Although I look forward to the flowers that bloom during our cool season, the transition is always difficult. The color quotient in my garden drops dramatically as seeds, bulbs, and plug plants take their time to develop roots, shoots, and buds.
I welcome the relatively few plants that flower during the fall months, one of which is Barleria obtusa, also known as bush violet. I'm surprised that I've never seen these plants in local garden centers. I picked up my original plant at the botanic garden located roughly five miles from my home years ago during one of their fall plant sales - when they had such sales, as well as an in-house propagation unit staffed by volunteers. Perhaps my biggest disappointment with that botanic garden, where I was once a volunteer, is that both the plant sales and the propagation unit have been abandoned.
Back view |
Top view |
Clockwise from the upper left: Barleria obtusa, Centaurea 'Silver Feather', Correa 'Ivory Bells', Eustoma grandiflorum, Lavandula multifida, and Vitex trifolia |
I collected a grab-bag of other flowers to fill a second vase focused on the few pink flowers currently found in my garden.
Two bulb flowers, an Amarine and a Lycoris, provided the starting point |
Back view, fleshed out with stems of Leucadendron and Plectranthus scutellarioides (aka coleus) |
Top view |
It remains very dry here. Last week's rain didn't materialize and there's nothing auspicious in the ten-day forecast either. It's windy too, which makes the garden even drier and the marine layer isn't expected to pay us a return visit until at least Wednesday. However, in the meantime the garden soldiers on with the assistance of our irrigation system and spotty hand-watering. According to my records, November 5th marks six months since our last real rain in early May, which measured only 0.17/inch. I'm not expecting the bounty of rain we got during the last two "water years" (measured from October 1st through September 30th of the following calendar year) but something along the lines of "normal" rain would be much appreciated.
For more IAVOM creations, visit Cathy at Rambling in the Garden.
All material © 2012-2024 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party
Your title is so correct! I love the colors and the forms of both arrangements. Just beautiful...as always. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Beth!
DeleteIt must be a bit sad for you to say goodbye to Dahlias, but I for one enjoy the change in this Monday morning vases: both so cheery and lovely, not to mention the huge variety for my eyes to feast on!
ReplyDeleteCentaurea 'Silver Feather' looks so good in the blue vase.
The Coleus in the pink (feels-like-Spring) vase is stunning.
Chavli
I miss the dahlias and the zinnias in part because they made it so easy to put arrangements together, Chavli ;) The Centaurea were stingy with their flowers this year but thankfully their foliage makes up for the slight. I love that coleus which has been hard to find in seed or plugs but I was lucky to propagate the one I happened upon last year and overwinter the plants too.
DeleteThis deep blue lisianthus was always my favourite of the varieties you grow - it's gorgeous. I did try from seed one year, but had zero germination... It's lovely to see a largely blue vase at this time of year - and what pretty foliage the centaurea has. The amarine and coleus in the second vase are gorgeous too!
ReplyDeleteI found some pelleted lisianthus seed earlier this year but ended up buying plugs because it was easier, Cathy - I think those plants are more readily grown in a greenhouse, which I don't have. Although the flower I cut for today's first vase was supplied by a previously established plant, I was delighted to discover that my local garden center was offering healthy lisianthus in 4-inch pots last week during what I consider an off-season for them. I grabbed up 5 plants on my first visit and picked up 3 more later the same week. And I'm kicking myself for not buying the 4 or 5 that remained!
DeleteVery nice, Kris. I love the combinations. I have seen Barleria here, but never for sale. Our local bot gardens have plant sales and propagation, I always end up with something when I visit.
ReplyDeleteI've never seen a botanic garden that didn't have seasonal plant sales on a regular basis - or an onsite propagation unit for that matter. To be fair, the South Coast Botanic Garden has a kiosk with some plants but all of them appear to have been sourced elsewhere and the stock is spare and ordinary at best.
Delete