The tulips have been enjoying the cool weather and lasting for a few weeks. The sideways trellis is there because I am going to train a purple clematis, which is just visible on the right, to clamber along it.
These double red tulips were just so vibrant in the sun. I find the double tulips come back reliably for several years. I have had Angelique pink tulips in the past and had good success with them. Near the upper right corner, some species yellow tulips are also blooming. They are self-sowing a bit which is great. They are an alternative to crocus which the chipmunks eat.
I never planted any tulips here and I have never bought tulips of this colour so two things are going on here. Some tulip that I bought has changed colour over time, as tulips will sometimes do, and a furry helper decided this was a good place for them. I would not have planted tulips here because it is a pretty shady spot once the trees leaf out. How is it that they are doing well, multiplying in fact, when tulips are supposed to need a sunny location? I think it is working because they get the spring sun and then the tree roots keep the soil dry through the summer. So it is a shady spot, but it is a dry spot. That's my theory anyway.
Some other pretty tulips. The small red ones are probably Greigii tulips. I can't remember as I got them several years ago. They are multiplying and I will dig them up in the fall , plant some in other places and replant some here.
The native merry bells (Uvularia) really makes a fine garden specimen. Sometimes it is offered by nurseries. I just took a bit of a clump from a patch growing wild in our bush decades ago and put it in better soil and more light. Now I have multiple patches. After the flowers finish, it leafs out more and makes a nice yellowy green clump.
More primulas just because.
Grape hyacinths. My problem is deciding whether to leave them in the garden or put some in a little vase and enjoy their grapey scent. I think I need to plant more of them.
This patch of trilliums looks pretty with the blue brunnera peeking through.
Hi Jenny,
ReplyDeletelucky you with tulips in your garden! We cannot grow bulbs in the tropics, so I get to enjoy photos of yours!