Saturday, April 30, 2005

Yellow columbine brightens the day


Better than pills... Posted by Hello

The Montelindo Gardening Club Motto:

Digging in your garden
is cheaper than pills.
Planting and growing
will take away ills.
So remember your garden
when you're feeling low
You'll feel much better
when things start to grow.
By Peggy Court

A few years ago, I had the pleasure to belong to a gardening club; The Montelindo Gardening Club. It was great. I learned so much and the members were so generous with their gardens. It takes 30 years to became a good gardener. It's a very long learning curve.
I stopped going, only because I stopped going to the monthly meetings.
I seldom found the time.
I wasn't a very good member, having a full time job.
I can't wait till I can join another gardening club, in our new place.

What price is serenity?


Sitting on the park bench and this is what I see Posted by Hello

Park Bench, Pond and tranquility


Daisy Mae likes to fish Posted by Hello

Daisy Mae can keep herself occupied just by looking at the fish.
I can keep myself content by just looking at her, listening to the trickle of the small waterfall, watching a butterfly sail thru the garden and spotting a plant in bloom that wasn't so yesterday.

Friday, April 29, 2005

Nature is not a place to visit, it is Home!


Yes, I am finally posting a picture of the house Posted by Hello

Things are moving along. The house and garden will be on the MLS listing May 9th.

The house is painted just two years ago, a pale wisteria, with white trim and gray contrast.
The front of the house has a great palm tree, which we assume was planted over 40 years ago.
The front is very low maintenance, the shrubs get trimmed every other year.
The front flower bed was planted last year with pastel colors of blue, pink, lavender, and white.

The tall plants are Pride of Madeira, Echium fastusum. There are some great photos of this plant, already posted on this blog.

A large pink camellia anchors the garden to the entrance way of the house. It stand six feet and was one of the original plants we kept, when we redesigned the front bed. It is outstanding and starts to bloom in December and continues thru the spring. There are still bloom on it today.

I have lavender lantana in front of the Pride of Maderia and along side of the house. It is a perfect striking accent. Birds are attracted to lantana. It is an evergreen vine shrub.

The front row of the bed is Society Garlic, Tulbaghia.violacea. The leaves are a bluish green, very narrow and can grow to 1 feet long. It grows in clumps and spreads easily. I have over 15 plant and they all were propageted from two plants. The flowers dance in the breeze with their rosy lavender color. Some people don't like the scent, but it does cut down on ants.

Along the steps and right in front of the house, we planted white flowers that are an iris type that were given to me and I cultivated till they filled a six foot planter box. Very low maintenance. When I want more flowers, I simply water them more often.

Next is Lily of the Nile , Agapanthus pops bright blue flowers in mid summer and early fall. It stands right next to the steps and offers a cheery hello.

The porch is tiled and has a landing, that I sometimes place large potted plants on.

Sneak into the kitchen for your first look


When there are flowers on your table.... Posted by Hello

The kitchen is one the two reasons we bought the house, the kitchen and the land.
We knew that the land over a third of an acre would keep us happy with planting.
We knew that the kitchen would be the center of the home.

It is large and open. Our table can seat 8. You can sit in the kitchen and look into the living room and out into the garden.

Country Kitchen


County Kitchen Posted by Hello
Large and bright. The washer and dryer are behind the accordion doors.
They are included with the house.
The refrigerator and dishwasher are included.
The kitchen also had a greenhouse window box, perfect for African violets.
Lots of cupboard, that are very deep and welcoming.
The ceiling fan keeps the room cool and often helps out with my cooking disappointments.
The tile floor is brand new.
The kitchen was recently repainted white and I have accented the room with blue.
The curtains are slate blue with pink roses.
The white blinds are brand new and cover all four windows.
The sunporch is right outside the kitchen door .

Roses make me smile


Heirloom, two dazzling purple roses Posted by Hello

Some people are always grumbling because roses have thorns. I am thankful that thorns have roses. - Alphonse Karr (1808-1890)

Up Close with Fragrant Memory


Show me your petals... Posted by Hello
I don't know what I enjoy more; growing them or taking tight close up photos of them.

Mr. Lincoln in full bloom


A Rose is a Rose is a Rose Posted by Hello

Thursday, April 28, 2005

Yorkies in the garden


Which way did it go? Posted by Hello

Yesterday, Blaze came to visit and I wanted to get some cute photo's of them in the garden.
Easier said than done. They would stay but they seldom looked in the same direction at the same time.

Yet, you get the garden to scale. Nasturtiums are everywhere and I love their carefree attitude.
Alyssum is blended into the pathways as white fluffy groundcovering. Cannas are still short and very green. There is lavender in the background and pink geraniums in the far background.
Yellow, Orange, White, Purple and Hot Pink. I never said this garden was shy.

Daisy and Blaze  Posted by Hello

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Angel Bunny


Angel Bunny waits for blooms Posted by Hello

I have a few stone statues in the garden. She is my favorite. I move her around to keep pace with the blooms. We got her during one of our trips looking for land. She was is a cute garden shop in Eureka Springs, Arkansas. We carried her back in our carry on bag and she keeps an eye on things when we are gone. She will be going on with us to our new place, but in the mean time she is happy to be sitting here.

Breath of Heaven


Pink dainty heatherlike leaves Posted by Hello

This is the prettiest evergreen shrub I have and have ever seen. I have a good size one in the middle of the garden and it is early to bloom. I also placed one in the front of the house.
So easy to grow, the worst thing to do is overwater. It is native to South Africa and is also called Pink Diosma. It can grow to 5 feet and this one is about 3 feet and spreading. It looks great in a bouquet with Rosemary and they both have a easy going scent.

April Rain Song

Let the rain kiss you.
Let the rain beat upon your head with silver liquid drops.
Let the rain sing you a lullaby.
The rain makes still pools on the sidewalk.
The rain makes running pools in the gutter.
The rain plays a little sleep-song on our roof at night--And I love the rain.-
Langston Hughes, 1902-1967, April Rain Song

A garden song

I'm a gardener and I'm OK.
I sleep all night and I plant all day!
I dress in grubby clothing, and hang around with slugs.
Oh I'm happy in the garden With dirt and plants and bugs . . .
(to the tune of Monty Python's "I'm a Lumberjack")

Pink so Pink it smells Pink


Fragrant Memory Posted by Hello

This rose was one of my first roses purchased. I do remember the details, when I was planning my rose garden over 14 years ago. I love garden catalogues and Jackson Perkins is one of the best. I thumbed thru many catalogue but I didn't know where to start; what criteria would I use. I was planning to buy 6 roses. I wanted to have a theme.

Scent! That is what lead me to roses.

Stop and smell the roses! How many times have we heard that and how many times we ignore the act and it's meaning. Why are we in such a hurry? When did it become an honor badge to be too busy to do anything we want to do? Roses are my way of slowing down.

I do go out to the garden and just smell a beautiful rose. Fragrant Memory always come true.
It's a perfect pink color. It is Hybrid Tea rose, the most popular class of rose. The flowers are large and shapely and produce one flower on a stem. I have two Fragrant Memory bushes.
One I bought and one I grew from a cutting. It is the most rewarding gardening act, I have been able to accomplish. One year, I placed a cutting in water. It took. I planted it in a pot and then in the garden. It sounds so simple, but I have never been able to do it again. It's mostly like the time element. I am just to busy or so I think..

Soft as cashmere hug


Graceland: Yellow Rose of Tennessee Posted by Hello

My husband prefers the color yellow. When I ask him what color should I get, in regards to any new plant, piece of clothing, ect. He says yellow. Sometime I buy yellow, so he won't mind me buying something new, that I really don' t need. I am a redhead and yellow may not be my best color. I have a great deal of yellow thru out the garden.

Yellow is a flower being happy. Yellow roses are the happiest roses in the garden.
I have two yellow roses; Graceland and SunFlare, both Floribundas. Graceland is softer in color and more generous with blooms. I don't know if Graceland comes from Tennessee, but I am sure it was named after the King .

Singing in the rain


Singing in the Rain strikes a chord with me Posted by Hello

I have two orange rose bushes. Boy, am I understating them. Neither are orange, they are sunsets in motion. Singing in the Rain is a Floribunda. I bought it because I love the musical and this flower is so aptly named. The other Floribunda is Brass Band and it has more intense color.

All my roses are in wine barrels. They are my days of wine and roses.
I pamper my roses. They are truly worth the time and effort.
They are in wine barrels so I can easily feed them and it keeps the critters from coming close.

A good friend of mine said that if there is reincarnation, she wants to come back as one of my pets. They live a great life. If I could come back, I would be a rose in my garden.

These Petals are the best dress I never wore


Mr. Lincoln as he blooms Posted by Hello

When I was younger I wore red dresses. It certainly was a state of mind. Now, I will wear red coats and blazers, usually toned down with black pants. A red dress is like a red rose.
It can not be ignored.


Why we love red roses


Mr. Lincoln before he unfolds Posted by Hello

Today this rose is in full bloom and the scent is better than anything I smelled in a very long while. It is deep and and dusky and smells better than a glassful of Cabernet Franc.
The bloom is as large as my hand with my finger's outstreched. If I was a rose, I would be red.
It knocks me out

Tuesday, April 26, 2005

Rural Life is lived, not discussed


Rural Life just 20 miles from San Francisco Posted by Hello

Rural life is lived: not discussed, not thought about, not outlined or drawn, not listed or accounted for: nor even written. It is spoken and done and danced and handled and sung and built, but these forms are significant only in the doing and the recalling of the doing of them: they have no life of their own beyond the living. For this reason rural life is fragile, evanescent, vanishing: it the moment it is grasped it disappears. Today as it is being grasped and handled and interpreted, it is most susceptible of disappearing. At best, we can peek around the corner, step through the gate, smell the distant sweetness of horses in the wind, but we cannot hold or turn it around and look at it or say what we know before thought ever rises to speech.
Excerpted from writings of Rev. Jerry Smith Sewanee, Tennessee

You can find your rural life just a few miles from city life. It really is in sight. It all depends on your frame of mind. It simply is your hands in dirt and your eyes resting on a rose petal or a bird in flight. It is the fragrance captured by rain, bouncing off jasmine and roses. It's neighbors with horses, rabbits or goats. It's a fenced in backyard large enough for Great Danes or Yorkshire Terriers. It's deer paths that are used daily by a trio of deer. It's a fish pond, with gold fish and frogs. It's here. It can be yours.

The Meaning of Flowers

Flowers are meaningful to us. They light up nature and the deep recesses of our mind.
If you love somebody what do you give them on special occasion? Flowers!
If you really love somebody what do you give them for no reason at all ? Flowers!
If you want to make somebody happy for the rest of their life, what do you give them? A Garden!!!!!

I found an interesting list of some popular garden flowers and their meanings. I highlighted in green the flowers that can be found in this garden. Imagine the interesting bouquets that you could make for your family and friends.

Alstroemeria: Devotion and friendship
Alyssum: Worth beyond beauty
Anemone: Unfading love
Apple Blossom: Good Fortune
Artemisia: Dignity
Baby’s Breath: Everlasting Love
Calla Lily: Magnificent Beauty
Camellia: Perfected Loveliness
Carnation: Pride and Beauty, Fascination
Carnation (striped): Refusal
Carnation (yellow): Disappointment
Cyclamen: It’s over, goodbye
Daffodil: Unrequited Love
Daisy: Innocence
Forget-me-not: Memories
Foxglove: Insincerity
Gardenia: Secret Love
Gladioli: Sincerity
Heather (pink): Good Luck
Jasmine: Cheerful & Graceful
Lilac: First sign of love
Lily: Purity of Heart
Lily (white): Purity & sweetness
Lily (orange): Hatred
Lily of the Valley: Return of Happiness
Marigold: Cruelty or Jealousy
Mums (white): Truth
Mums (yellow): Slighted
Orange Blossom: Marriage and Fruitfulness
Orchid: Beauty
Peony: Shame or Happy marriage
Queen Anne’s Lace: Fantasy
Red Rose: Passionate Rose
Rudbeckia: Justice
Sweet Pea: Good by
Violet: Modesty
Yellow Daylilies: Coquetry
Zinnia (burgundy): Lasting Affection
Zinnia (mixed): Thoughts of absent friends

If you pass the color purple in a field


The Color Purple Posted by Hello
"If you pass the color purple in a field and you don't notice , God gets really pissed off."
Alice Walker

I do love the color purple in a garden. What could be more awakening, more alive?
I have it splashed thru out the garden. Here is a patch of unidentified chrysanthemum. I bought a pot of them at K-Mart one summer. I just liked their color and petals. If you look closely they are like little spokes . One small pot has increased in size and it fills a corner of the bed.

There are about 160 species of chrysanthemum, mostly native to China, Japan and. Europe. I don't know anything specific about this plant, another than I noticed it's unusual petals. I call it my K-Mart special, because I have never found it in another nursery or garden shop.

Monday, April 25, 2005

Squirrels pay homage to garden


Sea Lavender attracts garden statues Posted by Hello

I have always called this plant statice. It is limonium but it is also known as sea lavender.
It's a sturdy perennial in the garden. I have it planted beneath the honeysuckle that enmasses the fence. Yellow and purple are a reoccuring color theme in the garden. I like it because it is long lasting, fresh or dried in a flower arrnagements. For crafts, this flower addes a pop of color and a touch of romance with is small cluster of delicate tiny flowers. It's easy to do. Just take a rubber band and join several bunches together and hang in the garage.

Outside in the garden looking in....


French Doors; Oh La La! Posted by Hello

Funny story about these doors. I came home from work one day, shortly after we moved in to the house. The living room had a basic sliding door that lead to the backyard. Some day we said we will put in beautiful french doors. Someday meant a few years from now.......
My husband said that evening "Honey good news, the sliding door we hated are no longer a problem. They broke. It looks like it would be a good time to get those french doors we wanted."

We not only got french doors, we got double ones that open wide when needed to let the fresh air in. The two hanging flower baskets carry pretty purple mums that flower twice a year, once in the spring and again in the fall.

Friday, April 22, 2005

Redwood Deck runs along the back of the house


All hands on deck Posted by Hello

The deck is our outdoor room. It's long and lanky and runs into the Hot tub.
We established a dining area and have enjoyed many a meal here. Breakfast brings the song of birds. Dinner you can hear the waterfall from the fish pond. If we eat lunch here, it usually sitting on the lounge chairs with our plate on our laps. The views are great from anywhere on the deck.

Thursday, April 21, 2005

Please Mister Postman.....


Curb Appeal Posted by Hello


This was gift of love, made by my husband. Yes, we are leaving it, because it has become an integral part of the home. Our mailman said it was the best mailbox on his route. Yesterday, I planted some white cosmos in the winebarrel, along with the bachelor buttons that I planted three weeks ago. The climbing plant is honeysuckle. What a sweet scent!

The interior of the box is carpeted and wallpapered. The exterior is decorated with hand painted wood cut outs. It's a happy mailbox for a happy home.

Wednesday, April 20, 2005

Where do you live?

Okay, I have been asked enough times.
Where is this garden? Where do you live?

I am ready to spill the beans............

El Sobrante is located in Contra Costa County between Richmond and Pinole. Since the 1970s, the semirural nature of El Sobrante has become increasingly urbanized by developers who are building housing projects on the remaining ranches and farms. During this time houses were increasingly being built on small city-sized lots. Fortunately, the community has fought back against this unchecked urbanization by organizing spunky grassroots groups, earning El Sobrante the reputation of being a difficult place for large developers to get their subdivisions approved. The home prices are much more affordable for most people than Berkeley or Oakland.

What's the Buzz?

I had this creative plan to get gardeners to get buzzing about this garden. I have placed high hopes on this blog. I want it to create interest first and foremost and then afterwards provide a history of the garden for it's next caretaker.

My efforts to record my memories have been a mixed blessing.
I am growing nostalgic as I reminisce. It's okay. I know I am going on to a better place.
No, I am not dying, I am moving on to 30 acres in Tennessee. I am also inheriting a garden.
The former owner of our Tennessee property planted flowers everywhere, on 8 cleared acres. Today, I was told there are 1,000 daffodil's in bloom on our property. Even if that is an exaggeration, those daffodils could fill many vases.

I hope this blog will help the next person identify the bulbs that will be popping up next spring.
I would wait one entire year to give witness to this garden. I wouldn't pull a thing, other than weeds. I wouldn't plant a thing, till September. I would dig carefully in the main garden, there isn't much left unplanned.

The hillside is an nearly an open canvas. The hillside has a huge iris patch, easy to identify. It has one fruite tree,a White Peach tree. Yes, we did get some peaches one year. It also has a massive Oleander in a pretty peach color and a smaller Oleander in white. In one corner, there is a giant Prickly Pear Cactus that bears enough fruit that you could go in business, making prickly pear cactus jelly. Vinca minor growing restlessly on the top of the hill. A few patches of daffodils, some spearmint, some succulents and a half dozen 40 foot pine trees completes the picture.

We don't water the hillside. It's like a a rambunctious teenager that has decied to live on it's own. It's doing well. The plants hold up the hillside and they add color. There are two deer paths that are used daily. The deer have enough to eat out here, that they just cruise thru. Nothing is better than to be working in my office and see a trio of deer just walking by. A week ago, I saw two possums walking along the deer path. They were on their way somewhere, but then they were just passing by. God, they are ugly. I hadn't seen possum for over ten years here. Yeah, I know in Tennessee, they would have been considered dinner.

My very favorite wildlife critter is red fox. We had a pair that lived in the open spaces around here. I haven't seen them in a few years. We have video tape of them mating on our hillside. It was amazing that we were able to film them, the first year we move here.
I love red fox. Everyday that I had the good luck to see one, I would consider it a lucky day.
I named one Blaze and the other one Sizzle. Yes, they are wildlife, but it doesn't stop me from naming them. I think with all the new construction that is happening here, it is limiting their space. They may have moved on. Red fox need about 3 miles to call their own. Their is still a lot of open space around here, but the big homes are moving in.....

Tuesday, April 19, 2005

Lavender Lady


Angel Face, First Rose of the Season Posted by Hello

The first rose was sighted April 5th. It's a delicate lavender Floribunda climbing rose. I have two of them along the fence, across from the breakfast deck. They are from a famous Napa Winery, that I use to work for. I became good friends with the winery's gardener and he would pot up plants for me. I wanted Angle Face for it's color and style.

I am a little late in posting this photo. Today, the garden is in 1/2 bloom with roses. The photographer comes tomorrow and will be taking photo's of the house and garden. Our house will be up for sale next month, May 12th is the broker's tour.