Spring...and winter. That's Kansas for you!

The view off our front porch this late March morning is typical spring-in-Kansas. Green grass, forsythia in full bloom – and snow gathering in the flower beds and on the pavement. We have 12 inches of the white stuff predicted for the next 24 hours. Brrrrr! But we can't complain. We'll take the moisture in any form it comes.

Dream a little dream of spring

We worked in the garden for an hour and a half this lovely middle-of-March afternoon, cutting back the rosebushes on the arbor, and the Carefree Delight rosebushes, Spirea, and Dappled Willow. Lots more work to do in both front and back yards. It's hard to believe that in a few short weeks the garden will go from this...to this!

Finally...rain!


We've been so dry! And finally, today, March 7, we got a nice shower. Not the two or three inches we would have loved, but moisture anyway. Amazing how much fresher and cleaner everything looks now. I'm trying to enjoy all the grasses because we'll be cutting them down soon. I'll miss them, but it won't be long and they'll be back spring-y and green! Can't WAIT!

The colors of February

The colors of February are usually gray and white, but on this 7th day of the month, we're seeing all the shades of sunshine and fire. The red twig dogwood is in its glory, and the sedum on Rock Garden Hill is spiked with red and yellow. I repotted the Christmas poinsettias and cleaned out the succulent dish that's been inside all winter. They will have to live in the garage for the next few weeks, but with temps pushing 70 today, we set the pots on the deck and pretended it was spring. We even put burgers on the grill and lunched out on the deck in sunglasses and shirtsleeves. Our kitties are sure they've died and gone to heaven!


















Powdered sugar

I remember sitting under the awning at Café Du Mondé in New Orleans a few years ago (pre-Katrina) enjoying café au laite and beignets with friends. Everything there - tables, chairs, floors, silverware - everything was sprinkled with a fine layer of powdered sugar. That's what it looks like in our garden this morning, January 27, 2009.













Sunset on the prairie

Kansas is famous for beautiful sunrises and sunsets, but we've had some that were absolutely stunning this month. And the days are growing noticeably longer. Can spring be far away?

Mid-January snow

Brrrr! It's cold in Kansas! I don't think the thermometer hit 10 degrees today. But it was a pretty day just the same. Snow flurries this morning. . .and a bit of it stuck, making a pretty pattern on the deck. But we're leafing wistfully through the seed catalogs. . .

Oh, mister moon, moon, bright and silvery moon. . .

January 11 and the moon was HUGE last night. This photo doesn't do it justice as it was taken early in the morning. Astronomy sites called this Hunger Moon, a name from Native American folklore. In the Northern Hemisphere, this was a time of snow and deep winter, when hunting was poor and wild dogs would roam by moonlight searching for food. (If our Sundae's thick coat is any indication, we have snow and deep winter in our forecast!)

Merry Christmas!

Christmas Day, and the kids are starting to arrive one by one. Precious memories being made. Blessings being counted. Hope the same is true for your family. God bless, and a very merry Christmas to you all!

Christmas in the air

Christmas has come to our neighborhood, especially now that we have snow on the ground and more in the forecast. This is the view from the kitchen window, and off our front porch tonight, December 16. If you listen closely, maybe you can even hear the Christmas music that's playing across the street. . .




A REAL snow!

December 16 and finally we get an honest-to-goodness snow. Beautiful and still gently falling! Isn't the red-twig dogwood gorgeous against the snow?

Four seasons of the garden

Click on the image to see a larger version.

First snow


It was just a dusting, but we got our first snow the day after Thanksgiving. I guess it's time to admit summer - and autumn - are really over and bring in the pillows and rugs. Time to get out last year's garden catalogs and dream of spring.

Late November patchwork

It's almost Thanksgiving but we still have a few things in the garden adding some rich color. The Bald Cypress tree that thrives in a damp fence corner is gorgeous this morning with the sun shining on it. You can see the Red Twig Dogwood strutting its red, too. And on Rock Garden Hill, the sedums, yarrow and speedwell form a carpet of jewel-tones...so beautiful against the backdrop of the limestone and dried tallgrasses.

More bringing the outside in

A few weeks ago, we finally brought our favorite garden pot - a combination of lantana, coleus and ivy - inside for the duration. And it's not very happy inside. I've been cleaning leaves and flower petals off the hardwood floors multiple times each day. But I'm not ready to give up on it quite yet. The ivy will eventually be planted on the other side of the shed. And I'll take some cuttings of the coleus and try to keep them going until spring. It's hard to say good-bye to a favorite flowerpot!

More fall colors


The fall color is almost gone after a couple of frosts and several days of relentless wind, but I captured this last gasp of color from our front porch early in November as a rainstorm rolled in.

Gifts from the compost heap

We spent a few hours working to put the garden to bed this week, but a nice surprise from the compost heap has kept things looking spring-y for a while longer. When we raked Rock Garden Hill this spring, we filled the wheelbarrow with the debris and tossed it in our garden compost heap behind the garden shed. When we went to dump some of the pots the frost killed, we discovered a lush variety of sedum growing on the compost heap. I dug some of it up and popped it in the bare spots in our remaining pots. So now our deck doesn't look quite so naked. Who knows, maybe next spring, instead of a trip to our favorite nurseries, we'll go "shopping" at the compost heap.

Bringing the garden inside for the winter

The one nice thing about winter's arrival, and having to say goodbye to the garden, is that some of it can come indoors. This bowl of succulents thrived all summer and even survived the first night of frost (we forgot to cover it!) but now it's safely tucked inside near a sunny window. We're hoping it will survive a winter inside and be able to take its place on the bridge baluster once again in the spring.

Autumn's first frost

We made it to the end of October before our first frost. We covered quite a few of the pots so the porch and decks still have some color, but the leaves are falling and the garden is fast going to sleep for the winter.

Deeper into Autumn

Please click to enlarge. Stunningly beautiful! Nice to have neighbors with gorgeous trees!

Octoberfest

October 4, and the garden designer has declared that the entryway is perfect - just as he envisioned it. (We won't tell him that the assistant gardener took some clippers to the willow on the right, or no visitor would be able to pass...Hmmm...maybe that was his intention?)

Mum is the word...

September is quickly coming to an end, and today we "replanted" our scraggly petunias in the compost heap and replaced them with gorgeous fall mums. With the air crisp and our hands in the dirt, for a minute it almost felt like spring again. But autumn is my second favorite season, so we're savoring every minute.



September peaches...just for looks

We planted this Bonfire Dwarf Peach tree two years ago and I think it's been the best $25 we ever spent on the yard! Gorgeous pinkish blooms in spring, deep purple palm-like leaves, and late in the summer, hiding underneath, perfect little peaches (that don't taste very good, but look luscious!) These dwarf trees get about 10 feet tall, and this one is close to halfway there now.

Rearranging the garden...furniture

We rearranged some furniture in the house, which brought a garden bench from our bedroom out to the front porch, which brought this cafe set (an anniversary present from my husband a few years ago) out to a corner on the back deck. I love it here. It's the first thing I see when I look outside every morning, and it always seems to be inviting me to come out and enjoy the day.

September rains

A cool September morning and we're getting a gentle rain here in Kansas. My favorite thing about rain here is that the rainspout sets off the "fountain" Ken fashioned from a holey rock. A simple concept, but really neat to watch.

We'd just about given up on the Confetti Lantana in the pot and I'd started to fill in with ivy and coleus cuttings. Wouldn't you know it...when those took off, so did the lantana. It's a beautiful combination - one of my favorite pots of this summer.

Prairie grasses

The prairie grasses along the fence are headed out and so top heavy they keep falling over. Recent rains haven't helped. They look lovely and graceful swaying in the breeze, but they are a pain to mow around. We have several varieties including Big and Little Bluestem, Side Oats Gramma, Prairie Dropseed, Dallas Blues, Indian Grass (the tallest, most prominent grass you see in the photo above) and probably some other varieties I'm forgetting. The grasses really are the stars of the landscaping.

Coral Bells and Blue Mist Spirea

The Blue Mist Spirea is blooming much earlier than last year, which seems odd given our very late spring. We've really enjoyed the Coral Bells this year, too. We have two different varieties, one just planted this year, and the other a year or two older. They really add some nice contrast in the garden and remain attractive into the fall and winter.


Crouching kitten, hidden roses

A scene from our late-August garden. Things are so much greener and prettier than they usually are this time of year, thanks to an abundance of rain and unseasonably cool weather.