Showing posts with label bradford pear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bradford pear. Show all posts

Thursday, November 10, 2011

A Foggy Fall Morning

"For me, a landscape does not exist in its own right, since its appearance changes at every moment; but the surrounding atmosphere brings it to life - the light and the air which vary continually. For me, it is only the surrounding atmosphere which gives subjects their true value."
- Claude Monet

This morning the surrounding atmosphere was foggy, changing the light and making the hues of the dogwoods, sassafras, Japanese maples, Virginia creeper, and hydrangea especially vivid.  
The tree in the left corner is a Bradford Pear.  It's just beginning to turn.
Dogwood, willow oak, chestnut oak
Sassafras, Carolina Jessamine, and Virginia Creeper on the fence.
Dogwood, Japanese Maple, Sassafras
Another variety of Japanese Maple - much more colorful!


The blooms on this hydrangea are prettier now than they were in the Spring.

Chestnut oak leaves on winter rye grass

Dogwood and juniper


Sassafras

Gallardia

Coreopsis
Not a very good color combination, but who knew that the hanging basket would still be blooming
when the Virginia Creeper turned?
Such a contrast to the red of the other Japanese Maple.


The fall color changes by the day, sometimes by the hour.  Soon the dogwoods will be bare and the chestnut oaks will be fully turned. And too soon we'll be settling in to the winter months, brightening those early days with the bright colors of the holiday season.

I'm linking up with The Fall Color Project 2011, hosted by Dave at Growing the Home Garden.  Be sure to stop by to see more fall color from all over the United States.


Sunday, March 21, 2010

What a difference a day (or two) makes

I was out of town for a couple of days at the end of the week.  When I returned, the first thing I did was to walk around the yard to see the changes that occur almost overnight. My sister put it so well when she wrote in her blog, "Tarmama Wanderings",
 "At this time of year we are watching and waiting and believing as we begin to see the hope of new life awakening as the days grow warmer and the light increases."
Much is awakening in my garden!  The first thing I noticed was the Bradford Pear.


The forsythia is nearly in full bloom.
The dogwoods and the azaleas are budding.


And I love these daffodils!

While I was away, the dill seeds sprouted and the zinnia seedlings grew a couple of inches.  
While all of this was happening at home, I was watching the birds outside my father's window.