Friday, March 5, 2010
20 degrees this morning, quiet and dark. Not sure what woke me at 3:30 but here I am an hour later thinking about the gardens and the advent of spring. Blogs, listservs and Facebook pages are filed with comments and pictures from impatient gardeners who have had enough winter and want to see color, not mud or dirty snow. I cannot get too excited yet because here in Vermont there can be a lot of winter left.
Looking out the office window yesterday I noticed the American Goldfinches are still finding seed on what appear to be spent rudbeckia seed heads. I like these little birds which my mother always called wild canaries. The males still sport their duller, olive, winter plumage but I can see some change started already even though it seems early.
Looking out the office window yesterday I noticed the American Goldfinches are still finding seed on what appear to be spent rudbeckia seed heads. I like these little birds which my mother always called wild canaries. The males still sport their duller, olive, winter plumage but I can see some change started already even though it seems early.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiTfBShWKlUxUSrgCd0Com9mud_YF0ewtpdxj55URxzQdzu7Ln0nKVTUGyQ56NXxSJ5vmf3GeBk_6W7Ik3UBl3AUnDp6lUVEz80xNgw-GY7Yx1u0du7ooUzzgESdAZhqhkmXchwNg/s320/5whiteconeflowers.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgh2LUfMI4X4svJfTFYnuTLe4XTcvUg7Y7qE7Tk25DsbMsvOhDZWuHQl4ZrTaCrrZyh4TjtN5oBwIk5l0VaCmfFP2DI2m7nFKZw2DN1G7SOf2xdTUgoK0PcurzsToqp6D0GuEsXyg/s320/6rudbeckia+nitida.jpg)
As Vermonters say "I kinda like 'um!" Here are two closeups.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhrtbsQF_Gjad4oKUCzgeV_YDj2BoNwmL8TtU7_pBWF0CJ8ykf898vtb06Ea_noZjPrgsFuSe12QBBcy-hsolf93VIn8wZdXGYrzeYVHf7h1XypNrAlakARTxmyHsHRhpG2Qg38EA/s320/1gloriosa.jpg)
Writing from the mountain above Peacham Pond where I can hear a barred owl just outside the window.
George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
http://facebook.com/george.africa
Facebook fan page: Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens
http://twitter.com/vtflowerfarm
George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm
http://facebook.com/george.africa
Facebook fan page: Vermont Flower Farm and Gardens
http://twitter.com/vtflowerfarm
4 comments:
I've had great success with Echinacea 'Fragrant Angel' although the fragrance is not all it is cracked up to be. And I'm always tempted by the new cultivars but they always seem a bit too much. Love the blog!
Oh. Plant the Big Sky echinaceas high. Pinch out the buds the first year. That explains it. Now I know why my e.Summer Sky struggled so much the first year. Not that it's magnificent yet, but it's trying.
Rudbeckias are not "rude" beckias (rudebeckias) as I sometimes write. Please excuse The Vermont Gardener when he makes mistakes.
I even had a person drop off the blog last week with the reason being --"Too many updates"--most of which are probably me catching spelling errors.
Age slows some senses.
George
You are forgiven, George. I would think that 4:30 in the morning might be a better excuse than age since most of us don't function well at that time.
beth
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