Skip to main content

Fall Color in the Butterfly Garden

I love plants that give a bonus show in fall and/or winter. This first year, foliage on the Foxglove and Rose Milkweed, along with the lingering the seedhead of the Sweet Black-Eyed Susan were a welcome sight.



Comments

  1. Victor H. Royer is the writer of several of} main works on casino gambling, and is a syndicated columnist for 카지노사이트 nationwide gaming magazines. His columns have appeared in Casino Magazine, Midwest Gaming and Travel, Casino Executive, Card Player, and many of|and a lot of} others. He has also served as a advertising and gaming consultant to the world's largest casinos, and to gaming machine manufacturers. It’s typical gambler’s knowledge to stop gambling after winning huge. Choose the slots with the very best Return to Player percentage (RTP%).

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Down Goes The Cardboard

20 Bags of Mulch on the Ground

While my hope is that native violets will fill in as a living groundcover, mulch is needed in the meantime. I've labeled every single plant so that I will know what should appear where and to better inform my future weeding activities after a long winter.

Now It Looks Like a Butterfly Graveyard!

Between the way-too-early snowfalls and before the weather got really terrible, I was able to install some fall-ordered bare root plants (never again -- that was brutal!) But the spring version of myself will be thankful that I was able to add in blazingstar, heath aster, blue-stemmed goldenrod, all the violets (labeled) and all the extremely early blooming sharp-loped hepatica (noted with the popsicle sticks). I also put protection around the milkweed, as I've heard rabbits tend to nibble down early milkweed shoots. All the plant labels make it look like a graveyard, but I have high hopes it will be full of life next spring.