Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day – April 2011

I will be better about posting photos for Bloom Day this year. Visit May Dreams Gardens for a listing of garden blogs that are sharing their April Bloom Day treasures.

There are a lot of blues and purples blooming on The Lot right now. Hyacinth varieties and crocus are both putting on a show. It was quite chilly and cloudy out this morning, so the crocus were too shy for photographs. Here are the hyacinth.

HyacinthGrape Hyacinth

 

Making it’s Bloom Day debut is our lenten rose. This hellebore was planted in the fall of 2009. Last spring it did not bloom, but showed healthy growth. This spring it’s so pretty. I believe the leaves were nipped by some overnight frost weeks ago, but it still seems happy.

Lenten RoseI had heard before what looks like petals on the hellebore are not really petals but “sepals.” These sepals are not shed like petals by the plant, so they often remain on the plant for a longer period of time. Other plants with colorful or interesting sepals are jack-in-the-pulpit and columbine.

The sepals on a hellebore surround “nectaries.” These nectaries are modified petals to hold the nectar of the plants.

Also blooming on The Lot are these little wild violets. At least that’s what I think they are. I noticed them for the first time in the park down the road from us this past Tuesday. They were peppered throughout the park underneath trees. When I was cleaning out beds on Wednesday, I found some back by the fence and compost bin.

While reading up a bit about the violets on The Internets, I noticed many people writing into lawn care forums complaining about the little flowers invading the lawn. I wasn’t sure if I was reading about a plot of grass or chemical warfare tactics. Making The Lot look like a golf course is not a goal this fledgling gardener strives toward. The little violets are welcome to stay.

4 thoughts on “Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day – April 2011

  1. I’m a sucker for the violets too until the flowers are gone. Then they just look like weeds, so I yank them up. So, in the spring I feel lucky that they are unkillable, but in the fall I call them names.

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