![]() |
|
|
|
|||||||
| Register | Blogs | Gallery | Gardening Forums | Hand Picked | Organic Forum | Urban Forum | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| Gardening Around the Web Hand picked gardening content from around the blogosphere. |
| Welcome to the The Grow Spot. You're currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload images and more. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
03-10-2008, 01:40 PM
|
#1 |
|
Green Gardener
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 19
![]() |
Tigridia & the Tenant Garden
This content is syndicated via RSS from the blog: High Altitude Gardening & Cooking
Tigridia (Tigridia pavonia,) also called Mexican Shellflower puts forth a breathtaking bloom that lasts for one spectacular day.No esté triste. ¡La primavera viene! (Don't be sad. Spring is coming!) Poor Ivonne. She's been shackled to me much longer than she probably ever intended. In order to afford my sweet, lazy life I turned half of my house into an apartment. She's so in love with the gardens, she refuses to leave. When she first moved in, she inspired me to learn Spanish: ¿Piensa usted pagar el alquiler en cualquier momento pronto? I inspired her to read books in the Tenant Garden I planted on her side of the house.I never thought I'd utter such words, but I'm beginning to dread the coming of spring. Temperatures are warming, the 12-foot drifts that border my driveway are smaller by half, turning portions of the old ranch road into a river. As the snow shrinks in size, I see the chaos created by this record-breaking winter. Plum, Pear & Cherry Trees all have broken branches. Flattened rose vines stripped from an ancient rusting arbor, listing heavily to one side. Perhaps it was her reading garden's devastation (or maybe my tears,) that inspired Ivonne to knock on my door and gift me with an unheard of summer-blooming bulb ~ Tigridia.She calls them the poor woman's orchids.* Explaining that this flower, like so many that blossom in our gardens, got it's start growing wild somewhere. In this case, Central America, where she grew up. It boosted my spirits as did this blog and that blog, when I discovered that while Tigridia might be new to me, she's a familiar friend to other gardeners. Speckles on the breathtaking Tigridia blossoms might inspire the orchid reference. She blooms for one day. Orchids can bloom for months. USDA zones 8-11, requires dry soil. It takes a village. Awe-inspiring one day bloomers are best paired with long-flowering perennials.Read More at High Altitude Gardening & Cooking... |
|
|