Showing posts with label ferns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ferns. Show all posts

Monday, September 28, 2009

Autumn Kinkitis

I don't have the best of the garden to share today, but there are signs of a transition into our kind of fall.  The garden had taken quite a beating the last few weeks between the heat waves and the painters.  And then, surprise, the painters are finished.  Nice little blue and white cottage. And it was so "chilly" outside, I had to wear my bathrobe in the garden this morning to survey the plants.




My tomato is still producing, despite the heat-damaged foliage.



My leafy begonia did not survive the heat. I hope they will produce new leaves from the bulb. I keep watering them.




The path the painters made through my bed to get at the side of the house. It will take some time for this to recover.




My rose bush suffers from heat-melted blossoms and painter sanding dust. I will have to hose off each plant in the garden to give the leaves a chance to breathe again.




One echinacea dried to a crisp by the heat, while its neighbor still blooms. Nature is mysterious. We never know which plant the strong sun will toast and which it will leave to flower.

There is some good news.  Despite the heat some plants have fourished.



Witness my peony rose. Four buds!!




Dragon-Winged Begonia


Rabbit-foot Fern



Staghorn Fern



 Jupiter's Beard



Salvia Chiapensis reblooming!!

If the cool temps remain, even for a week or two, other plants will start to recover, more blooms will appear and my fall garden will flourish.  With every loss comes new life. How happy that the garden shows me this truth in every season.







Now I've got to go to the garden center for a new hose. This one has permanent kinkitis. Who says I haven't been watering!

Monday, September 21, 2009

Love those Leaves



Passion Flower
 
Ornamental Sweet Potato


Variegated Ivy


All leaves have their own personality, especially the ones from different plants.  The above  three leaves have three or five lobes, but on closer examination are quite different.  The Passion Flower leaf reaches its veins into each of the three lobes and has parallel veins, while the Sweet Potato treats each lobe as part of the larger leaf and does not have parallel veins.  The colors of the Ivy almost obscure the veins in this leaf.

At the expense of not getting too technical in this post, I will describe some leaves and leave the others for you to notice the difference. It's only because of this post that I've started to recall some of my high school biology and look at leaves as individuals again.  It's so easy to see the flowers and forget about the leaves that engender them.


Polka-dot plant
 
Caladium

Some leaves are more spectacular than the flower, as the above two.  The Polka-dot leaf has veins that do not follow the pattern of the pink color, while the Caladium does. The Caladium looks as if its sap ran deep pink in the middle of the leaf.


Australian Tree Fern


Staghorn Fern Frond
 
 Mother Fern Leaflet

 
??

The ferns are a world all their own.  Leaflets grow off of the main stem in different shapes and sizes.  The spores on the back of the Mother Fern leaflet can form new ferns.  I love the gentle curve of this leaflet.


Yarrow Leaf
 
Boston Fern Leaf

But even ferns are similar to the leaves themselves, as in the two leaves shown above.  The Yarrow may have a more complex form, but both leaves grow out from a central stem. 


Cranesbill Geranium
 
Kalanchoe
 
Begonia


Plumbago Groundcover in Fall



These leaves show the different colors that leaves can have. The colors in the last two photos show on the leaves in different places, some year-round, some due to their exposure to the sun or the turning of leaves in fall. The succulents have no visible veins.





Mexican Heather
 
Hen and Chickens Succulent

Some leaves form a recognizable form, while others have their on creative chaos.


Forget-me-not
 
 Purple Oxalis


Two of my favorite leaves. Seen close the Forget-me-not has a wonderful contrast of colors.  The various colors and the form of the oxalis speak for themselves.