Cool relief

Too hot to think, write, garden (beyond watering) or cook. Last evening I found some relief in cool blue.
Too hot to think, write, garden (beyond watering) or cook. Last evening I found some relief in cool blue.
Subtract eight hours for restful sleep & you're left with 14 glorious hours to see, hear, touch, smell, taste & simply absorb all kinds of beauty & goodness.
Images (top to bottom):
1. View north from the balcony: neighbouring farm, mountains, sky -- heaven.
2. The tenant in the balcony birdhouse.
3. A butterfly thermometer -- earlier in the day the dial was past 90 (degrees F).
4. Antique 'Cupani's Original' Sweet Peas. 5. First harvest of sugar snap peas.
6. Yellow 'Flashback' Calendula. 7. Apricot 'Flashback' Calendula.
It's now midweek, I'm back at work, & already planning the next visit to my favourite bed & breakfast, which I'm determined to stretch to at least 44 hours -- there's a long weekend coming up soon.
Do you have a country garden or do you visit one regularly? Please share your stories & links to images in the comments.
'Flashback' basks in the early morning sun.
Shades of Firefox
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Pot marigolds on my balcony? Orangey-yellowy flowers of any kind? Never and not likely used to be my responses. And I probably turned up my nose, too. Then last year I saw Gayla's gorgeous photos and knew I wanted a 'Flashback' glow in my 2009 garden.
Softer, later, smaller -- the calendulas blooming this week on my balcony.
And then everything goes bee,
sun exploding into green,
the mad sky dive
through shards of diamond light,
earth veering left, then right,
then left, sweet scented,
the honing in,
the buzz,
the yes no dance,
the quantum leap into
open swoon of calendula,
yellow orange delphinium starflower,
ultraviolet milkweed forget-me-not,
caress of corolla carpel calyx....(Di Brant, from “Interspecies Communication” in Now You Care. I found this poem in "Five Canadian Women Eco-Poets" on Harriet, the Poetry Foundation's blog.
Growing Notes:
Resources on Calendula officinalis:
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Now I'm wondering: Have you ventured to new regions of the colour spectrum this season, either with plants or pots or both? And what plants ("thrills", "fills" or "spills'), if any, would you combine with calendula in a container?
Squeezed in between the pots...
...we spent half the morning doing mundane gardening tasks: watering, tying tomatoes, squishing aphids, dead-heading spent blossoms, emptying the containers of bolted lettuce, sifting old soil and moving pots either to follow or avoid the sun, depending on the plants' preferences.
And we spent half the morning -- ok, more -- just observing:
Nasturtium, 'Cherries Jubilee'
Eggplant, 'Millionaire', flower buds
Persian baby cucumbers, 'Green Fingers'
Cherry Tomatoes, 'Sungold', 'Sweetgold' or 'Supersweet' (I lost the tag)
If only tomato leaves were edible. I do love the scent they release when you brush them with your fingertips.
Before Piper & before my camera, I did not take time to observe -- it was just work, work, work, and no play.
How did you enjoy your garden -- and I hope you did -- this weekend? How do you make sure you take a well-deserved break, even for just a few minutes, from the work that is never done. Like me, do you find it hard to ignore the messy bits -- the parts of your garden that never appear in photos?
I spent a little more time with my sweet peas & this post today so I've republished it with some minor changes.
Anticipation -- The sweet peas are blooming one...at...a...time.
Sweet pea appreciation -- a necessary respite today yesterday after spending my lunch hour running errands on foot in the urban milieu of heat, dust, rush, noise, exhaust fumes and traffic congestion. When I got home, I dropped the groceries and mail on the hallway floor, kissed the top of Piper's head, and then headed out to the balcony for sweet {pea} relief.
I have an embarrassing confession to make, though. Two weeks ago I considered pulling out the still unblooming sweet peas. In a brief, insane moment when I thought I was being practical and rational, I deemed them dispensable luxury plants taking up valuable real estate that could be used for tomatoes and cucumbers. (I did not get a community garden plot so I'm even more space-challenged than usual.) Thankfully, my sober second thought was to remind myself the garden is also for the "eye and heart" (1).
Maybe planting sweet peas hasn't been the most practical gardening decision I've made this season, but I have no regrets. And I mentally cringe to think what I'd have missed if I'd pulled them out.
In the rest of this post I'm going to share my gardening notes and favourite sweet pea resources.
Growing notes
Resources:
The Sweet Pea Book by Graham Rice. The Google Books preview includes excerpts on dwarf sweet peas (page 27) and growing sweet peas in containers (page 31).
Renee's Garden Seeds articles:
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If you aren't too busy in your own gardens, I'd love to hear about your sweet pea memories and experiences. Which varieties are you growing this year, either in the ground or containers? Which ones have you found to be most heat-tolerant?
Notes:
(1) "Flower treasures for the eye & heart" is the phrase on Renee's Garden flower seed packages.
(2) See Brian's Johnston's excellent online article "A Close-up View of the Wildflower Sweet Pea" (Lathyrus latifolia) for photos and a description of the perennial sweet pea's structure. It is cousin to the annual sweet pea, Lathyrus odoratus.