Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Cleome Serrulata, Wildflower Wednesday

Cleome serrulata is a native self sowing annual.  I was tickled to get some seeds at a plant/seed share, I think, last season. It is the first year I have had them in front of our picture window, anyway.    Planted in the fall, they come up in the spring. I am posting to participate in Gail's at Clay and Limestone Wildflower Wednesday.


Of all the plants in the yard, this plant, also called Rocky Mountain beeplant has had the longest bloom time, and has attracted about as many pollinators as the different kinds of mountain mints. It has been fun seeing lots of American ladies earlier in the season, and now, painted ladies on the blooms
.

I am signed up for a class on bee identification in August.  I hope to be able to remember the names of the bees on the blooms in the yard.  It is fun seeing a number of different kinds here.




I am not remembering what this yellow creature is.  I always like to see different kinds of insects feeding near each other.  They seem to be better at sharing than we are sometimes.


 
I am thinking these are a sweat bee of some kind.  It is fun to watch them balancing like this.


 The Lady Bird Johnson site says they get 3 to 6 feet tall.  These are at least 4 feet tall.  They do well in dry soil, and sun to part sun. In addition to providing for bees and butterflies, doves and other small birds eat the seeds. https://www.wildflower.org/plants/result.php?id_plant=CLSE

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

October Wildflower Wednesday/East Bed Update

The garden season is wrapping up, and there are not many blooms left.  We had a heavy, wet snow a week and a half ago, which caused a number of plants to break or lean over.  I am glad most have perked up and are showing nice fall colors.  I decided to do a post showing the east front bed instead of focusing on one plant for Wildflower Wednesday, hosted by Gail at Clay and Limestone.  I want to look at some older posts to see changes over time.  I am in the process of making changes to a number of areas, including this bed.  I wonder if I will reach a point where I won't want to keep making the changes. I tend to plop plants in without a design, and while there are lots of blooms and pollinators, there are also holes that are not quite big enough for a plant the size of the ones around the space.

I am not a fan of the eastern fox squirrels we have, but we co-exist the best we can. 




The squirrel is eating some of the seeds I scattered from the maximillian sunflower, and maybe the rosinweed, after removing a wild senna that was taking up too much space.  I also scattered some pale Indian plantain seeds in the area.  I don't know if they eat those.


I skipped over some of the west side of the area, and went to the front of the bed, where we are facing south.  I think my plan was to start here with the photos, and not include the squirrel photos, but I changed my mind.  The tall plant on the left is sweet black eyed susan.  The brown plant in the middle is one of the sneezeweed plants that have self sown around.  The other ones are not as brown as this one.  I am also seeing brown coneflower plants and seedheads that the birds have been eating from.  The sign shows we are a Monarch Waystation.


The New England aster in front did not bloom this year.  I cut several of them back, because they had a disease that was causing the leaves to turn brown.  The others bloomed, thankfully, and I am glad the foliage that came back is looking better.  The brown stem is common milkweed.


The green foliage next to the sign is one of a number of amsonias of different kinds, which seem to have cross pollinated with each other and given me my own kind of amsonias.  They are loaded with lovely blue blooms in the spring, but need to be trimmed back a couple or so times in the summer so they won't flop over.  I am thinking about taking some out to make room for other plants with longer bloom times.  I need to figure out which ones.


This is facing west. The brown seed heads are yellow giant hyssop, a new to me plant that I am enjoying.  My memory has not been very good the last few months.  This is either the first or second season for this lovely plant, which I have two of.  Oh, I also scattered some seeds from it in the area where I made a space for seeds.  The plant to the right is gray headed coneflower.  The tall plant in the back is cup plant, which is on the other side of the front sidewalk.


You can tell it is fall!  The yellow amsonia hubrichtii will be staying.


You would not see a number of the plants I have, such as maximillian sunflower and meadow rue, the plant with the lovely colors growing together in nature, but they seem to do OK here.


This amsonia on the left side of the photo may be one that I dig out at some point.  The sweet black eyed susan is flopping.  Oh, the little shrub on the right is an American black current.  It replaced the butterfly bush that had been there before I found out the seeds can get into the waterway and grow down the way, crowding out native plants.


We turned the corner and are facing north.  The area between the bicycle and the fence is where the seeds are planted.


I wish I could remember which kinds of asters are which.  They have self sown around.  I don't even notice them much until they bloom.  It is fun to see the different kinds of pollinators that depend on them in the fall.


Here is where we started with the squirrel.  I was thinking the plant with the tall brown seed heads was prairie bush clover, but just now, when I did a search, I think I figured out that it is round-headed bush clover.  I had two of them, but one died after after a few years.  The asters and mountain mint are mingling nicely.


The liatris by the fake bird house has grown here a number of years.  I don't remember what kind it is.


Here is the maximillian sunflower clump that I scattered some seeds from in the other area. I was pleased to read recently in Heather Holm's Pollinators of Native Plants that it is a host plant for silvery checkerspots and bordered patch butterflies, which must explain why I saw bordered patch butterflies several times this season.  I don't remember seeing them in the past, but there may have been an occasional one.  There have usually been some silvery checkerspots around, and I did see some of those this season as well.  There is a bordered patch on the asters in the header photo.  (There are some seedheads of pale Indian plantain leaning on the sunflowers.)


I wasn't remembering what the plant next to the stake is, until I asked in the Facebook group, Gardening with Nature in Mind, and was told it is rosinweed.  I may have picked it up in one of our plant shares we have for the local members.



We are back to the sweet black eyed susan.  I think I am going to trim them back early in the season so they won't get as tall and flop.


I don't know what I was thinking when I planted pussy toes in an area with tall plants around it, but the clump has spread, and looks to like it there.  There is a bare space behind this, where I planted some prairie milkweed plants, which did not grow much. I hope they do better next year.


I am thankful for our yard, and hope to start using my time more wisely, so I can be outside more. I hope all is well with you and your gardens.

Wednesday, September 26, 2018

September 2018 Wildflower Wednesday

Oh, my goodness!  How did it get to be September already?  Many plants are finished blooming for the season, but the fall bloomers are in full swing, adding beauty and nectar for the pollinators.  It is awesome to be outside with butterflies and such flying around! 

The plant I am going to feature for Gail's Wildflower Wednesday this time is one that is new to me.  I don't remember if I planted it last year, but this is the first season for it to bloom.  It has been fun to watch the Helianthus maximiliani grow and then bloom.  I have to admit to tying it up for support, as I have done with a number of tall or floppy plants.  Here is information from the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center.

I have these in pretty much full sun, in an area that gets hit with the sprinkler system my husband uses on the lawn when it has not been raining in awhile.

I wrote down the dates in the order the photos were taken, but for some reason, they didn't load in order.  I rearranged them, and decided to delete a few, but I think I figured out the dates these were taken.

I can tell this one is from July 26.  It is definitely not an early bloomer.


This must have been taken August 3.  Last month's featured plant, Cleome serrulata, Rocky Mountain Bee plant was in full bloom here, and the Maximilian sunflowers were still not ready to bloom.  Can you see the sunflower foliage in the middle?


This was taken September 14.  Look!  There are flower buds!


Here is what the top looked like the same day.


The next few were taken this week.  The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower site says these get 3 to 10 feet tall in one area of the page, and on another 3 to 6 feet.  That is quite a range!  The tallest stem here is about five feet high.  The blooms face east.


The white seed heads are Pale Indian Plantain.  I saw a wasp on one of them today.  I don't know if there was any pollen on there or not.


I have seen butterflies and a few bees on the blooms, but not always when I have my camera handy.  I read that numerous birds eat the seeds.  I just hope the squirrels here don't eat them all.


Here is what the Cleome serrulata plants look like this week:


This one loaded sideways for some reason.


But wait!  I need to show some photos of the action on the New England Asters, which I most likely have featured before.  They are the hot spot for the pollinators this week.  I counted 8 monarchs in this spot today, a bordered patch, and a bedraggled buckeye. This is a volunteer plant.  I am not sure how long it has been here, but the older clumps had a disease of some kind, and I cut them back.  Some of those are getting ready to bloom, and one has no buds yet.  I am thankful for the healthy volunteers!




I hope to get more blogs visited next week. I have a lot going on this week, getting ready for a native plant/seed share this Saturday for the local members of a FB group, Gardening with Nature in Mind. I know I've said this before, but I miss visiting blogs like I used to, now that I am spending so much time on Facebook.

Added After First Posted:
The next day, I saw a bordered patch butterfly and a buckeye butterfly on the sunflower blooms, and took some photos: