Archive for March 2013

This Morning Wants me to Get Off the Internet

Sunday, March 31, 2013

I wrote a post about Eostre, the goddess of upspringing light, goddess of spring and of the rabbit, who welcomes buds with bonfires, but the internet doesn't want you to read it. Instead, on this first Sunday after the first full moon of spring (thank you Grandpa for your great lectures on the moveable feast that is Easter), the internet wants you to get outside. Look close at the ground for what might be working its way into the light. Light a bonfire, and call me if you do. There's lots and lots of work to be done.

Now here are some photos of the lilac and magnolia branches that I brought inside two weeks ago. I suggest trying this out, if you're as impatient as I am for what is to come.

 



Who Scouts Before Us

Monday, March 25, 2013

The other night, in my dream, I bumped into my maternal grandfather. He was smiling mischievously in his St. Patrick's Day banjo-playing outfit. We both knew he was a ghost, but it didn't matter. He had come to party. He tilted his hat to me, and then he was off.



My grandpa was a fantastic gardener. He sacrificed generous amounts of MiracleGro to the garden gods, but he also toiled and tended his plot carefully, and produced in turn a hearty amount of flowers, vegetables, and fruits. My aunt gave me a pile of his photographs recently, which are all filtered through summer evening light and motes of floating soil.



I love the one above especially, which seems tantalizingly quiet and slow, like a frame from a really patient film. Just watch the water track across the hot asphalt. You can hear the cicadas buzz. I can see my grandma sip her ice water on the screen porch. Summer! Summer comes toward us again. 



Birthday flowers

Saturday, March 16, 2013

I made a surprise bouquet for a friend-of-a-friend today, and felt very springy in the making. It included pale pink tulips, jasmine vine, and plumosus, a thorny velvety fern.


I tucked some brunia in for a second, too. Though their color was perfect, their shape didn't fit at all. (I'm trying to learn this stuff, with help from this book and this one.)


Tulip stems elongate in water, even after they've been cut, which lends them that characteristically droopy look. I struggled for a bit trying to straighten them up, but eventually we all succumbed to the wild frilly movement this bouquet seemed to demand. I'm pretty happy about it.


If you think flowers may be the perfect gift for an upcoming birthday or other event, be in touch: email me at flowerscoutfarm@gmail.com, give me at least a few days notice, and we'll make it happen.

The Meaning of Flowers

· Posted in ,


The Meaning of Flowers
Meaning of Flowers

Hera = Loyalty.

Lilies = Purity.

Roses = Considered the most romantic among the flowers. Symbolically represents the eternal passion.

Red roses = Love.

Violets = Modesty.

Orange blossom = Fertility and joy to the couple.

Gerbera = is linked to feelings such as joy, purity and simplicity.

Sunflower = Represents strength and integrity.

Jasmine = Relates to luck and joy.

Daisies = symbolize innocence and virginity.

Tulips = elegance and sensitivity.

I know what I said;

Thursday, March 14, 2013

I said we were just about ready to bust. And, as is always the case when the present seems unmoving, the present had passed just as soon as I wrote it down.


Given a south-facing rock wall and a few days of sunshine, the present becomes something heretofore unrecognizable.



My goodness--suddenly serious work is impending! All of the putting-off of plans, the wavery envisioning, the procrastinatory daydreaming: OVER.
 

GET READY FLOWER PEOPLE
these boots feel so good


Columbine Flower

Wednesday, March 13, 2013 · Posted in , , , ,

Columbine Flower, Blue Columbine, Pink Columbine, Purple Columbine

With beautiful bell-shaped flowers, columbine is an excellent garden perennial with many colorful hybrid varieties to choose from.
 Columbine (also known as Granny's bonnet) is known for its distinctive, bell-shaped, spurred flowers, which bloom from mid-spring to early summer. Though individual plants are short-lived, lasting only two to three years, columbine self-seeds prolifically and will persist in the garden with volunteer seedlings. With a wide choice of hybrid varieties, colors range from light pastels to bright yellow, red, orange and purple selections. The plant foliage is has an attractive lacey appearance.
Special Features
Aquilegia 'Snow Queen' is well known for its striking , pure white spurred flowers.

 Aquilegia vulgaris 'Adelaide Addison' displays bi-color white and blue flowers in the early summer.

Aquilegia vulgaris 'Nora Barlow' has attractive double spurless flowers in red, pink and pale green.
Site Selection
Columbine grows best in full sun and well-drained, fertile soil. For most climates, columbine grows best in partial shade; however, in warmer climates like Florida and Southern California, less sun and more shade is preferred.

Planting Instructions
Plant in spring, spacing plants 1 to 3 feet apart, depending on the variety. Prepare the garden bed by using a garden fork or tiller to loosen the soil to a depth of 12 to 15 inches, then mix in a 2- to 4-inch layer of compost. Dig a hole twice the diameter of the pot the plant is in. Carefully remove the plant from its container and place it in the hole so the top of the root ball is level with the soil surface. Carefully fill in around the root ball and firm the soil gently. Water thoroughly.

Care
Columbine is prone to a fungal disease called powdery mildew. The spores spread through splashing water and travel on wind currents to infect other plants. Once established, powdery mildew is difficult to control. Most fungal diseases develop during rainy, wet weather, but powdery mildew develops when daytime temperatures are warm and nights are cool. The disease is not dependent on water on the leaves. You can help your columbines resist the disease by cutting back the affected plant parts (down to ground level if necessary), providing afternoon sunshine, and lots of air circulation in and around the plants.
One of the most common pest on columbine is leaf miner. These fly larvae feed inside the leaf. You'll see their damage as light-colored, winding tunnels on the leaf surfaces. Cut off and destroy all infested foliage after plants have bloomed; the new leaves that regrow later in the season will be miner-free.

Biding

Monday, March 11, 2013

We're all waiting.
 Planning.
 
Scoping, envisioning.

Staring out of windows.

Dealing with the little deaths and the big ones, softening up. 
Just about ready to bust. 

(Photo #1 is a box of future blooms, #2 is a future home of Flower Scout. 
Nos. 3 & 4 represent all cabin fever waste-away. Oh March, oh March. 
Spring's smell is undeniably in the air.)


Some Bulb or Other Grows in Brooklyn

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Last weekend, I visited my smart and generous friend Lina in Brooklyn. My stated purpose: Scope flower shops. Scope, scope, scope.

And the weather complied, so I spent two sunny days bouncing between the dots called up by google maps each time I searched for "flowers." Staring at my phone-map, sipping on good coffee, checking out the nearby outfits, and generally being absorptive: The weekend was a success. Some good hard yoga, some high-concept faux-commune dining, the birds in Bed-Stuy singing, Lina's sprouting avocado pits and lemon seeds, and many hypnotic vibrating train rides later, I have a new appreciation for city living. And a stockpile of photos, some of which are below.


Something is growing, by golly, something is coming out of the ground

A magazine I did not buy, and an apple harvest I would have jumped up & down to have seen last fall, when apples were few.

 Forsythia at the MoMA




(self-explanatory)

Terrarii abundant in the flower shops of Brooklyn

plum blossoms
 
things are more expensive in the city 
 
 THANK YOU DEAR LINA

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