✓ Winterhard, robuust & compact✓ Ongelooflijke bloemenzee van zomer tot herfst✓ Voor potten, bloembakken & tuinperkenDeze nieuwe topsoort betovert uw potten, bloembakken en tuinperken! Lilly Rose® Wonder5 behoort tot de nieuwe generatie rozen, die met een ongelooflijke hoeveelheid bloemen van de zomer tot aan de herfst bloeien. De kleine struikroos is uitstekend geschikt tussen elke zomerbeplanting in het tuinperk, op het balkon en het terras. Als mix en ook solitair wordt de Lilly Rose® een mooie blikvanger. De vele bloemknoppen van de Lilly Rose® Wonder5 (Morus macroura) lijken oneindig en bekoorlijk. De compacte groei en het feit dat ze robuust is tegen de typische rozenziektes zoals de echte meeldauw, roest of sterroestdauw zorgt voor mooi groeiende planten. Plant de Lilly Rose® Wonder5 op een zonnige tot halfschaduwrijke standplaats met een voedingsrijke, losse bodem. De winterharde, meerjarige plant wordt ca. 35 tot 40 cm hoog en bloeit van juni tot oktober. (Morus macroura)
This flower is a great choice to add as a marginal plant to your pond or waterfall. Calla lilies are easy to grow and beautiful.
(via Favourite Rose | Gardeners Corner)
Tumblr Blog
Yellow banksia climbing rose
Visit the post for more.
Unless specified, photos of this blog are not mine. If you see one of yours and you'd like it removed, please message me. Visit my other blogs on tumblr... https://www.tumblr.com/blog/mangegrenouille and https://www.tumblr.com/blog/whimsicalsteampunky
Our garden seems to be the only one festooned with beautifying ivy in our quartier. Perhaps because so many think that ivy is the great destroyer of buildings? In the past, gardeners weren't frightened of its power to cover. It was well clipped. And that it what happens chez nous. I take the shears to it at least four times yearly. Its colour is quite dark and foreboding during winter, but when spring comes along, oh, such a bright, friendly green says, hello! I also hose down ivy covering the pergola and alongside one boundary fence about twice yearly. Become friends with your ivy, and the birds who eat its berries during winter when there isn't much else in the larder will thank you. In addition, roses look scrumptious against a background of ivy. Ferdinand Pichard (bred by Rémi Tanne France, 1921) is a fragrant, reblooming Bourbon rose. Its pink, cupped flowers are heavily striped with white, crimson, and magenta. Next to it, is probably another old rose, but unfortunately I have yet been able to identify it. The texture and colour has a mysterious quality. Depending on the angle and distance from which it is seen, it shimmers between coral velvet and pink silk. Its blooms are quartered and huge with a stupendous fragrance. And it loves ivy. My gardening approach is to watch plants grow so as to ascertain what the best interface with them is. In the process, I get to learn a lot. For example, ivy can gussy up a leggy rose without killing it. Of course, the rose in question is a toughie. I suspect it has been around many decades, scraping out nourishment from being planted smack next to the patio. Miniature gladioli have sidled up to it too. It seems it's a magnet for other plants. On the first of May in France, sellers of lily of the valley take to the streets for it is a traditional practice to give said blooms to loved ones. Years ago, a neighbour gave me a few plants, and now, they have spread, covering four times their original area. They self-seed readily, and apparently learning the beautifying lesson from the ivy, they fill in cement cracks and grow around the lavender, naturally snuffing out what was once the stomping grounds of some serious weeds like thistles and bindweed. What a delight it is to bring in a bunch of lily-of-the-valley indoors! Gradually its fragrance filled up my office with its fresh, sweet scent making me feel that somehow I am outdoors in the garden while I write this post. When the yucca was planted here about ten years ago it had already spent nearly ten years as a potted specimen on our Grenoble balcony. In its former location, it had a wonderful view of the Belledonne range dotted with villages and church steeples. In its present location, I like to think though the view can't match what it had in the past, its robust growth is telling me that it's actually happier here because this spikey beauty can spread its roots. Providing a dramatic background, it's a perfect foil for the fluffy heads of Blue Parrot tulips. Blue Parrot tulips are closer to lavender in terms of colour, with a bronzy sheen, however their white centres contain an irregular areola of true blue. In the small patio cut-out, the calla lilies are flourishing most likely at the expense of the Queen Elizabeth shrub rose. Our garden location is a fortunate one because though it is an urban setting, it is right on the edge of the city giving unobstructed sky views. Having such spaciousness overhead accentuates the coziness of the garden even more. À la prochaine!
You made me radiate while intently watching me as I effortlessly released celestial illuminated rays of you.
Two Purple Calla lilies:
I loved my wedding day so much, but if I did a redo (to the same mister, of course), it would look exactly like this beauty from One and Only Paris Photography . South of France? Check. Maids in gorg...
Rose apple tree growing instruction & requirement Rose apple tree info: climate, zone, growth speed, water, light, planting season & colors
None of these photos are mine. I just share what touches my heart.
Did you go out and buy an Easter Lily this year? Or maybe you received one as a gift for Easter and wondering what to do with it once the holiday is over. You'll be happy to know that the Easter Lily is a perennial that can be planted outside once the ground can be worked in the spring.Easter Lily care while it is in your home:At home, keep your lily away from cold drafts or drying heat sources such as heating ducts. Bright, indirect light is best with daytime temperatures of 65° to 75° F. Water the plant when the soil feels dry to the touch, but do not over water. To prolong the life of the blossoms, remove the yellow anthers (pollen-bearing pods) found in the center of each flower. You may want to wear gloves when doing this because you will have yellow fingers. Be sure not to get any pollen on your clothes, it will stain.Planting Outside:Once your lily is done blooming, you may plant it outside, once the ground has warmed up enough to be worked. Choose a sunny area with well-drained soil. Set the top of the bulb six-inches below the soil surface. Cut off the old flowers, but leave the stem and leaves. Do not cut back the stem until it dies down in the fall, then cut it off at the soil surface. After the soil surface freezes in late fall, mulch the soil and do not remove the mulch until new growth begins in the spring.Watch our video on Easter Lily care below:
Austin rose
Get cottage garden style when you learn to grow climbing roses. They add abundant flowers when grown on pillars, fences, arbors, and gazebos.
Tumblr Blog
Hver uke nå fylles glasskrukkene opp med deilige sommerblomster,i dag har jeg funnet hundekjeks.Fantastisk dekorative og plukket rett ute...
The name of this beautiful flower that originates from a marshy soil in South Africa comes from the Greek word 'Καλά' that means 'good, beautiful'. Despite that name, Calla lily (Zantedeschia aethiopica) is not really
Like why the delicate flower is a favorite of royal brides, for starters.
Tumblr Blog
New! Versatile Group 2 snapdragon. Robust stems, high-quality blooms, and uniform growth in the field or greenhouse. Group 2 snapdragon bred for performance under short days and low temperatures. We've found the Costa Series to be more adaptable than most Group 2 snapdragons, in that the plants produce strong stems and high-quality blooms even under slightly warmer and longer days than would be ideal for a Group 2 series. Costa performs well in our spring and fall trials both in the field and tunnel, and overwintered (fall-planted inside an unheated tunnel for early spring flowering). Flower quality and stem quality are reduced under long days and high temperatures. Costa Light Rose II is slightly shorter and more compact compared to other Costa varieties in this series. Flowering time, bloom quality, and stem quality are consistent with the rest of the Costa II Series. Edible Flowers: The flowers are a colorful garnish for use in salads, desserts, and drinks. The flavor is floral and slightly bitter, so use sparingly. Specs: Plant Height: 28–36" Packet: 50 seeds Avg. 185,000 seeds/oz Read More