Here's what's happening in the mid-winter garden.
Cinnamon Snow hellebore:
The other hellebores have buds, but no open flowers yet.
Bergenia looking very tatty:
But can you see the bee? That was surprising. Our top temperature today was 11.4C, which felt almost spring-like after a few days of 7's and 8's.
Red-hot pokers in the foreground, leucadendrons in the background:
Correa "Gwen":
The lion's ear, Leonotis leonurus flowered earlier in the year, but seems to be starting again:
This salvia is very late to the party, just starting to bloom now:It isn't the latest, though. There is another one that hasn't even got buds. Perhaps our not-very-hot summer is to blame. Other plants that didn't flower this year include the normally autumn-flowering Japanese anemones, and some sedums.
Yellow daisy with buds and a sprinkling of flowers:
White daisy:
Thryptomene:
Not a flower, a kookaburra:
The kookaburras follow us around whenever we are in the garden, hoping we will turn up something for them to eat.
Phygelius aequalis "Yellow trumpet":
Crimson rosellas have been busy pulling the flowers off my bethel sage:Lots of flowers and buds on the rosemary-leafed grevilleas:
This delicate flower is on a very prickly hakea, which I think is Hakea lissocarpha:
Its tag is probably somewhere down under the prickles. But I think we bought this after seeing it in flower at the Clarkesdale Bird Sanctuary a few years ago.
Viburnum tinus:
Abutilon flower and buds:
Just about the last of the penstemons, with some euphorbias starting to flower in the background:
Zygocactus:
Hebe:
Flowering quince:
And last but not least, cyclamen:
The end!
4 comments:
Your garden is full of color and beautiful flowers.
Isn't that Hebe a lovely color? I am so amazed that you have such flowering in Winter; here in our winter, it is totally bare. Hugs, Julierose
Your garden is beautiful, even in winter. In girl scouts we used to sing a song that starts “Kookaburra sits in the old gum tree ...”. I didn’t know what we were singing about then. Do you know that song?
Another beautiful round up. You really have a garden for all seasons (and continents)
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