i think if you have an azalea you have to name it iggy, right? sauna in background.
Tag Archives: blossom
127/365. first blossoms on our new transparent apple tree.
no peaches but we’ve got a billion cherries coming and a few blossoms on a transparent apple tree that we just planted last fall. i don’t expect too get much if any fruit, but maybe next year!
it’s supposed to be a dwarf but it’s already 7 feet tall?!
123/365. tart cherry blossoms.
we lost our peach tree, but based on blossoms we’re about to get approximately 1 billion cherries the year!
the pretty peony predictor predicted.
once again blooming peonies predicts a downpour strong enough to knock them down within 24 hours. happens every year.
a pretty peony predictor.
after the brutal winter, it’s looking like the peach tree didn’t make it but we do have a few peonies starting to bloom which means it’s time for a torrential downpour.
the annual perennial viola odorata question.
am i going to get around to making violet syrup before i’m forced to mow the lawn lest i get a ticket from The Lawn Police.
nope. not this year.
Digitalis purpurea.
etymology of the common name, foxglove:
“Dr. Prior, whose authority is great in the origin of popular names, says “It seems probably that the name was in the first place, foxes’ glew, or music, in reference to the favourite instrument of an earlier time, a ring of bells hung on an arched support, the tintinnabulum”… we cannot quite agree with Dr. Prior for it seems quite probable that the shape of the flowers suggested the idea of a glove, and that associated with the name of the botanist Fuchs, who first gave it a botanical name, may have been easily corrupted into foxglove. It happens, moreover, the name foxglove is a very ancient one and exists in a list of plants as old as the time of Edward III. The “folks” of our ancestors were the fairies and nothing is more likely than that the pretty coloured bells of the plant would be designated “folksgloves,” afterwards, “foxglove.” In Wales it is declared to be a favourite lurking-place of the fairies, who are said to occasion a snapping sound when children, holding one end of the digitalis bell, suddenly strike the other on the hand to hear the clap of fairy thunder, with which the indignant fairy makes her escape from her injured retreat. In south of Scotland it is called “bloody fingers” more northward, “deadman’s bells” whilst in Wales it is known as “fairy-folks-fingers” or “lambs-tongue-leaves””