Showing posts with label Tiger Lily. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tiger Lily. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Home from Nova Scotia

A container planting with a lime colored Coleus and Butterfly Gaura, Gaura lindheimeri

My Dad dressed in his maroon swimming trunks; a grey sweatshirt wrapped over his shoulders leans on a black cane with one hand and on my arm with the other. He is a small man, but his weight on my arm is considerable as we navigate the rough gravel path that leads down to the lakefront beach.

I had asked my Mom, as we made dinner together the night I arrived, what my eighty-seven year old Dad would most like to do while my sister Nancy and I were at home.

"He wants to go swimming," she told me.

Humble Lobelia in a metal bucket.

Our week-long visit has flown by and it is the final couple of days before my sister and I must fly back to our regular adult lives on different continents. The weather has turned overcast and a bit blustery, but we are both determined to honour Dad's wish to go for a summer swim.

Odd boulders and serpentine tree roots mean that every step my Dad and I take down the forested pathway to the lake is a new adventure for Dad and his cane. We pause frequently, so he can catch his breath.

When we finally reach the beach the lake is looking black and mighty cold. The two life guards in attendance are wearing jackets over their  swimsuits. Unfazed, my Dad takes my sister's arm, and with his cane in the other hand, he heads into the water. As my Mom and I watch anxiously from the shore, there are a few tense moments when he falters on the sand, but Dad recovers his balance and strides out into the dark water.

Chest deep he throws the cane back to us on shore and he and Nancy take the plunge.

Burr that's got to be cold!

But as I look at my Dad's face as it pops up out of the water, he looks only happy. While he struggles to be mobile on land, he is buoyant in the water. Jubilation is written all over his face.

That moment of sheer joy will most certainly be one of my dearest memories of my trip home to Nova Scotia.

Jacquie's Garden

There are lots of other wonderful memories too. 

Though there was little time to visit local gardens, Mom took me to visit her friend Jacquie's garden the afternoon I arrived.

Martagon lilies.

My favourite object in Jacquie's garden: a carving of a hand with long tapered fingers. The hand rests on an old wooden bench. One day I must ask her about the story behind the hand.



This is Valentine. 

As you can by her dark stare, Valentine eyed me with suspicion the whole time we were in Jacquie's garden. 

My Mom, on the other hand, she adored. Though Valentine notoriously dislikes visitors, she put her tiny paws up on my Mom's trouser legs and begged repeatedly to be petted. 

I am sure she would have nipped my hand if I had dared to do the same! So much for the notion I hold any sway with dogs!

Mahone Bay

Almost everywhere I went on my trip to Nova Scotia, there seemed to be flowers.

Liatris with pink Phlox paniculata in the background.


Blazing Star or Gayfeather, Liatris spicata: forms a low clump of grass-like foliage with flowers spikes of magenta-purple, white or flowers in late summer. Attractive to butterflies and bees. Full sun. Height: 75-90 cm, Spread: 30-45 cm. Laitris will grow in a variety of soil types and are pretty drought tolerant once established.

Honeysuckle Vine

Mahone Bay

Houses in Nova Scotia are sometimes painted the most outrageous colors.


I had to pull the car to the side of the road and take this picture.

Orange Tiger Lilies en masse.


My sisters and I (a third sister lives in Dartmouth, N.S.) did the most touristy thing we could possibly do: we went on a little mini-vacation that took us along the South Shore to Peggy's Cove and Mahone Bay. We avoided the main highway and opted instead for old twisty-turny road along shores of the Atlantic ocean.


The land that hugs the St. Margaret's Bay is a lunar landscape of granite boulders and plants that manage to cling to life in thin soil, salt air and harsh winds.

When you reach Peggy's Cove, the vista becomes a mix of rolling hills of stone and little salt water ponds.


The white lighthouse at Peggy's Cove is one of Nova Scotia's most famous landmarks.


Do you see the figure on the lower right?


This lady, with her wide brimmed hat and accordion, was singing traditional ballads 
for all the visiting tourists.


My sisters and I stayed overnight in this resort hotel.

We had our evening meal on the terrace and watched the sun go down. Dinner was delicious! I had roast chicken, while both my sisters enjoyed pan-seared halibut with scollops and shrimps in a lobster-cream sauce.


I flew home on the weekend with a bit of a heavy heart. How I wish I lived closer so I could check in on my parents more often! They need help, even though they are reluctant to accept it.

When I got home this big bouquet of dahlias awaited me on the kitchen counter. It was a wonderful trip, but it is always nice to come back home.

Friday, August 10, 2012

Rain, rain don't go away...not just yet anyway!


Yesterday and today it rained. More rain is forecast for the early part of the weekend, but don't expect to hear any grumbling about miserable weekend weather from me. Just the opposite is true. I couldn't be happier! The garden needs the rain so desperately.  

Balloon Flowers peaking through the front fence.


Frans Hals, a great late blooming daylily.


Mid-summer Tiger Lilies.


Not everything is pretty. This poor Viburnum is pretty beat up.

This is one watering can that won't get any use for at least a couple of days.


Phlox


As you can see, my Rose of Sharon is still pretty tiny.

This is my favourite flower in the garden at the moment. I promise to find the plant tag and post its proper plant name by GBBD.

My hydrangeas have rallied quite nicely.




Thanks for the Lavatera seeds Marguerite!

Carefree Beauty Rose


There is just one little fellow who is a bit depressed that he can't go out and play.


Cheer up little buddy, the sun will be back in a couple of days.

Have a great weekend, everyone!

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Getting to Know a New Enemy


They have finally arrived in my garden! 

I spotted the first one in the roses by the picket fence. I gasped in horror! There, resting comfortably on the pink petals of my rose, was one of those retched Japanese beetles. 

How did he get here, I wondered? Did he come in on some plant I purchased? Was he the only one or could there more? 

After I knocked the beetle to the ground and ruthlessly crushed it, I went to check the other roses along the picket fence. None, thank God! I breathed a sigh of relief. It seemed the beetle might have been alone. 

Then I remembered the John Cabot Explorer Series roses at the back gate...


Sure enough, there were beetles hiding in every rose cluster! I tried to knock a few of them to the ground, but they took flight. I had no idea the damn things could fly! 

I need help from those of you who have been fighting this invasion force for sometime. What do I do to control Japanese beetles?


At least their appetite seems to be limited (so far) to my roses.


The baby bunnies, on the other hand, don't seem to be nearly as selective. I crossed paths with this little fellow just the other evening. He did not seem to be afraid of me, but rather regarded me with frank curiosity.


On to other garden news. In the front beds, the Tigers are showing off their summer spots.


The Brown-Eyed-Susans shining are in all their late summer glory.



Providing a counterpoint to the bright orange Tigers, are the paler cantaloupe colored daylilies and a number of varieties of phlox.





I have to say, that I am disappointed with my Asiatic lilies this year. The white ones in front garden are beautiful, but the pink lilies in the back garden have failed to put in an appearance.

Here is my favourite Yarrow.


Most striking of the perrenials in the front garden is this Rudbeckia. The plant easily 
has to be as tall as I am. (5'4")


This shot gives you some idea of scale. (That is an old well in the background.)


The combination of a late spring and a hot, dry July has meant that my Pee Gee (paniculata 'P.G. compacta) and Oakleaf hydrangeas (hydrangea quercifolia) are somewhat delayed in flowering. 


Unfortunately, the recent host of problems are not limited to the front garden. We store our garbage and food waste compost in an enclosed storage area at the gate to the back garden. The doors to the storage area always remains closed and yet some nocturnal creature has been managing to squeeze its way in each evening and tear everything to shreds. 

Yesterday, I found that one of the biodegradable bags of food compost had been lifted out of its locked green bin and spread all over the ground. What a smelly mess! 

I suspect there is a clever racoon at work. How he is getting in there is still a mystery. We have checked for holes or some sort of gap. There is none.


When I went to check on my tomatoes, I found the biggest slugs I have ever seen in my life. They have been feasting on my tomatoes. I swear they were over an inch long and fat as can be! 

Do I remember rightly? Can you drown them in shallow dishes of beer or is that some other insect pest?


I want to end on a more positive note. 

I had written in one of my last posts that my hostas had finished blooming. I had forgotten all about a few of the late bloomers. 

The hosta pictured here is easily the biggest perennial in the yard (about 3 feet in every direction). The blooms are huge and glisten with water droplets from yesterday's rainfall. 

Along with the slugs, bugs, racoon and rabbits has come some much needed rain!

Today I am going to link  to Cottage Floral Thursday at Fishtail Cottage.  Tomorrow, I will link up to
Fertilizer Friday at Tootsie Time. I will also be linking to the Creative Exchange on Monday.
 To see other great posts, simply click the links.