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  • Archive for April, 2011

    Being narcissistic

    Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

    There’s no doubt now that this is the week for narcissists at Blithewold. Even if daffodils aren’t your thing (perish the thought!) you’d have to admit that so many open all at once is a sight for sore eyes. (And didn’t our eyes get sore this winter?) There’s just something about their cheerfulness – about as subtle as a smiley – even on an otherwise dreary day like today. (Pictures were taken in yesterday’s sun.) William Wordsworth said it best, “A poet could not but be gay, in such jocund company”.

    As much as I enjoy staring into the faces of daffodils (conceitedly wishing they loved me back), I’ve also been noticing the hopeful, happy-making changes in the wider landscape. I can’t help but ogle the reverse striptease of the trees as they begin to put on lacy lingerie. So lovely. And yesterday we saw the first bumblebees of the season – they must be last year’s queens buzzing flowers to feed a new brood; and noticed that the frog chorus is suddenly out in full voice.

    What’s catching your attention? Are you being narcissistic too?

    Subthig’s bloomig

    Friday, April 15th, 2011

    Besides the visible beauties in bloom like the daffodils (about halfway towards peak!), forsythia, Cornelian cherry, maples and spicebush, my nose knows there are other less visible blooms too. Evergreens like Hinoki cypress (Chamaecyparis obtusa), Sawara cypress (C. pisifera), and Japanese cedar (Cryptomeria japonica) are absolutely loaded with flowers and great foggy puffs of pollen – more than Gail and I have ever noticed before. (Click to enlarge pictures below – the top one shows a pollen cloud.) My theory is the trees were stressed by the last summer’s drought and are endeavoring to ensure the survival of the species by flowering madly – the same way African violets bloom gangbusters when we forget to water them for a while – in hopes that the next generation will carry on if they can’t. Or they’re simply going through a normal cycle of heavy and light bloom years.

    The Katsura (the male flowers of the weeping form – Cercidiphyllum japonicum ‘Pendulum’ shown below) and maples are showy enough for me to call gorgeous but they’re also wind-pollinated – probably smart to not take their chances on insects when April weather can be so iffy.

    I am really looking forward to breathing again and seeing the bees working on cherries, crabapples and serviceberry (Amelanchier spp.). Unfortunately serviceberry and crabapples are susceptible to a disfiguring – but rarely life threatening – thing that’s also blooming right now: cedar-apple rust. Check your Eastern red cedars (Juniperus spp.) for bright-orange gelatinous alien-looking galls – they usually bloom on a sunny day right after a rainstorm. Cut them off and throw them away – not in the compost.

    What have you noticed blooming?

    To see more – and probably showier – flowers blooming around the country and world today, visit Garden Bloggers Bloom Day over at May Dreams Gardens.

    Wherefore art thou?

    Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

    The daffodils are definitely on their way towards peak and if I had to guess I’d still predict that peak will be perfectly timed during next week’s school vacation.

    (see below for the latest “daff cam” shot. And in case this is your first time checking out the “daff cam”, it’s a bit of a misnomer. It is not a live video feed. Rather, every few days I stand on the millstone at the entrance to the Bosquet to take another shot. Very low-tech time-lapse photography. Click on images for larger view; hover over for captions.)

    But what if the daffodils didn’t bloom? We’d feel stricken – betrayed and letdown. Unlike fly-by-night tulips, daffodils are supposed to faithfully increase, bloom every year, and outlive us. It’s almost ironic then that Narcissus are associated with unrequited love (due to their frustrated namesake from Greek mythology) and every year we get the question, “why aren’t my daffodils blooming?” In a comment on last week’s post, Marianne asked,

    I have 10 different varieties of daffodils and this year only 3 varieties will bloom. I have heard that overcrowding can decrease bloom but not all are crowded! The blooming ones are in the warmer spots but in prior years all were blooming away. Could feeding them have led to more foliage and less bloom? Do they have a “rest year”?

    Gail and I think that yes, like other plants they do sometimes take a rest. And the weather over the course of the year probably has a significant impact. For instance, last year we had 15″ of rain at the end of March and then heat and all of our daffodils bloomed, early and late varieties, all at once – about 2 weeks early. But after that rain we had next to nothing for the rest of the summer and if any of our clumps look thin on blooms this year I’d be inclined to blame drought stress. It has also been a dry (until today) and chilly spring so far and for that reason I expect the late daffs to be late (by which I mean, on time) and some of them might not even be showing buds yet.

    Sometimes daffodils stop blooming when the clump becomes too tightly root-bound and hemmed in by tree roots or rocks. I’ve also heard that they might peter out if more than one variety is planted in the same clump (the way many catalogs sell them, alas) probably because some out compete others. As far as feeding them, any high nitrogen fertilizer would encourage more leafy growth than flower production. And the amount of shade is another very important factor. Granted, the ones that are blooming for us now are the earliest varieties (mostly ‘Ice Follies’) but the clumps blooming their little hearts out totally gangbusters are the ones in more sun.

    It’s also very necessary to leave their foliage intact to the bitter end. Despite falling over and looking terrible, it keeps photosynthesizing to feed next year’s blooms. It may be safely removed after it has turned yellow – or at least give it 6-8 weeks before giving it the chop.

    Are any of your daffodils “resting” this year? Why do you think? And when will you come take a walk through ours?