What Color Was Your Day?

(Via grow this)

Posted by admin to Tom Robbins, bearded cactus on 2008-02-11, 10:13:00

"The only truly magical and poetic exchanges that occur in this life occur between two people. Sometimes it doesn't get that far. Often, the true glory of existence is confined to individual consciousness. That's okay. Let us live for the beauty of our own reality."
Tom Robbins, "Even Cowgirls Get the Blues"

I noticed cactus plants quietly preparing to burst into bloom today.

When I had a small child, and I tucked her in at bedtime, we would often sum up our day for each other by answering the following question. What color was your day?

It started out simple and intuitive – my day was often blue because I hated my job. Hers was often green – especially on days she got to play outside at after-school day care.

After a while, we got all existential and symbolical. I’d have a day that was pastel blue shading into pink with shiny silver highlights. That meant there was a silver lining inside my professional rain cloud. I was going to law school, and was learning how to think straight. Hers was sometimes yellow with orange streaks and flecks of gold, a kind of impressionistic finger-painting representing a sunny day on the swings, but with a bully lurking at the bottom of the slide. She was growing in body and spirit and learning not to be intimidated by playground bullies.

The fun was explaining to one another how we arrived at specific combinations of colors, and what they signified. Yesterday, we had a preview of Spring: warm, sunny, temps in the middle 70F range. I went to an event at the garden where I volunteer. My day was pink and green, like the prickley pear and bearded cactus plants getting ready to burst into bloom.

It’s been years since I’ve summed up my day in terms of color. I should get back to that.

Guess what???

(Via Girl Gone Gardening)

Posted by admin to bulbs, trees, video, work on 2008-02-11, 09:29:00

10*, feels like -2*, 82% humidity, E 10 mph wind, light snow, SNOW ADVISORY, FLOOD WARNING I got the job. WOHOO! BOOOOYA! Ahem.To celebrate, I ordered some trees. 2 apricots, 2 pears, and a sour cherry. The order comes with 6 free asiatic lilies, from Stark Bro.

What Does Your Landscaping Need?

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-02-11, 07:51:33

There are a few different things that any good landscaping will need to be successful. First you should know what a successful landscaping is. To be successful a landscaping needs to be well thought out and all issues must be dealt with and accounted for.

Easy Landscaping

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-02-11, 07:50:51

How Can you make the landscaping Issue as simple as possible...

Bonsai Pots

(Via Home and Family: Gardening Articles from EzineArticles.com)

Posted by admin to Uncategorized on 2008-02-11, 07:17:26

As we all know growing up a bonsai is an art, the focus is not only the main product in this case plant but also the surrounding which makes the central thing look even better. You should remember that pot is not only a frame of a bonsai it is part of the whole thing.

Oslo, Norway

(Via gardenauthor)

Posted by admin to Fort Oslo, Klaserose, Oslo Norway, roses on 2008-02-11, 05:46:00


Above 2 photos: Fort Oslo, Norway

Above: Klaserose 'Riberhus' Poulsen 1998... Bred in Denmark by Poulsen
A floribunda, with repeating flower clusters, throughout the season.
Full growth, with a mature height of about 4 feet.
Sold as 'Grand Canyon' is the USA.

Above: Klaserose 'Astrid Lindgren' Poulsen 1989... Bred in Denmark by Poulsen
A floribunda, whose flower clusters repeat occasionally through the summer.
This is a tall beauty, maturing at 4-8 feet.
May be more familiar as 'Dream Sequence'.

Above: Klaserose 'Fellowship' Harkness 1992... Also known as 'Living Easy'
Bred in Hertfordshire, England by Robert Harkness & Co.
Introduced in the USA by Weeks Wholesale Rose Grower, as 'Easy to Love'
Floribunda, whose orange clusters repeat throughout the season on a 2 1/2-5' shrub.

Klaserose 'La Sevillana' Meilland 1978... Bred in France by Marie Louise Meilland
This red floribunda is also a repeat bloomer.
At 2-4 feet, it can also be trained as a ground cover.

Special thanks, again to S.R. Calef for the ©2007 photos from his European cruise.

Disclaimer: The above photos are not mine, although I am grateful for such photos and the opportunity to share them, through this blog. I am not a world traveler. Not even close. On three separate occasions, did I travel great distances from my New England home. Are you ready? Mapleton, Maine - Mystic, Connecticut - Desmoines, Iowa - "that's all folks!" Seriously. So, I guess I'm living vicariously through the travels of others. Who knows, maybe someday I'll get me one o' them new-fangled digital cameras. Mustn't rush these things. Perhaps I'm still in mourning for my poor little dead Advantix camera... at some point, I shall move on.

HelpMeFind/Roses may be of interest to the avid or casual rose grower... The "Rose Search" capabilities are marvelous - you can join and contribute, as well.

©2008 Deb Lambert