the two varieties.  Its blossom color is far more intense that our picture shows.  Our point and shoot camera does not handle bright colors well.  Still, any plant near our stone walls creates an impressive appearance.


There is a native Wood anemone but this may not be it.  Ours have rounded petal tips while the native version's petals end in a sharp point.  We have had this plant for so long that we cannot recall its original source.  Not snobbish by nature, we have included this plant in our developing shade garden.  Many of the favored plants placed there completely disappear by summer.  We intend to allow this plant to take and hold large sections of our garden where Trilliums and similar plants can have their day above the low green leaves of Wood anemone.


We first encountered Siberian squill when driving to our then newly purchased retirement land.  An area near a small barn that no longer housed cows was covered with these flowers.  Buy them we did and they were placed in a garden that we have since lost to the grasses.  Many of these plants escaped into the lawn where we can still admire them.  Their new location only requires that we watch where we are walking.


These white flower buds were formed as darkly colored tiny tight buds last Fall.  One of this plant's names is Mayflower since it is reported to be the first plant to flower where the Pilgrim's ship made landfall.  Arbutus is another name for this plant.  Reported to be impossible to transplant, these plants exist in contradiction to that still widely held belief.  As an evergreen, many animals eat it as disappearing snow reveals its tasty leaves.  All of my plantings are under wire cages and that is why they have survived.  It is possible that these deliciously scented flowers will open in late April.  Then the wire cages will be moved aside so that we can drink in the sweet scent of these ground hugging flowers.  Some insect has been eating these leaves or perhaps chipmunks eat an occasional salad.  These are native wild plants and there is a limit to how far we can go to protect them.

1 comment:

Beth at PlantPostings said...

Spring is here! The spring peepers have been so loud around here lately. And, yes, it's wonderful to watch the blooms multiply. :)