Friday, May 10, 2013

Iris Germanica

Also known as "bearded iris":

("Lullaby of Spring" German iris; photo by Jonathan Everitt)

I spent two summers as a volunteer at Kingwood Center Gardens in Mansfield, Ohio, tending the iris and day-lily beds. Of course these are some of the most recognizable plants but the face, the eye of the iris strikes me still.

("Aachen Elf" iris, photo here)

These are hardy perennials that are known and so well-loved for their big colorful heads, long stalks, and swooping petals. It is almost as if they stand to meet you face-to-face, their mouths open in a slack-jawed but joyous smile. They give off this warmth, too. When you're working in their soil a sense of at-homeness overtakes you.

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Hyacinthoides non-scripta


(image: Peter Gasson)

From Kew Royal Botanic Gardens:
At the beginning of the 29th century special "Bluebell Trains" took tourists on excursions to see the spectacular bluebell displays in the deciduous woodlands of the Chiltern Hills in southeast England. Although the special train services no longer run, the bluebells can still be seen in what has since been designated an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB).
 Some other AONBs (that don't necessarily boast an abundance of bluebells like Chiltern Hills) include Blackdown Hills, North Devon Coast, and North Pennines (England); Clwydian Range and Wye Valley (Wales); and the Mourne Mountains and Ring of Gullion (Northern Ireland).

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