Sunday, June 14, 2015

The many colors of June

The June landscape is less riotous than that of April and May, but I've still got a near-rainbow of flowers to report for Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day.

I don't see any red out there, but there's orange:

Coreopsis 'Creme Caramel'
And also the orange ditch lilies peeking out behind the blueberries:


Speaking of which, let's jump ahead to blue, and away from flowers for the moment:


Mm, blueberry season.

Other daylilies besides Hemerocallis fulva are beginning to bloom, though it'll be another week before they're plentiful. (I note, looking back at previous Bloom Days, that the same was true last year, but in 2012 there were lots of daylilies in mid-June. (No post in June 2013.)) Anyway, here's one (I don't have the name; think I grew it from seed in a mix):


More yellow in St. John's Wort:


And in the low-growing sedums in this shot of the front bed:


Accompanied by blue brodiaea (or perhaps triteleia), some thyme in the back of the tall sedum, and a pink annual dianthus.

Let's abandon the rainbow and move on into the whites:

Feverfew
An early-blooming hosta
Astilbe
Motherwort
And clary sage, edging over into pink
And there's quite a lot of pink:

Spiraea japonica, having survived yet another transplant

Echinacea

Spiderwort

Rose campion
I used to have a lot more of the last - it's probably been weeded out too severely.

Finally, the purple-blues (no one ever agrees on those colors):

Stokes' aster

Lavender
The lavender's in my community garden plot - look how huge it's grown. It's one of a half dozen plants there, all of which I grew from seed. Not sure what I'll do with that much lavender, but it's nice to have, and brings all the bees.

6 comments:

  1. You certainly do have a rainbow of colors in your garden this June! I am so envious of the lavender; I try to grow some every year, but it's never been very happy here. You could make lots of lavender sachets later in the season!

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    1. I'm very surprised at this lavender since I planted it in a hurry in clay loam and have given it nothing it likes except lots of sunshine - but it seems to appreciate that. Just saw a lavender advertised that's supposed to deal well with lots of usual problems - http://parkseed.com/phenomenal-lavender/p/v1899/ - not sure if it would help but maybe worth a try.

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  2. As you could see from my Facebook posts, June is a riot of color this year in NH. Very satisfying. If the critter that ate my purple kohlrabi leaves had just not found the hole in the deer netting...I would be a blissful gardener.

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    1. Very frustrating when they eat your garden! But otherwise it all looks beautiful.

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  3. I am sighing at your ripe blueberries - we won't have blueberry season until later in July. Just now starting to get local strawberries. Growing daylilies from seed is something I've never attempted and that lily is a nice one. Happy GBBD to you.

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    1. Yeah, I have some really early ones - most others around here are July berries too. The daylily seed I got from Park's years ago and it yielded a nice selection - but of course no way to tell what colors would turn up.

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