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Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Foliage Follow-up, April 16, 2014

Today I'm joining hostess Pam at Digging to celebrate some spring foliage, to see other posts, join her there.

I was anxiously hoping for the return of my Trillium luteum I planted last year, and finally Eureka!-some gorgeous leaves, it may be too much to expect a flower this year-


Pulmonaria seedling leaves with gorgeous silvering-

It's raining!  The plant who jewels up the best, Lady's Mantle-

Oxalis adenophylla and Saxifrage 'London's Pride'-

Vinca 'Wojo's Gem'-

So much pretty foliage in the spring!   

Hannah

©Weeding on the Wild Side, all rights reserved.


14 comments:

  1. Love your "Lady's Mantle" with sparkling rain drops, I must see if ours look as lovely. Cheers, Jean.

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  2. Thanks, Jean, they show off raindrops so splendidly!

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  3. Hi Hanna,
    I enjoyed your foliage, especially the Trillium. I planted a non-variegated one a friend gave me, but it did not survive last winter.

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    1. I have lots of native Trilliums that came with my woodsy areas, but I wanted a special one. I don't know if there is any possibility it could bloom, but I'm glad it is alive.

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  4. That is some incredible foliage, Hannah--especially with the raindrops coating the plants. Just beautiful! My Trilliums haven't emerged yet--probably mid-May. :)

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    1. It was a surprise rainy day today for the photos, my regular Trilliums are blooming. They always look like big bouquets.

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  5. Yea for the trillium! Is it native to your area? It is here, in the Upstate of SC. Love that Lady's Mantle too.

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    1. No, I have a native Trillium growing in my yard but T. luteum is native in the NE United States. The Lady's Mantle was growing here too. It spreads well from self-sowing, it has taken over an unruly bank and looks great.

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  6. Wow! You do have some beautiful foliage! I love your area of the country--so, so beautiful!

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    1. I looked up your Scutellaria ovata, it looks very nice, but it says it likes calcareous soils, which is probably why I don't succeed with some plants that grow well in Texas, probably like the Sphaeralcea too, which I would dearly love to grow.

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  7. I have Trillium luteum along with a number of other varieties. Just love those mottled leaves. The saxifrage and oxalis combo is lovely. I don't think I can grow Saxifrages here; I'll have to check it out.

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    1. London Pride is a great plant, I just break off the cute flower-like heads and stick them in the ground. Perhaps if you had a place to winter them over in pots you could set them out in spring, but I don't know if they could then bloom or not, though they are cute anyway. Another Saxifrage with reddish leaves does well in pots, I know. It's great that you can grow Trillium luteum, I hope to see the flowers someday.

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  8. You have some wonderful foliage in your garden and I love the photo with the droplets of water on the leaves of the Lady's Mantle...so pretty!

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    1. Thanks, Lee, I knew when it was raining that I had to go check out the Lady's Mantle.

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