Jumat, 25 April 2008
The Snowdrop Screensaver
Poinsettias the Christmas Star Flower Screensaver
Breathtaking Flowers Screensaver
The Blue Passion Flower Screensaver
Primrose Screensaver
Japanese Cherry Screensaver
The Cowslip Screensaver
Sunflowers Screensaver
A Weed of National Significance
Flowers Photo Screensaver
Sabtu, 19 April 2008
Mexican Sunflower
Orange Chiffon Poppy
Single Lilac Breadseed Poppy
Danebrog Poppy
Dwarf Breadseed Poppy
Falling In Love Poppy (Flanders)
Annual. An eye-popping variety of the famous Flanders Poppy of World War I fame. Falling In Love blooms papery-petaled flowers in glowing pinks, reds, and whites. Single plants are rich in blooms and several plants together create a field of flowers that will dazzle the eye! Blooms are 3", plants grow to 12-18".
Ladybird Poppy
Annual. An heirloom favorite and one of the most prolific poppies available, the beautiful Ladybird (a British word for Ladybug) is garden head-turner. Bright red flowers with black spots are born on 1-1.5ft blooms. A single small plant can have 10-20 simultaneous blooms and several dozen throughout the course of a season! Great in containers.
Yellow Evening Primrose
White Rose Campion
Rose Campion
Money Plant, Honesty
Mexican Tulip Poppy
Purple Gleam California Poppy
White California Poppy
California Poppy
Tassel Flower, Lady's Paint Brush
Pacific Beauty Calendula
Seeds are from the Pacific Beauty mix, with large orange and yellow flowers. Pretty, low-growing annual native to Southern Europe that is instantly recognizable by its bright flowers. In addition to its ornamental beauty, calendula has been used for centuries medicinally---usually topically as a skin ointment, and to treat a wide range of skin disorders.
Yarrow
Jumat, 11 April 2008
Pennsylvania State Flower
The Blue Passion Flower
The free screensaver “The Blue Passion Flower” was created by RateMyScreensaver.com and contains 28 high resolution images of the blue passion flower. The Blue Passion Flower (Passiflora caerulea), also known as the Common Passion Flower, is a vine native to southern Brazil and Argentina (where it is known as the Pasionaria or Mburucuyá in GuaranÃ).It is popular with gardeners because of its intricate, scented flowers that have an almost plastic-looking appearance. The unusual shape of the flowers has led to the plant being associated in Christian symbolism with the passion of Jesus; the three stigmas representing the three nails used to nail Jesus to the cross, the ovary and its stalk represent the chalice of the Last Supper, the five anthers represent the five wounds, the corona represents the crown of thorns, the ten ‘petals’ (actually five petals and five sepals) the apostles (save Judas the traitor and Peter the denyer); the old leaves also represent the hands of those who persecuted him, the young leaves the point of the lance used to stab him, and the tendrils the whips of those who beat him.
Small jam pot, daffodil
Oval Trinket Box, snowdrop
Gordon Plate, tulip
Gordon Plate, marguerite
Kamis, 10 April 2008
Large Plate, daffodil
Oval Plate, cornflower and buttercup
David Austin Rose Sir Walter Raleigh
Of limited availability, David Austin English rose Sir Walter Raleigh is best suited for experienced gardeners, largely due to the cultural demands required to ensure success. The blossoms, outstanding in form and fragrance, are produced somewhat stingily throughout the season. The blooms are a warm pink, and have been described as being similar to a peony. Watch out for mildew and rust in areas where these maladies are prevalent.
Knockout Roses
Knockout roses have been the rage in recent years. Introduced in 1999 by Star Roses, and an AARS winner, Knockout roses have been the subject of some controversy (the ‘why’ in a bit) within the rose community. Truthfully, I had to conduct some soul-searching of my own about this rose. Even my mother started a crusade to get some type of answer out of me with regards to the Knockout rose. After much consideration, I have to (surprisingly to those who know me and even to myself) give the Knockout rose an enthusiastic thumbs up. A little late perhaps, as it seems the market has already spoken. So what exactly is the deal with Knockout roses?
Pale Coneflower - Echinacea pallida
Not to be confused with Purple Coneflower, Pale Coneflower is not often seen in the garden. This fact, combined with Pale Coneflower’s many strengths recommends it fully. One might have to search a bit to find a nursery but I’m quite certain that my readers are an astute enough crowd to snuffle around the web and sort it out. Pale Coneflower bears flowers that are similar to Purple Coneflower, enough so that other gardeners in your town will stop, look twice or thrice, and then do one of three things: One, scurry nervously down the street to their own home and begin a frantic search through their catalogs to discover what’s going on with that strange coneflower down the street in their strange neighbor’s garden (you are strange, aren’t you?)…Two, have the nerve to ask you (good on ‘em because we can always learn)…or Three, exclaim with great joy the boldness and great discerning quality of any gardener so marvelous as to include Pale Coneflower in their garden. It is, simply put, a gardener’s garden plant.
David Austin English Rose Abraham Darby
Abraham Darby is one of the most widely grown David Austin English roses, and with good reason. Abraham Darby is a shrub with classic flowers that also has the desired qualities of wonderful fragrance, excellent re-bloom, strong growth and disease resistance. Abraham Darby is the kind of result David Austin had in mind when he began his search for the new English Rose. Large blossoms can vary in color from soft peach to pink to apricot, and each perfectly formed flower is truly lovely. More, the fragrance is rich and memorable.
Floribunda Rose Hot Cocoa
Floribunda rose Hot Cocoa is, simply put, one of the most beautiful roses ever. Compared to the beauty of Hot Cocoa in full-bloomed glory, many roses are merely pretenders. Some readers have taken exception to my general coolness to Hybrid Tea and Floribunda roses, and that’s perfectly okay by me. One must remember (note to self) that there is a reason roses stir such passion, and as a rose, Hot Cocoa is staggeringly beautiful. Stunning. Smoldering. Hit me in the chest, take my breath away, can’t think or speak, just as if I laid eyes the first time on a beautiful woman. It happens so rarely, but when the stars align, love truly can be at first sight.
Grandiflora Rose Strike It Rich
Grandiflora rose Strike It Rich is an old-fashioned garden rose of the modern era, and by this, I mean it’s the kind of rose that might have been found in the 1950’s or 1960’s when we worried whether our martini’s would be ready after work or whether the Russians were indeed coming (and in that order). A 2007 All-America Rose Selection, Strike It Rich was bred by Tom Carruth, who has a undeniable talent for hybridizing stunning and unusual roses (see Hot Cocoa for more evidence of Carruth’s awesome powers). Strike It Rich has a famous parent, Sutter’s Gold, AARS 1950, and thus the connection to the glory days (for some) of the post-war optimism of that time.