Six on Saturday – 4/2/2023

Perish the thought I might be getting ahead of myself, but there are very definitely signs that a new season is kicking off. The advantageous bit, as far as SoS is concerned, is that there are a few more flowers appearing, but of greater significance, in the great scheme of things, is that there are a lot of things that are revealing their survival of the winter so far, shoots emerging from the ground, buds swelling on stems above ground, signs of life evident when layers of winter protecting leaves are moved aside. As the remaining detritus from last year slowly gets cut down, it is to reveal. not lifelessness, but renewal.

Six things happening in the garden on a Saturday is the brief for this meme; should your own sap be rising it would be lovely to have you join in, assuming you don’t already. There is a participants guide here, though in truth it’s a simple enough concept.

One.
What it doesn’t tell you in the participants guide is that it is de rigueur at this time of year to post pictures of snowdrops. I’m certainly no galanthophile, but neither am I a galanthophobe. I can offer only common or garden sorts, single or double. I have succumbed to the lure of Avon Bulb’s catalogue, varieties with names will be coming my way. My garden is not well furnished with places they can grow without risk of disturbance, something that is going to have to change.


Two.
Another plant that regularly makes an appearance at this time of year is Hylotelephium ‘Herbstfreude’, like clumps of miniature cabbages bejewelled with raindrops. I may call it Hylotelephium but will always think of it as Sedum.


Three.
I can’t complain that looking after Sue’s glasshouse while she’s been away has been too onerous, cacti and succulents are far better able to look after themselves than I am. Crassula ovata is flowering very nicely to itself in there. I took its picture, then drew back a little and took it again in context. Context is everything, forget it for a moment and you have spines in your nether regions.

Four.
There has to be a Camellia of course, and I have four or five flowering. Camellia ‘1001 Summer Nights’ Jasmine has a bit of a long back story which I wrote about elsewhere. Suffice it to say that it is supposed to be a new hybrid that flowers in summer, something like July to November. I put it in my six the day before Christmas, when it had come through the cold spell and opened its first blooms. It has about six blooms and a few buds, but will have to make new growth and set new buds before it can do more and I will be mighty surprised if it manages to do so by July.


Five.
Narcissus just won’t grow in my ground, for reasons unknown. I have a few in pots, like this N. bulbocodium var. conspicuus. They flowered well in their first year and haven’t done as well since, though the foliage growth this year seems pretty lush, so maybe next year they’ll be good. I don’t want to think that those fabulous pans full of flower that you see at the alpine shows were bought bulbs planted three months earlier.


Six.
Decision time, another Camellia or another succulent. The succulent has the looks, it hasn’t had to put up with winter weather. It’s a form of Echeveria pulvinata, variety unknown.

That’ll do. I have a slide show to put together for a garden club talk on Monday. Months out I say yes to these things, then with a day or two to go, wonder what I was thinking of. It’ll be fine.

42 thoughts on “Six on Saturday – 4/2/2023

    1. Me panic? I read yesterday that fear of public speaking is the most common human phobia, followed by acrophobia. I wonder what the word is for fear of computer/projector breakdown.

      Like

  1. Your snowdrops with raindrops is a lovely photo Jim. I bought 25 single and 25 double snowdrops in the green several years ago and I still don’t have a decent clump! Oh, well there are other bulbs. The Echeveria is rather lovely. Sue acclimatised to being back in the cold yet? Or is she spending all her time in the heated greenhouse?

    Like

    1. Sue isn’t back yet, she’s calling me up at 8am their time and complaining that it’s 28°C and stifling. She went to Brisbane Botanics yesterday and send lots of lush photos. Your experience of snowdrops chimes perfectly with my expectations, sadly.

      Like

  2. Snow is what we got last week. Big surprise. Today sunshine and temps above freezing, though, so this is welcome. I would not mind below freezing temps, but yesterday was a high of 6F, with wind chill of -25F. So, more whiteness in my post, and some houseplants to round it out. Looking forward to seeing what everyone else has going!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. You’ll be delighted to discover that snowdrops have made it into my post this week! Thankfully, because there’s not that much else going on out there at the moment. Your photo, with the drops of water, is fabulous though. When to prune roses is the question I’ve been mulling over this week, as well as what do to with some cyclamen seedlings.

    I’m off to check out Avon bulbs (I love your budgetary book balancing).

    https://www.hortusbaileyana.co.uk/2023/02/early-february-in-garden.html

    Liked by 3 people

  4. You have some lovely colour this week. In particular the Echeveria and the Narcissus. The Camelia is very pretty too. Sue’s greenhouse is a wonderland of succulents, and just as well you did not step back into those huge spines on that cactus!
    A mixed lot from me this week, including the promised aerial view of the vegetable garden, C/O Mr S who took the photo from roof. Here is the link to this week’s Six: https://hairbellsandmaples.com/2023/02/04/six-on-saturday-w5-2023-gingerly-through-the-garden/

    Liked by 2 people

  5. Getting ahead of yourself? It seems that you are getting behind yourself. Is today the fourth of February there like it is here, or is your region in a VERY different time zone?
    Your camellia reminds me that I should have gotten more flowery pictures. I seem to make a habit of lacking flowery pictures. Camellia are somewhat easy to forget here. To me, within the context of our landscapes, the trees are more interesting.
    These are my six:https://tonytomeo.com/2023/02/04/six-on-saturday-after-the-storm-2/

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I’m not sure I’m getting this time zone thing but am I right in thinking 4/2/2023 is the second of April where you are. A truly intelligent internet would autocorrect such anomalies when they cross boundaries. Then again the URL for your post is 2023/02/04 so you surely don’t turn that around and get 02/04/2023?

      Liked by 2 people

  6. I just typed a comment and I pushed a random button and it disappeared, forgive me if it has popped up somewhere and I am repeating myself. Yes, I agree, I feel different about it all this week, as if it is indeed possible. I think it is going to get a bit cold again next week, but hopefully nothing like we have had. I too succumbed to Avon Bulbs, but not snowdrops. I considered a snowdrop photo, but the picture was so blurry I was ashamed. Your shot is great. Love the echeveria flower, what a wonderful colour. Here are mine https://offtheedgegardening.com/2023/02/04/six-on-saturday-mizzle/

    Liked by 2 people

    1. No random comments have popped here, other than the usual ones. My Avon Bulbs was not just snowdrops, my current best excuse is that it was the money I’d saved by having the heating turned low while Sue was away.

      Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to J. Wilder Cancel reply