Cheer for P
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Thanks for the wonderful photos @goosehd - absolutely gorgeous spring blossoms. I recognise them all apart from the pale blue and white star-shaped flowers, they are stunning - what are they?
It's interesting that most of our spring flowers are over now, so whilst the same flowers thrive in your part of the world they are flowering a few weeks later.
Now our wisterias are flowering and our first tree peony. The wisteria at the front of the house is glorious, these photos were taken a couple of days ago. When the sun is on it, the scent is lovely.
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@Madame Buttonfly The flower is called Glory of the Snow. Your wisteria are beautiful as is the rest of your garden pictures. The cherry tree (pink flowered) was outstanding this year. Thank you for showing us your thinking spot.
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I'm always fascinated by how wisteria looks so pleasant under the right circumstances. When I was a kid, my mother spent countless hours battling to keep it from killing all the plants and trees. It's almost impossible to eliminate and it grows fast (at least in the American southeast). Ours didn't have pretty flowers or smell nice, either.
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Dog Wood cheer for Paula AKA @Madame Buttonfly
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I've always liked dogwoods, especially the pink flowered ones. Like Twin says, they stay small, which is nice for planning purposes. When I was a kid, we had one in the yard that I used to love to climb. Random fact- dogwoods are the state flower of North Carolina.
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^ I learned something today. And I live in NC. (but not from here).
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Wow @twin - that Dogwood is fabulous!
@goosehd - thanks for the info, I shall be getting some "glory of the snow" to plant under our daffodils for next spring, have already done a little research ;).
How funny that Wisteria is seen as invasive in parts of the US, here it's a fairly expensive plant which (unless you buy a well established one, difficult because of the way it twists and climbs as it grows) takes several years to flower for the first time. So by no means uncommon but definitely not considered particularly easy to grow. The ancient one at the front is a Chinese wisteria, we have another on the pergola (planted maybe a dozen years ago) which is a Japanese variety, flowers later and has longer racemes. Both are gloriously scented. Weather here is bright and dry, but very cold for the time of year. It's chilly and windy out there today, but I might venture out later and take some more photos!
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Glad I took this photo on Sunday, this poor tree peony has suffered badly from the gale force winds that started yesterday, big chunks and flowers broken off
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I have never seen an Iris that deep of a purple before mine are bluer.
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Black flowers. Now we're talking
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Nice. My iris’s blooms lasted a whole day. Then…caput. Didnt even get aNy pics
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Hey @Madame Buttonfly i thought of you when our flowers came in: