Friday, April 9, 2021

2 more and poppies!


Two more survivors! The hummingbird bush and the mexican bird of paradise are putting up new growth from the roots. No signs of life from the hibiscus, bougainvillea, star of india gardenia, desert rose trumpet flower bush, purple orchid tree, and while the pink trumpet flower in the ground came back, the yellow one has not but since I have one in a pot, I'm not including it in the no show list. Same for the porterweed, dead in the ground but a living one in a pot. I haven't given up on the purple orchid tree yet but I'm pretty sure everything else that hasn't shown life by now is dead. So that's 4 or 5 lost depending on if I include the purple orchid tree.

The poppies are in full bloom. 

Most are just the brilliant red with the four black spots


but now and then a variation shows up like the ruffly fluffy

or the semi ruffly fluffy

or the trending to pink/lavender

or the white stripey

or the black spots with a white edge.

My neighbor's bees have been very busy in my yard so I hope he gifts me some of their honey later in the year.





21 comments:

  1. Does poppy nectar make the bees drowsy? (I know they're probably the wrong sort of poppies for that.) But it's a sweet thought.
    They sure are pretty.

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    1. I don't know about poppies but they do get drunk off figs that ferment in the sun on the trees.

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  2. Love those genetic variations! That ruffly one looks like it belongs at the Race for the Roses, or perhaps an English wedding. It would make a dynamite hat!

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    1. I also get the occasional one that is a more orangey red but none were blooming the days I took those pictures.

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  3. Your poppies are so beautiful. Ours haven't bloomed yet, and now I can hardly wait!

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    1. do you get the red ones or just the orange 'california' poppies?

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  4. Those are beautiful. My dad grew orange oriental poppies. Very persknickety about transplantation. Worse than that plant with the tall single white blossom with a name I can't recall.

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    1. well, now you've got my curiosity up. tall single white blossom?

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  5. I just love poppies... you have some truly beautiful ones. I especially like the ruffled one! Cool!

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    1. these were seeds from a friend's garden. also had pink and purple ones but they didn't reseed as readily so don't have them anymore.

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  6. Wow, the poppies are an explosion of color. So early, too.

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    1. they're a little later than usual because of the arctic freeze.

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  7. Your poppies are gorgeous! I have tried but failed to grow poppies in my yard:(

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    1. I threw seeds down one year and they have reseeded every year since. been at least 5 or 6 years.

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  8. Thank you so much. These are really exciting.

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  9. Wow! So many wonderful variations. Beautiful. Does your camera capture the true redness of the poppies? I find that my camera tends to translate blue-red to orangey red.

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    1. I think the colors are pretty true. I do get an orangey red variety but none were blooming when I took these pictures.

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  10. I love poppies! Thank you for taking me on a tour through yours!

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  11. Poppies always a fave, I love everything about them, If I had a daughter i would name her Poppy. They grew well when we lived on the res by the bay where it was dry and sunny. Maybe that is their perfect environment?

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  12. Wonder what's up with those ruffly poppies?! How bizarre that they'd just show up that way. Must be some genetic throwbacks to an earlier hybrid -- or a cross with someone else's poppies?

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I opened my big mouth, now it's your turn.