Cathy
Britain
plants
gardening
tulips
PINK
Cathy
Britain
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In a Vase on Monday: Ball and Chain - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
13.05.2024 / 08:15

In a Vase on Monday: Ball and Chain

Having decided to spare a few allium (probably A hollandicum) for today’s vase, I sought other material on the purple spectrum, cutting Geranium phaeum ‘Raven’, a deep purply-blue aquilegia and foliage from Persicaria ‘Red Dragon’ – but the combination just didn’t seem to work. Glancing up at the wisteria W floribunda ‘Multijuga’ in all its glory, it occurred to me that the purple hints in the racemes were on the same spectrum as the allium – would they last in a vase? I have no idea, but I decided to give them a try.

In a Vase on Monday: Last Chance Saloon - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
06.05.2024 / 08:27

In a Vase on Monday: Last Chance Saloon

Having cut spent flowering stems from all the hellebores over the weekend, amassing a large trugful of them, rather than compost them all I decided to use several stems in today’s vase. Not only was it the last opportunity this year to use hellebores in a vase, but this time I could also be sure, with seedpods well-swollen, that the stems will remain upstanding, unlike vases when the blooms were fresher. I wish I could tell you what colour the original blooms were, but I can’t; now, they are a very pale green with dark speckled centres, giving them a kind of vintage appearance.

In a Vase on Monday : A Splash of Blue and Some Curls - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com - Britain - Spain
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
03.05.2024 / 14:25

In a Vase on Monday : A Splash of Blue and Some Curls

Averting my eyes from the tulips which were shouting “Pick me! Pick me!” as I walked past, I headed towards the bottom end of the garden to pick some of the marauding Spanish bluebells that have sneaked their way in under/over/round the fence. The impact of bluebells in the garden has really registered in recent days, with the uninvited guests and the more local residents joining forces to provide by far and away the biggest splash of blue in the garden out of all the seasons. There may be little patches of blue from spring bulbs and isolated spots in the summer months, but bluebell season is something else and the splashes will only get larger and more widespread as time goes on, with even the English bluebells popping up in other parts of the garden than the woodland. By picking the Spanish bluebells, however, I can at least try and restrict their desire for dominance!

Grow these Purple Plants in jars, bottles, and vases - balconygardenweb.com
balconygardenweb.com
03.05.2024 / 14:24

Grow these Purple Plants in jars, bottles, and vases

If you want to repurpose your old glass kitchenware, just Grow these Purple Plants in jars, bottles, and vases. Now, you may wonder that why “Purple”? Purple, the color of royalty and luxury will vibe up your space to the next level. Beyond its aesthetic appeal, it will infuse your space with positive energy and a calming aura.

In a Vase on Monday: Pretty (Pink) Pods - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
03.05.2024 / 14:21

In a Vase on Monday: Pretty (Pink) Pods

Technical issues will keep this post brief as a mammoth Windows ‘update’ and ‘cleaning’ of my laptop yesterday evening would have kept me up way past my bedtime otherwise!

In a Vase on Monday: Strawberries n’ Cream - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
03.05.2024 / 14:17

In a Vase on Monday: Strawberries n’ Cream

I was trying to avoid tulips for today’s IAVOM, as they could easily become a mainstay for many weeks; however, these creamy tulips were tucked out of the way where they mightn’t otherwise be seen and, like last week’s fiery contribution, they are also a bit of an enigma. They are growing in the cutting beds where they were planted around 10 years ago with the sole purpose of cutting them. Presumably, they flowered in the first year of planting but, although there has been foliage in some of the intervening years, I don’t think there have been any further blooms until now. My guess is that these are mature bulblets from the original bulbs, now large enough to flower: I have only picked the two blooms that were in full flower, but there are others to come. They may be ‘Exotic Emperor’, which I have bought periodically over the years.

In a Vase on Monday: Spotting Signs of Spring - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com - Britain
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
18.03.2024 / 09:41

In a Vase on Monday: Spotting Signs of Spring

As was clear from many Six on Saturday posts this weekend, spring is very much on its way in the UK and some other northern hemisphere gardens, so spotting signs of it is a doddle, with spring bulbs very much to the fore. It was only after I snipped the contents for today’s vase that I remembered my intention to pick some of the double Narcissus ‘Tête Boucle’ from the baskets usually hanging at the front of the house, but removed to allow installation of external installation (delayed numerous times, unsurprisingly due to the weather) and now languishing largely unseen at the side of the property instead. Perhaps they will still look as good next week?

In a Vase on Monday: Sunshine and Blue Skies - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
11.03.2024 / 10:27

In a Vase on Monday: Sunshine and Blue Skies

Sadly, there were neither blue skies nor sunshine yesterday, when I created this vase, and if I had checked the forecast when I first got up I would have searched for and picked blooms, popped them in a vase and photographed them first thing, when it was at least dry. As it was, however, with other commitments later, I found myself dashing out in the rainy late afternoon to find something I could quickly cut and display and photograph.

In a Vase on Monday: Measure for Measure - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
04.03.2024 / 10:37

In a Vase on Monday: Measure for Measure

Like last week, I hadn’t a clue where to begin when I began my hunt for the contents of today’s IAVOM, but was prompted by the arabis shown on yesterday’s Six on Saturday, one clump of which grows close to the back door. The arabis firmly fixed the scale of the vase as ‘small’, making the rest of the task suddenly easier, as I cut unnamed pulmonaria and Cyclamen coum blooms, adding slightly reddish sprigs from Nandina domestica ‘Obsessed’ and an unlabelled heather that had been included in baskets at the front of the house to provide some height.

In a Vase on Monday: Keeping Watch at Twilight - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
26.02.2024 / 09:25

In a Vase on Monday: Keeping Watch at Twilight

I had no preconceived ideas of what I might pick for today’s vase but wanted to avoid hellebores and snowdrops, which would have been the easy option. I don’t have many summer snowflakes, Leucojum aestivum, but the first stems were in bud so I cut three as a starting point, keeping the stems long.

In a Vase on Monday: Keen as Mustard - ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com - Britain
ramblinginthegarden.wordpress.com
19.02.2024 / 10:51

In a Vase on Monday: Keen as Mustard

Many people think of daffodils as the harbingers of spring, but we gardeners know there can be many other early spring treasures delighting us before most of the daffodils begin to emerge. Whatever we think of yellow blooms, however, there is still something pleasingly cheery about daffodils and narcissi of various types although personally, I prefer the smaller varieties and those that are – yes, I have to admit it – less yellow.

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