Bloom Day - March 2008

Carol of May Dreams Gardens asks us to share what's blooming in our gardens on the 15th of each month.
Did you know that my husband and I were married on the 15th of July a couple of years ago? I find the 15th of each month an easy day to remember, because we still celebrate our "monthiversaries," but that doesn't prevent us from being quite busy when the 15th rolls around.
This month, fortunately, the 15th falls on a Saturday. I've decided that setup is ideal; it means that Friday afternoon when I get home from work, I can snap photos of what's growing in our west-facing front yard, and then Saturday morning as the sun rises over our east-faced fence, I can snap photos of what's growing in our back yard. Bloom Day winds up being a two-day affair, but it helps me avoid the boring flat light that I encounter when I take pictures at less opportune times.On that note, I begin March's Bloom Day entry with a look at my aloe bloom, lit from the east, which gives it a nice bit of three-dimensionality and contrast to set it off from the background. Aloes are funny blooms; a year or two ago in my old garden, an ancestor of this plant sent up a shoot in preparation for blooming. My roommate was upset because she'd be out of town when the actual blooming happened, and she was afraid she'd miss it. Lucky for her, aloes are about the slowest-blooming plants I know, and she'd been back for weeks by the time it was well and truly blooming. Fifteen days ago, on Leap Day, I posted a picture of this same plant. Check it out for comparison! It has obviously changed over the last couple of weeks - the stalk is much taller, and the groups of petals have branched out, but it's still not blooming! You can see that the bottom flowers are starting to get the faintest blush of coral about them and are starting to peel away from the group. Perhaps in another couple of weeks, the whole group will be blooming.
I picked up this Dittany of Crete a few weeks ago in the herb section of Green and Growing in Pflugerville. Its leaves are so sweet and fuzzy that I couldn't help it - it followed me home, really. I'm growing it in a pot now, and I'll try to keep it alive during our hot Texas summer. If I can, I've been promised beautiful pink blooms. Pictures will follow, naturally.I also picked up the Oxalis "Lucky" seen below, which I'm also growing in a pot for now. I'm really a sucker for oxalis, weedy though some consider it. I love the different types of foliage and flowers that they display. At last count, I've got at least four different varieties in my garden: this dark purple variety with yellow flowers, which I purchased, a green-leafed, pink-blossomed wood sorrel that I brought over from my last house, a green-leafed, white-flowered variety that we inherited with this house, and a green-leafed, yellow-flowered sort that is probably a weed but which I enjoy.
Here's a bright little planting that I'm enjoying, as well: yellow and orange French marigolds planted among red and orange gerbera daisies. Also in this planting is a lyreleaf sage that lay flat as a rug all winter but is starting to grow upward and take on some shape. Its blue flowers will be striking in this little bed.
Now its buds seem full to bursting, and every day, I think it will start blooming. So far, it hasn't, but you can see how close it is. I'm hopeful that we'll get some fruit off this tree in the next year or two, but I need to learn more about how to take care of it.
Other things blooming in my garden include:
- Orange bulbine
- Roses
- Purple trailing lantana
- my new lantana "Anne Marie" - more on that to come!
- Mexican bush sage
- Mexican mint marigold
- Pansies
- Snapdragons
- Strawberries
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I have problems with plants following me home from the garden centers, too. You have a lot of blooms and that Aloe is intriguing. Until I started reading blogs, I never thought about my Aloe blooming. To me it is just a foliage houseplant!
Thanks for joining in with bloom day.
I love the orange and yellow combo of the marigold and gerbera daisies. Happy GBBD!
I'm up to four different kinds of oxalis now, not counting the weedy ones that grow in the lawn. Your aloe stalk photos are making me anticipate mine even more. Mine have never flowered until this year and I don't know what to expect.
I love your photos!!!
You and MSS have cute yellow oxalis. I'm going to have to add some to my collection.