The Bud Stands for All Things

Something different tonight before our normal rounds – I am starting off with a poem about flowers that was sent out by the Father of Positive Psychology to a listserve I am on earlier this week.  I love the flower reference and the need to reteach us of our inner loveliness so we bloom, again.  Boy, I identify with that this year.

Drizzle

It’s Friday!  So, after work, I dashed out to continue the daylily potting project.  Ran out of potting soil after the first two, so ran to Home Depot.  Came home and was working on another two when the rain started.  It is a nice rain . . . drizzle, but enough to cool things off and wet the garden.

No new faces today.  Tiger Kitten lost his only bud  😦   For tomorrow, I think maybe Nearly Wild might bloom.  At any rate, I decided to make a collage like I did every day last year during the peak.  I don’t have enough time do to that this year, but wanted something to show for the last of the big bloom days of July.

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The rain on Wednesday bought mushrooms to my Southwest garden . . . guessing the mushroom compost come to life.  Weird, in the desert.

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Tomorrow, the journey continues.  I wanted to be camping, but decided to plan 3 camping trips for August this weekend AND STICK TO IT!!!!  But, for now, I am making good progress on the daylily potting. And, not camping in the rain. I have so much to do before freeze and Amazon is slow with my second order of pots.  Oh, well, like the daylily, all we really have is this moment.

Where is the Rain?

Today, we were supposed to get a lot of rain.  Maybe flash floods.  I wasn’t sure I would get any work done in the yard on split-shift, but I worked outside the whole afternoon. More on that in a minute.

Today brought 2 new blooms.  Royal Palace Prince was a bonus plant a couple years ago.  It has done better than some of the purchased plants.  It reminds me of Pick of the Litter.

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The second new face for the year is Apache Uprising.  It is the second year for this one.  I like the red.  It reminds me of Baja a little.

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I also like this photo of some of my last near blues today – Blue Beat, The Colorado Kid, and Bluegrass Music.

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I don’t know about a later peak this year.  Bud counts down and buds dropping.  March was warmer than April.  And, we had the late May snow storm . . . then no rain.  Last year was better in the front garden.

I feel like I am freeing hostages.  Daylilies that are not flourishing, but could under different circumstances.  Buried pots in order for several in the front garden.  Today, Catherine Irene and Happy Happy.  Neither has ever bloomed here, and this is going on 3 years.  Others that need a transplant include Alabama Jubilee, Coburg Fright Wig, Navajo Blanket, Primal Scream, Lacy Doily, and Heavenly Curls.  All have had either extremely low bloom this year or have never bloomed.

When I dug up the two today, I was amazed at the other roots that were woven in with theirs.  And, in one case, an ant hill.  The whole front garden looks so dry.  I have the sprinkler on daily.  I need to get a sprinkler hose or something.  I wonder if eventually, all 100 plus of my in-ground daylilies will be in buried pots.  That makes me tired to think about it . . . but it worked well for the veggies.  Come on monsoons.  Where are you?

First bloom: The Yellow Trumpets

Today brought my first bloom of 2017. A golden Stella de Oro. Well, more like two Stellas. Simple yellow trumpets are the early birds. Happy Returns will join, soon. So will Ruby Spider . . .the one in a container on my patio. It gets hot back there. That bunch is always a couple weeks ahead.

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While Stella led the way, more scapes became visible.  Indian Love Call, Pink Enchilada, Stephanie Returns,  Isaac, Early Bird Cardinal,  Mesa Verde, Heron’s Cove, Red Hot Returns, Lady Fingers, Royal Palace Prince, and Prairie Wildfire.  And, a tiger that the nursery wasn’t sure what it was . . . So, I got a big discount. The list grows. I’m hoping for a 75% bloom year.

This blog will be different this year. Last year, I was finishing up my doctorate.  I had a lot of flexibility to be in the garden and playing with photos. This year, I work 45+ hours a week for Western Governors University. I’m committed to the blog, but it needs a new approach.  Because, sleep is good.

 

 

Tigers, Skinwalkers, Apaches, and Princes. Oh My!

Yesterday was my first no bloom day since early June.  Today brought several blooms, including my very first Tiger Kitten.

 

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Tiger Kitten – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

And, after a few weeks of deformed Skinwalkers, today comes a picture perfect bloom.  I think the early blooms were premature.  What a great Ned Roberts bloom!

 

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Skinwalker – Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Apache Uprising made a huge show with three blooms.

 

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Apache Uprising – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

And, how awesome it is to see my last two Royal Palace Princes in full bloom.

 

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Royal Palace Prince – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Stella also showed up to meet this crowd in the garden – both my golden and yella Stella.

 

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Yella Stella – Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

 

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Golden Stella – Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

And, calm little Orange Flurry was present in the background.

 

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Orange Stella – Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

That leaves only two unbloomed cultivators . . .  Heirloom Heaven and Red Hot Returns.  However, that is not bad for mid-August.  And, nine total have unbloomed buds.  Will I make it until freeze?

This weekend, I start the work of fall mulching.  I’m learning more about promoting my rebloomers.  And, so more improvements in store for the future.

Savoring the Four Seasons with Daylilies

Savoring is the art of being in the moment and totally immersing ourselves into an experience.  It means no multi-tasking or thinking about chores.  It also includes planning for experiences, as well as reminiscing about the past good times.

So, today my yard takes on all of the above.  Here are my in the moment blooms:

Apache Uprising:

 

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Apache Unrising – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Royal Palace Prince:

 

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Royal Palace Prince – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Fairy Tale Pink:

 

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Fairy Tale Pink – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Marque Moon:

 

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Marque Moon – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Orange Flurry:

 

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Orange Flurry – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Stella do Oro:

 

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Stella de Oro – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

In savoring the 2016 daylily season, I write this blog.  Last night, I actually looked through every post I made this summer.  It will be so cool to read back on things this winter, while I am painting these beauties.  I have tile paintings of Inwood, Cheddar Cheese and Route 66 in my room.  I said I didn’t want to ever have a day of the year where I didn’t wake up to daylily blooms.  And, so it is.  I cannot wait to add a few paintings of my new Ned Roberts Spiders.

And, that is a perfect segway into savoring through planning.  I have a few interventions for my Ned Roberts garden to start this month.  Things to empower more blooms next year.  Last night, I also found a Ned Roberts spider that is pretty rare on the auction, and put in a bid (it’s under $10).  I got my potted ones planted yesterday . . . the ones that were only temporarily in pots.  And, I fertilized.  It’s all part of beginning to savor next season.

The seasons of savoring daylilies:

Spring: Looking for the baby fans, cleaning out beds, watering on nice days, fertilize a little, early bloomers show-up!

Summer: Bloom fest! Photography and active blogging. Savor each colorful bloom.  Also, water, weeds, insects, and dead-heading.

Fall: Savor the late bloomers. Take time to smell each one.  Begin preparing beds for fall.  Fall planting.  Begin to consider which cultivators will make the best paintings.

Winter: Break out the paints!  Be creative – what new ways can daylilies be painted objects that I see every day during the cold, bleak months?  Paint daylilies on pumpkins.  Hey, what about daylily ornaments?  (I just thought of that one and need to consider how I might accomplish that before Christmas.) I love the daylily solar lights in my garden.  More for this winter, too.  Oh, the list goes on.  And, hey, what about searching for a few rare daylilies to add to my garden in the spring?  Look, winter is the busiest season of savoring of all!

 

 

Praise for the Sweetness of the Wet Garden

The rain came.  Finally.  Not much monsoon activity this year . . . so the big, cool storm is welcome.  I got up reasonably early and several of the flowers had not bloomed all the way. Cool, wet weather.  It is a nice break.

I’m two months into this daylily journey 2016.  I hope for another two.  It won’t peak again, but plateaus are good, too.  And, then, comes the paintings.  The cool weather and the presence of my granddaughter put me in the mood, a little.  Ah, but alas, homework calls. Because the grandkids will be back through Sunday on their way home and due dates loom.

Enjoy the collage for today!  This weekend, I am also going to try to sink some of my smaller potted daylilies into the ground.  The rain will be good prep for that chore.

 

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From L to R: Top Row – Stella de Oro, Orange Flurry, Prelude to Love, Royal Palace Prince, Marque Moon. Second Row – El Desperado, Primal Scream, Apache Uprising, Purple de Oro.  Bottom – Pizza Crust.

 

 

Morning Has Broken

Today was an early day in the garden before a hike with my family.  I love having my daughter and grandkids in Colorado so I can see them every couple of months.  Grandkids are the best blooms of all.

The morning brought two very first blooms to my yard.  The first is Nona’s Garnet Spider.  Sadly, Nona only produced one viable bud year.  (So far – keep hoping!)  She was another small root planted last fall.  I really like her.  I hope Nona brings more buds next trip.

 

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Nona’s Garnet Spider – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Apache Uprising was also added late fall and was pretty small.  I added a couple of intentional late bloomers.  It’s a pretty flower.

 

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Apache Uprising – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

It was also a day of hiking and swimming, so I am beat.  But it is making me smile to have 13 blooms on an August day.  My dream is May – October.  This year started early June.  Let’s see where it ends.    (71 blooms so far – so I made my 50% goal.)  I have noticed Heirloom Heaven with brand new scapes forming.  Plus Tiger Kitten and Frans Hals are growing scapes.  I may hit 74.  And, who knows, I may have another scape or two join the show.

 

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From L to R:  Top Row – Lime Frost, Fine Time Lucille, Nona’s Garnet Spider.  Row Two – Royal Palace Prince, Purple de Oro, Marque Moon, Stella de Oro, Orange Vols.  Bottom Row – Apache Uprising, El Desperado, Pizza Crust.

 

Like a Box of Chocolates!

So, today I applied for two more jobs and tomorrow my family comes.  After that, it is some catch-up work with school.  I can’t believe I am done in 6 weeks – I’ll have my Doctorate in Nursing Practice!  It’s wonderful and frightening.  The downside of online school is that it can be isolating.  It seems especially pronounced now that we are almost done.

So, I promise myself one trip away from the dogs every couple of days.  It gets me out with real humans and no leashes.  Now, I love my dogs but I also enjoy feeling human.  So, today I visited a local nursery that is having a plant sale.  Four dollar daylilies – cool.  I’ve decided to put Stellas in a couple more of my containers so they have season long bloomers.  It may be good motivation to water them more – and get more blooms from the more specialty plants.

So, welcome to the yard Orange Flurry (in bloom today with scapes and buds):

 

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Orange Flurry – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

And, another couple of Stellas.  I thought it might be interesting to show the ones I got over the weekend with the new one.  The new one is definitely more orange tone.

The other new ones have buds and scapes, but not in bloom today . . . so we wait.  And one is a mystery label one, so like Forest Gump said . . .

Other blooms are Pizza Crust:

 

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Pizza Crust – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Lime Frost:

 

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Lime Frost – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Marque Moon:

 

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Marque Moon – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Prelude to Love:

 

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Prelude to Love – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Orange Vols:

 

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Orange Vols – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

El Desperado:

 

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El Desperado – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Royal Palace Prince:

 

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Royal Palace Prince – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

With any luck, I’ll have blooms until Jack Frost shows.  Here is to hoping I have a job by then, too! And, by next spring there will be more flourishing at my home than ever!

Pizza Crust for Lunch

Pizza crust is what I had for lunch.  I shared a bite with my doggies . . . and then I found my daylily, Pizza Crust, in bloom.  This is a brand new baby to my yard.  I really love the mottling.  The colors are neat – and it is tall enough to go perfect in a back space in my flower garden.  You see, I planted the daylilies in that garden last summer, then dug out the old red concrete bed in the fall.  The bed is bigger than I thought, but the grass had grown over the edge.  I added bricks to the outside of the bed so that should not happen, again.

 

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Pizza Crust – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Another new bloom today is Royal Palace Prince.  It is a nice one that was a gift plant last summer.  I have found that my gift plants have had a higher rate of bloom this year (in my main garden) than the ones I picked.  I am guessing the hardy ones are generally the ones the sellers use as bonuses.

 

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Royal Palace Prince – Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Here are the other bloomers – the two small orange gals, Mini Pearl and Mellon Balls:

Lime Frost – I wish it was a lime Frosty:

 

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Lime Frost – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Primal Scream:

 

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Primal Scream – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

El Desperado:

 

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El Desperado – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Ghost Ranch:

 

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Ghost Ranch – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Marque Moon:

 

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Marque Moon – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

Soco Gap:

 

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Soco Gap – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

And, by golly, Miss Stella.  I am still chuckling at the poor nursery person who was trying to be nice and explain daylilies to me.  I said, “Yea, they are cool.  I have 130 varieties in my yard.”  Oh, the look on his face.  He went immediately back to watering.  Here is Stella:

 

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Stella de Oro – Photo by Colorado Kid Daylilies – C. Hartt

 

And, my mind is now thinking of where to put the gift plants that I put in pots and they didn’t bloom.  I have ideas . . . now, wait for September.