April is busting out all over
Life is good. I, like most easterners, am reveling in an extraordinary spell of warm weather this week. I am also congratulating myself on planting iris reticulata and eranthis in the fall; their bright blue and yellow relieves the otherwise rather dull look of the early spring garden.
It’s the power of suggestion—Anna Pavord inspired me to take another look at reticulata (they are her new obsession), while fellow bloggers have long been growing early spring bulbs I never bothered with before. One reason was that the April frosts and freezes made me less than anxious about flowers outside, though I've always had snowdrops.
But here we are: the hellebores are lush, the erythronium are emerging, and the iris and eranthis are more than living up to their word-of-mouth.
You see here Katharine Hodgkin. Pavord says “Close to, it is extraordinary, but in a garden you need to think carefully where to put it. It … certainly does not need noisy neighbors.”
Well, my early April Buffalo garden is far from noisy. Katharine Hodgkin can shine here—and will shine even more when I plant more in the fall.
Comments
The hellebores are gorgeous, but the little iris is also just a delight. Happy spring to us!
We've had softer weather and the erythronium and hellebore has been lovely for a while, though in the rain. The trilliums are blooming too, and cherry trees are sprinkling their blossoms.
I love how I always forget where I have planted bulbs in the fall (just like the squirrels forget where they have put the walnuts so I have trees coming up in flower beds) and then suddenly it is spring and I see the little plant tips poking up and Oh ya! I remember!
I especially enjoy species tulips. They naturalize and they never abandon you, but rather always return, year after year. (I love the golden Batalini type.)
I agree with everyone... those little iris are so lovely.