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Showing posts with label Magnolia trees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magnolia trees. Show all posts

Sunday, March 19, 2023

Spring, 2023

Annually the vernal equinox occurs on March 19, 20 or 21 in the Northern Hemisphere. The vernal equinox happens when the sun crosses the imaginary line, AKA the celestial equator, from South to North in the sky above the Earth's equator. Spring, 2023, begins Monday, March 20 and continues until Wednesday, June 21. 

03/17/2023: My dear friend Rosa shared this picture from her place near 
Villanueva, NM, which is mostly East of Santa Fe on I-40.

Does not look like Spring at Lake Tahoe
where Dwight's niece lives.
She sent me this picture taken from
her dining room window.
 
The almost daily rains has battered 
the white blossoms on
the Santa Rosa plum tree in my backyard.
Hopefully the bees are finding the
flowers so they can produce an
abundance of plums this year.

A few days ago on Shasta's and
my morning walk I took this picture.
Magnolia trees in various colors are
livening up the neighborhood.

   Lamprocapnos spectabilis (Bleeding heart)
Last year I noticed these plants were not doing well where I had
planted them. I believe it was too sunny so
I moved them to shady spot.
They seem contently thriving where I transplanted them.
They are even beginning to bloom this Spring.  

Sisyrinchium  bellum (Californian blue eyed grass)

Ceanothus (California wild lilac ‘Dark Star’)




Ribes sanguineum var. glutinosum ( ‘Heart’s Delight’)

A close up picture 

of the lowest hanging flowers

is above.    

and the entire plant on a
lovely sunny day
a rarity these days.

Frequently I notice that the Wild Birds Unlimited  
Woodpeckers cylinder is covered
with Bushtits. I simply love these cute little birds!
I am hoping as the coyote bushes grow
and produce more flowers hence seeds
they will visit those.
At MuRefuge they certainly did.

I have noticed when I am out and about in my sweet little town that the rosemary bushes are covered with bright blue flowers. I have a very small bush that also has has many blue flowers. I have ordered a pink flowering rosemary which I hope to plant in the ground soon. At MuRefuge I had three of these. I thoroughly enjoyed the pink in contrast to the glossy green leaves.

As I survey my garden bursting into Spring I have a frequent big belly


Saturday, March 5, 2022

Spring . . . Early

“We hear you, fellow-creatures. We know we are wrecking the world and we are afraid. What we have unleashed has such momentum now, we don’t know how to turn it around. Don’t leave us alone, we need your help. You need us too for your own survival. Are there powers there you can share with us?


I, lichen, work slowly, very slowly. Time is my friend. This is

what I give you: patience for the long haul and perseverance.


It is a dark time. As deep-diving trout I offer you my fearlessness of the dark. 


I am caterpillar. The leaves I eat taste bitter now. But dimly I

sense a great change coming. What I offer you, humans, is my

willingness to dissolve and transform. I do that without knowing what the end-result will be, so I share with you my courage too.”

                                                              JOANNA MACY                                                                                      


Blossoms on the Aristolochia californica (Dutchman's pipe vine

The Dutchman's pipe vine pictured above is my very favorite of all native vines. The pipe shaped blossoms are just so interesting! When the plant specific insect, the fungus gnat, comes to the flower, it gets temporarily trapped inside until it is thoroughly dusted with pollen. Slowly the flower relaxes and allows the gnat to escape and to spread the pollen. The vine itself is easy to grow, and grow it does each season. Once well established it can use pruning. The meager plant here does not seem to grow as fast as I remember they did at MuRefuge. I have planted an additional two very small plants purchased from California Flora Nursery in Fulton. I do so ever hope they will flourish here and grow into robust vines covered with flowers and fruit. I am looking forward to when the Pipevine Swallowtail females lay eggs on the leaves so I can watch the caterpillars gobble up the leaves.

Below are pictures I took of the entire event of egg, caterpillar, to butterfly while living at MuRefuge.

Eggs

Caterpillar

Chrysalis and caterpillar

Just emerged California Pipevine Swallowtail (butterfly)

I am looking forward to viewing the entire process here as well. It is such an extremely astonishing process to be hold!
 

"May it be beautiful before me.

May it be beautiful behind me.

May it be beautiful below me

May it be beautiful above me.

May it be beautiful all around me.

In beauty it is finished.

In beauty it is finished."

                           NAVAHO CHANT

It is beautiful all around us here in Cotati and in fact everywhere we drive in Sonoma County. It is Spring with a vast array of flowering bushes, trees and perennials.

The plum trees with both white and pink flowers
are in bloom everywhere. This one, and the one below
 are in the park just across the street from our
Cotati home. Shasta and I walk this
way every morning on our 2 mile walk.



These are on the hill a ways South of our house
where Shasta often walks with her "Dads" in the morning.

The camellias blooming this Spring
in an array of pinks, reds and white
are really spectacular.
I remember it was one of my mother's favorite
flowers she became acquainted with
while living in Southern California
in her early married life.

Oxalis stricta (common yellow woodsorrel)
is an ubiquitous weed found in almost
everyone's lawn or garden here in Sonoma County.


This picture was recently
taken at my acupuncturist's 
in the West County.

Manzanita bushes are in full bloom all around
the county. Some have pale pink flowers
while others have pure white ones.
This is one of my very favorite native bushes!


Each Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings I pass
this stunning display of rosemary cascading down
a wall in the front yard of a home which
is atop a gentle slope.

And nearby is this beautiful Flowering quince.

The deciduous Magnolia trees are flowering.
This one is white but I pass on Shasta's and my
morning walk others that are pink.

And just down the street a crabapple 
is covered with glorious flowers.

Spring is one of my favorite seasons; the other one is Fall. I am so delighted that Spring has already arrived in spite of the minimal rainfall so far in 2022. No doubt we are in for a record breaking dry year here in Sonoma County but Shasta has not a care in the world. Below she is nestled in our arugula bed after one of her Auntie T's recent visits.


May our bodies, our minds, our spirts, learn a new rhythm paced

by the rhythmic pulse of the whole created order.

May spring come to us, be in us, and recreate life in us.

CHINOOK PSALTER


Spring arrived early during one of the top ten hottest, driest months of February on record here in the Bay Area. May we whole heartedly celebrate Spring and all her glory with a hearty, frequent