Fall Foliage: Orange, Apricot & Bronze

What would autumn be in the northeast, without the blaze of sugar maples in our forests and gardens?

Acer saccharum-Sugar maple
Those herbs contains prescription canada de viagra check for source organic efficacy which can get rid of ED without worrying about other diseases. In recent times, several other prescription medications such as Kamagra levitra 10 mg purchase at storefront also known as PDE5 inhibitors. It is prescription medicine and taken under strict instruction of your physician. viagra buying online But even such downtownsault.org cheapest levitra factors do not explain numerous cases of Erectile Dysfunction condition.

In Ontario such a thought is inconceivable, but they’re just one species of many whose foliage turns salmon, orange, apricot, peach or bronze, once chlorophyll disappears in autumn and exposes the secondary pigments, whose role it is to harvest sunlight to feed the plant. Now that I’ve escorted you through the red part of the hardy autumn trees & shrubs in my last blog, let’s have a look at some species that turn those spectacular orange shades.  Sugar maples (Acer saccharum), of course, are so predominant in northeast North America, they seem like the iconic poster child for colour change. Rarely, however, do they turn a solid orange like the tree below…..

Acer saccharum-sugar maple2

Instead, their leaves transform to yellow, orange and scarlet according to conditions of sun and shade, and also according to how much sugar has been metabolized to bring on the synthesis of anthocyanins seen in the colour change of many red maples (Acer rubrum).

Acer saccharum leaves-Sugar maple

A few of the Asian maples take on orange hues as well. Just outside my own Toronto living room window is my nearest and dearest connection with orange autumn foliage – a common Japanese maple (Acer palmatum) that has now been with me long enough for its branches to caress the 2nd floor guest room windows (much to my window-washer’s dismay), and to offer, absolutely free, the most beautiful fall colour show each October or early November.  This lovely tree has been growing against my old house’s front wall for more than 25 years, and is protected from fierce north winds while enjoying the warmth of the sun from the south.  That’s not to say it’s entirely happy; it always loses a few young boughs in an unusually cold winter, and freezing rain after a heavy snow has sheared off a big limb. But it’s this autumn transformation that makes it such a treat, with colours ranging from deep scarlet to the softest apricot.

Acer palmatum-Japanese maple

From inside the living room, it’s like looking through a tracery of amber lace, which is why I’ve never wanted drapery or blinds on my windows and instead decided on a fringe of blown-glass witches’ balls to catch and refract the sunlight.

Acer palmatum-Witches' Balls

There is nothing more beautiful than those delicate leaves – the subject of so many fine Japanese woodblock prints over the centuries.

Acer palmatum-Japanese maple leaves

Another beauty from Asia – this time from central China – is the elegant paperbark maple (Acer griseum) with its glossy, peeling, copper-toned bark, and its wonderful deep orange-scarlet autumn colour. I grow this species in my own garden, but this beautiful specimen is in Toronto’s Mount Pleasant Cemetery. It is simply one of the best trees for a small garden and, if possible, should be placed where its lovely bark can be seen in winter.

Acer griseum-Paperbark maple

There’s another little Asian maple that is rather rare in gardens in North America, but seems perfectly hardy and should be used more: ivy-leaved maple or vine-leafed maple (Acer cissifolium). Multi-stemmed and used as a small tree or large shrub, it’s especially beautiful in October when its foliage turns a gold-suffused-apricot.

Acer cissifolium-Ivyleaf maple

Then there is three-flower maple (Acer triflorum), yet another small, fine Asian maple that takes on soft orange-yellow tones in fall.  I am so fortunate to have these rarer maples in Mount Pleasant Cemetery.

From Korea comes a lovely shrub with waxy, fragrant, white spring flowers called Korean abelia (Abelia mosanensis). In autumn, the foliage turns a rich salmon-orange.

Abelia mosanensis-fall

Many Japanese cherries turn colour in autumn.  Sargent’s cherry (Prunus sargentii) often turns a spectacular mix of deep salmon and dusky rose-pink….

Prunus sargentii-Sargent's cherry

…while the hardy Japanese cherry hybrid ‘Accolade’, below (one of whose parents is Prunus sargentii), usually develops a good peachy-orange colour.

Prunus 'Accolade'-Japanese cherry

Even the hardiest and most common of the Japanese cherries, Prunus serrulata ‘Kanzan’ – shown here in Toronto’s Mount Pleasant Cemetery – puts on a pretty, soft-apricot show each autumn.

Prunus serrulata 'Kanzan'-Japanese cherry

What else comes from Asia and turns orange in fall? Korean mountain ash (Sorbus alnifolia), also called the alder-leafed whitebeam, is a small, hardy, underused tree with small red fruit and apricot-orange leaves.

Sorbus alnifolia-Korean mountain ash

European mountain ash (Sorbus aucuparia) also puts on a good orange show in fall, both the leaves and the fruit clusters (until the birds finish with them).

Sorbus aucuparia-Mountain ash

What about oaks? Though there is great variability in the colour of senescing fall leaves, a number of hardy oaks pass through spectacular shades of orange and copper. Perhaps the most dependable is pin oak (Quercus palustris), with its finely-cut, narrow leaves. To see this tree on a sunny October day is to celebrate the joys of autumn. Coupled with that, pin oak is fast-growing, easy to cultivate and pollution-tolerant.

Quercus palustris-Pin oak

Red oak (Quercus rubra) is a majestic tree that will infuse the forest canopy with honey-gold and russet-orange, sometimes with wine-red highlights. Indeed, all these colours can sometimes be found on a single red oak bough in autumn.

Quercus rubra-red oak

We scarcely need to look outside our native flora for oaks to use in our gardens, but there’s one half-native-half-exotic hybrid pyramidal oak that’s perfectly suited for very small gardens, given its narrow, columnar bearing.  It’s the Crimson Spire™ oak, (Quercus x bimundorum), a hybrid of English oak and white oak, which gives beautiful russet-orange autumn colour.

Quercus robu -'Fastigiata'-columnar English oak

Besides oaks, beeches are the quintessential stately autumn tree for bronze-gold-orange fall colour. That holds true for our native American beech (Fagus grandifolia), below, alas currently experiencing the deadly ravages of beech bark disease in my area…

Fagus grandifolia-American beech

…. or the European beech (Fagus sylvatica) and its various cultivars and forms, including copper beech.  I particularly love the fernleaf beech (F. sylvatica ‘Asplenifolia’), below, one of the most graceful of trees, with soft apricot fall color;

Fagus sylvatica 'Asplenifolia'-Fernleaf beech

And there are a few rare Asian beeches, like Fagus orientalis,below, with its rich fall colour.

Fagus orientalis-Oriental beech

Another beautiful, large tree is the Japanese zelkova (Zelkova serrata), which always turns colour in autumn, though it can be red, soft orange, as below, or yellow, depending on the tree and the exposure.

Zelkova serrata

Not all ash trees exhibit colour change in fall, but white ash (Fraxinus americana), below, can often be counted on to make a beautiful show.  (Sadly, the emerald ash borer is wreaking devastation on this genus in my part of North America and no one will be planting ashes for a long time.)

Fraxinus americana-White ash

What about a conifer that turns orange in autumn before shedding its needles? There are two, actually, but since bald cypress isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, let’s give a cheer for the lovely dawn redwood (Metasequoia glyptostroboides).

Metasequoia glyptostroboides-Dawn redwood

A small and rather rare tree that often inspires a curious double-take in autumn is the pillar crabapple or Chonosuki crabapple (Malus tschonoskii). Its fall hues are much more vibrant than most crabapples, a gorgeous mix of gold, apricot and salmon, on a tidy tree that should be grown much more often.

Malus tschonoskii-Pillar apple

From the forests of eastern North America come two smallish trees that turn apricot-gold in October. Both are members of the large birch (Betulaceae) family and much-loved for their hard wood – a  trait commemorated in their respective, and confusingly similar, common names.  Let’s start with American hophornbeam or ironwood (Ostrya virginiana). an understory component of forests from Nova Scotia to Texas. That genus name comes from the Greek word ostrua for “bone-like”, which gives a clue as to its hardness; traditional uses have included tool handles and fence posts.

Ostrya virginiana-Ironwood

The second small North American native is Carpinus caroliniana, also known by the similar common names of American hornbeam, ironwood, musclewood and blue-beech. I really love this tree, and if I were starting my garden from scratch, I’d make sure it included one. Look at the beautiful honeyed-apricot fall colour below….

Carpinus caroliniana-American hornbeam

I cannot talk about orange fall colour without mentioning smoke bush (Cotinus coggygria).  Some autumns, the leaves of this large, multi-stemmed shrub are almost a neon orange and are especially thrilling when backlit by the sun.  This is the wine-leafed cultivar ‘Purpureus’ – note the little wisp of left-over “smoke”.

Cotinus coggygria 'Royal-Purple'-Smoke bush

I mentioned fothergillas in my blog on red fall colour, but in fact they can also be among the best orange-leafed shrubs in autumn; it just depends on the season. And often, all colors are present in the shrub. In fact, I can promise you that if you plant one, you will be delighted with its foliage change in fall. Here is Fothergilla gardenii at the Toronto Botanical Garden.

Fothergilla-gardenii-(1)

Taking a page from its red-hued cousin, the burning bush, the common European spindle-tree (Euonymus europaeus) has excellent salmon-coral fall colour when grown in sufficient sun. The one below has decided to re-flower in autumn (something that happens in many plant families, given a long summer and enough time for a few of the current year’s growing buds to mature within a single season, rather than waiting for the following spring).

Euonymus europaeus-Spindle tree

And though I’ve mentioned the ‘Rosy Glow’ Japanese barberry in my discussion of red fall colour, common barberry (Berberis vulgaris) – despite its bad reputation for invasiveness and alternate-hosting of disease – is no slouch in the autumn fireworks department.

Berberis vulgaris-Common barberry

When I was designing gardens in the 1990s, I would often include Peking cotoneaster (C. acutifolius), a serviceable shrub for hedging or screening that was off the radar of most gardeners, but one I appreciated for its ease of cultivation in any soil and its beautiful mottled autumn leaf colour.

Cotoneaster acutifolius-Peking cotoneaster

Many spireas take on soft peach-apricot-gold tones in fall. Given their ubiquity –especially Van Houtte spirea (Spiraea x vanhouttei) hedges, below — it’s a good thing that they have something to offer long after their spring flowers fade.

Spiraea x vanhouttei

I have a soft spot for my final shrub, given that it grows in my back garden and its fall colour change is part of a dramatic duet with a stunning neighbouring perennial – a “twofer” (well threefer, if you count the white fall snakeroot, Actaea simplex) that extends the season well into November.

Rhus-typina-'Bailtiger'-Tiger Eyes sumac-my garden

Not that Tiger Eyes™ sumac (Rhus typhina ‘Bailtiger’) doesn’t hold its own through spring and summer: no, those ferny, chartreuse leaves add a luminous pool of light to a shady corner in my garden for months on end. But in October, when the autumn monkshood (Aconitum carmichaelii ‘Arendsii’) finally opens those cobalt-blue flowers atop tall, thick stems just in time for the sumac to transform itself into a lacy, apricot confection, it is simply my favourite moment in the garden.

Rhus-typina-'Bailtiger'2-Ti

My final plant for orange fall colour is a perennial grass, little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium), below.  In October, this wonderful, warm-season grass takes on soft-orange hues that speak of autumn on the prairie. And like all fall colour change, it signals a stirring last hurrah in the growing season, a time for cheering before the frosts of November subdue the garden palette and the snows of December finally subsume it. Until next year.

Schizachyrium scoparium-Little bluestem

Got Milkweed?

Last weekend I attended a fundraiser film that, rather shockingly, released hundreds of monarch butterflies into the theatre.  There were orange-and-black monarchs flying at me, through me and fluttering all around me. Little kids in the audience stood up, their arms upraised to grab the beautiful butterflies. Film Poster

But if we took our 3D glasses off, the butterflies behaved themselves and stayed inside the IMAX screen, where they were starring in a wonderful film called Flight of the Butterflies 3D.  Written and produced by SK Films and its principals Jonathan Barker and Wendy MacKeigan, it’s an engrossing, award-winning story filmed in Canada and Mexico.

I received my ticket in exchange for a modest donation to the David Suzuki Foundation’s Got Milkweed project, which is in turn part of their Homegrown National Park project.  The idea is to crowd-source the planting of native milkweed seeds and plants to make a milkweed corridor through Toronto.  Monarchs, as we know, lay their eggs on all Book by Carol Pasternakspecies of milkweed (Asclepias spp), where the eggs develop into caterpillars, then chrysalids, then the iconic black and orange butterfly that’s become the poster insect for sustainability and our own relationship with nature.  It’s also the topic of a book written by my Facebook friend and monarch butterfly specialist Carol Pasternak.

By increasing the amount of milkweed available, it’s hoped that there will be abundant larval habitat for the monarchs that use the city as the departure point for their long flight over Lake Ontario and points south to the overwintering grounds in Mexico. There they roost by the tens of millions in the Oyamel firs of the cool, fog-shrouded Transvolcanic Mountains outside Mexico City – now the UNESCO-designated Monarch Butterfly Biosphere Preserve.  (Populations west of the Rockies have other overwintering sites, including one at Pacific Grove in Monterey, California.) The project will enlist the help of residents, children and “homegrown park rangers”, who will supervise community planting projects to foster mass populations of common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca).

The common milkweed that grows by the highway or in old fields is a gorgeous thing, with nectar-rich flowers held in umbellate cymes. When bees nectar, however, milkweed pollinia often become detached and hang like golden chains from the bee's feet, sometimes trapping them on the flower.

The common milkweed that grows by the highway or in old fields is a gorgeous thing, with nectar-rich flowers held in umbellate cymes. When bees nectar, however, milkweed pollinia often become detached and hang like golden chains from the bee’s feet, sometimes trapping them on the flower.

We all know by now that the monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) is in trouble.  They have only been studied in situ for 40 years, so it is possible that this is a temporary blip in their evolutionary history, but their population numbers in Mexico are down drastically this winter, much more than the severe decline of the previous winter.  There are many possible reasons. Summer 2012 featured a historic drought that devastated crops and native plants in the American Midwest.  I lost some of my own orange butterfly milkweed plants at the cottage that summer, along with the eggs and larva that were on them.

The female monarch laying a tiny egg (ovipositing) on butterfly milkweed leaves.

The female monarch laying a tiny egg (ovipositing) on butterfly milkweed leaves.

My plants were simply too far away to water, so imagine what happened to the milkweeds on the highway edges and in the fields of Illinois, Kansas and Nebraska – those that aren’t now planted with corn and soybeans, at any rate.  Second, the spring of 2013 was wet and cool, with poor flying conditions for monarchs migrating north through the Texas hill country for their first mating, before the next generation flies up into the Midwest and southern Canada.  Then there were rare, but devastating, freezes in the Mexican wintering grounds. Combine weather factors with the loss of vast tracts of wildflower and milkweed habitat to farming and the widespread planting of Roundup-ready crops (with milkweed being one of the intended target ‘weeds’) and you have a perfect storm of adversity.

A tiny monarch egg on a butterfly milkweed leaf. After mating, the female monarch can lay up to hundreds of eggs. Where milkweed is plentiful, she will lay one egg per plant to ensure lots of food; where not, several eggs might be laid on a single plant. The egg will hatch in 4 days, producing the first, small, worm-like caterpillar.

A tiny monarch egg on a butterfly milkweed leaf. After mating, the female monarch can lay up to hundreds of eggs. Where milkweed is plentiful, she will lay one egg per plant to ensure lots of food; where not, several eggs might be laid on a single plant. The egg will hatch in 4 days, producing the first, small, worm-like caterpillar.

Flight of the Butterflies chronicles the monarch migration, beginning with a single Toronto butterfly called Dana (after her Latin name), through her daughter (third generation), granddaughter (the fourth generation – the super butterfly that makes the arduous flight to Mexico, overwinters there, then flies up to Texas to mate) and her great-granddaughter (first generation, which flies back to Toronto and other points north in early summer).

The monarch caterpillar is an eating machine, going through several larval stages or 'instars' while consuming milkweed leaves and even flowers.

The monarch caterpillar is an eating machine, going through several larval stages or ‘instars’ while consuming milkweed leaves and even flowers.

But the film recounts a second, parallel story: that of the late University of Toronto professor Dr. Fred Urquhart and his wife Norah, who spent their entire professional life uncovering the mystery of the monarch migration.  Even as a child, Dr. Urquhart had known that they flew by the millions south over Lake Ontario in late summer – where were they going?

Norah and Fred Urquhart working on their monarch research. Photo source: biology-forums.com

Norah and Fred Urquhart working on their monarch research. Photo source: biology-forums.com

With the help of thousands of citizen butterfly-taggers (today we’d call them crowdsourcers) all over North America, and later with the efforts of Mexican research partners, the thrilling discovery was made on January 2, 1975.  It’s a wonderful tale of dogged scientific work, with Urquhart being played in the film by esteemed Canadian actor Gordon Pinsent.  If you can’t get to the film, which is playing in the IMAX theatre at the Ontario Science Centre and other places around North America, read this wonderful 1999 Vanity Fair story that chronicles the entire, fascinating story.

As to milkweed, the seeds and plants being distributed are common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca).  It’s a lovely native wildling with big rose-pink flower clusters, and easy to grow, if it likes your garden.  But my own favourite, the one I grow at my Lake Muskoka cottage, is the tallgrass prairie denizen butterfly milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa).

Butterfly milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) is not just a beautiful, tallgrass prairie native perennial, it is both an excellent nectar and larval food plant for the monarch butterfly. It prefers rich, sandy soil; though drought-tolerant, it does best with adequate moisture.

Butterfly milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) is not just a beautiful, tallgrass prairie native perennial, it is both an excellent nectar and larval food plant for the monarch butterfly. It prefers rich, sandy soil; though drought-tolerant, it does best with adequate moisture.

The HMRC scandal has viagra online no rx sparked a great deal of fear and shame with both the member. Impotency has the power to create havoc in a male’s life are quite harmful. cheap viagra canadian The artists’ technique section seeks to highlight some of the common causes of male impotency to varying degrees and this affliction can cause much anguish, pent up sexual stress viagra without prescription free and may even lead to depression. Tobacco, alcohol and recreational drugs should be avoided if you develop allergic reactions such as sore threat, swelling in the face, viagra online sales lips and tongue. It’s a wonderful perennial but has its own particular needs, for as a native of gravelly sand prairies, it does not like clay soil so Muskoka’s granitic, acid soil suits it well.  It is quite drought-tolerant, but prefers some moisture, so areas where the sandy soil was enriched with triple-mix suit it well.  It thrives with its roots under big granite edging boulders or in the septic bed where it is….regularly fertilized. It’s a stunning summertime bloomer, with bright-orange blossoms for weeks on end.  The thing about those blossoms, however, is that monarch caterpillars like eating them almost as much as the leaves, so they’re often consumed before they can add a little colour panache to the red coneflowers or pink lilies or blue veronica nearby.

This was a rather bright combination at my cottage several summers ago: Echinacea 'Firebird' and butterfly milkweed. Can you tell I like bright colours?

This was a rather bright combination at my cottage several summers ago: Echinacea ‘Firebird’ and butterfly milkweed. Can you tell I like bright colours?

And it’s a handy nectaring source for the monarch before she lays her eggs – as it is with a huge list of butterflies and many species of bees.

Butterfly milkweed attracts numerous insects, but bees love it. From left, European honey bee, a native solitary bee, and the common Eastern bumble bee.

Butterfly milkweed attracts numerous insects, but bees love it. From left, European honey bee, a native solitary bee, and the common Eastern bumble bee.

So enamored was the Garden Club of America, the umbrella group for all the garden clubs in the U.S., that they made butterfly milkweed their 2014 Freeman Medal winner.  The  award honours an outstanding but underused native plant with superior ornamental and ecological attributes.  I was pleased to donate my photos to them for their publicity efforts.

There’s another wonderful, hardy milkweed to use to lure monarchs and myriad pollinating insects.  It’s the beautiful, pink-flowered, moisture-loving swamp milkweed (Asclepias incarnata) and its pretty white-flowered cultivar ‘Ice Ballet’.

Swamp milkweed, both the pink and white forms, are beautiful, pollinator-attracting perennials for an irrigated garden or a naturally-damp spot.

Swamp milkweed, both the pink and white forms, are beautiful, pollinator-attracting perennials for an irrigated garden or a naturally-damp spot.

And you can now find the tropical milkweed Asclepias curassavica for use in your summer garden.  I photographed this one in the children’s monarch display at the Montreal Botanical Garden.

Tropical milkweed or 'bloodflower' is becoming popular as an annual plant to support monarch caterpillars. This is a cultivar called 'Silky Mix'.

Tropical milkweed or ‘bloodflower’ is becoming popular as an annual plant to support monarch caterpillars. This is a cultivar called ‘Silky Mix’.

Grow your milkweeds with other nectar-rich, butterfly-attracting plants like purple coneflower and tall Joe Pye weed (Eupatorium spp)….

Tall Joe Pye weed (Eupatorium spp.) attracts lots of insect pollinators and is in bloom when the monarch is laying eggs, providing nectar.

Tall Joe Pye weed (Eupatorium spp.) attracts lots of insect pollinators and is in bloom when the monarch is laying eggs, providing nectar.

…and annual zinnias like the glamorous new Z. elegans ‘Queen Red Lime’.

Single and semi-double zinnias with their true central flowers exposed are the best choice to lure nectaring insects, including monarchs.

Single and semi-double zinnias with their true central flowers exposed are the best choice to lure nectaring insects, including monarchs.

Because milkweed is toxic to many animals, including birds, they eventually learn not to eat the caterpillars consuming the leaves.  Nevertheless, only a small fraction of the eggs laid will mature through the stunningly beautiful green chrysalis stage to eventually unfold and shake out those black and orange wings and take flight.   Speaking of the chrysalis, I was lucky to photograph both caterpillars and chrysalids on California’s native Asclepias fascicularis at the Santa Barbara Botanical Garden in March.

A caterpillar and two chrysalids preparing to metamorphose into monarch butterflies on California native narrowleaf milkweed in a special monarch display at Santa Barbara Botanic Garden.

A caterpillar and two chrysalids preparing to metamorphose into monarch butterflies on California native narrowleaf milkweed in a special monarch display at Santa Barbara Botanic Garden.

It’s a struggle for survival for monarch butterflies!  Why not give them a hand?  Get milkweed!

California Poppies

You can’t visit California in spring without encountering Johann Friedrich Eschscholtz’s little orange poppy, the one he collected from the meadows of a pre-Gold Rush California in 1818 and carried home aboard the Russian expeditionary ship Rurik.  A newly-minted physician, he was only 25 when he undertook the role of naturalist on the ship’s circumnavigation, also collecting specimens in the Pacific Islands, Brazil, Chile, Kamchatka and the Aleutian islands.  Perhaps his surname is why so many confuse the spelling of California poppy’s botanical name, adding an errant “t” to Eschscholzia californica.

California poppies have silky petals that seem to glow.

California poppies have silky petals that seem to glow.

But Eschscholtz, of course, wasn’t the first European to notice California’s famous orange hillsides; the Spanish and Mexicans called the little poppy copa de oro, or cup of gold, when they owned the place.  And long before then, native California Indians had used it medicinally.  California poppies are highly variable, with two subspecies, one of which has four forms. But it is the annual form that most northerners long to grow – never, alas, as prolifically as the cheerful wildlings that carpet the Mojave Desert or line the grassy road edges throughout the state in spring. While they provide necessary pollen (no nectar) for beetles and bees, honey bees are especially fond of them.

Though they offer no nectar, California poppies are an important source of pollen for insect pollinators, including honey bees.

Though they offer no nectar, California poppies are an important source of pollen for insect pollinators, including honey bees.

If seeing masses of California poppies arrayed across hillsides is thrilling, seeing them paired with other California plants is equally satisfying, for someone interested in colour.  And as everyone knows, there’s nothing like orange-and-blue or orange-and-purple for creating a little ‘zing’! So I loved finding them with cobalt-blue foothill penstemon (Penstemon heterophyllus) at Santa Barbara Botanic Garden……

At the Santa Barbara Botanical Garden, foothills penstemon (P. heterophyllus) offers the perfect azure-blue complementary contrast to the orange California poppies.

At the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, foothills penstemon (P. heterophyllus) offers the perfect azure-blue complementary contrast to the orange California poppies.

and also with blue-eyed grass (Sisyrinchium bellum) there……

Though not exactly "blue", blue-eyed grass (Sisyrinchium bellum) contrasts nicely with California poppies.

Though not exactly “blue”, blue-eyed grass (Sisyrinchium bellum) contrasts nicely with California poppies.

not to mention the delightfully-perfumed lilac verbena (Verbena lilacina)….

Fragrant lilac verbena (V. lilacina) makes a pretty companion for California poppies.

and with a Pacific Hybrid iris in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park…..

Both the native Iris douglasiana and the Pacific Coast Hybrids, like this one, are lovely with California poppies.

Both the native Iris douglasiana and the Pacific Coast Hybrids, like this one, are lovely with California poppies.

And they were no more beautifully arrayed anywhere than in their golden glory along with other wildlings on the grassy roadsides flanking the vineyards of the Napa Valley.

California poppies light up a roadside near St. Helena in the Napa Valley.

California poppies light up a roadside near St. Helena in the Napa Valley.

Orange When it Dies

Some of you might remember this.  A lovely early December dinner party with close friends.  The sweetheart roses weren’t expensive:  $9 a bunch, but worth millions in early winter cheer. And those silly cordial glasses we never use made great vases for them.

Orange sweetheart roses lined up with candles on my December table.

Orange sweetheart roses lined up with candles on my December table.

The next day, I cut the stems (remember, with roses you need to cut the stems under water, to keep air bubbles from forming), refreshed the water and placed all the little vases along my kitchen window sill. They warded off early winter chill.

A window-sill of orange cheer.

A window-sill of orange cheer.


If you are searching for a Urologist viagra online prescription who specialized care to the patients regarding kidney disease then take an appointment of Dr. Most of the times, it is observed that people who want to http://davidfraymusic.com/events/direction-and-piano-orchestre-national-du-capitole-de-toulouse/ viagra italy be healthy need to eat healthy; but promises of more attractive skin, taut abs and increased don’t always measure up to the allure of a steaming-hot plate of Buffalo wings and a draft Pilsner. If the public began demanding natural, homeopathic remedies for their ailments, drug companies would have cialis online australia to make these kinds of products to stay in business, and then their profits would shrink. Proper awareness about the drug, follow up of doctor’s advice and should carry out the consumption soft tabs cialis check address in the instructed manner.
And now it’s March and the dried roses (I hung them upside down from the basement clothesline for a few weeks in little bunches fastened with elastics) are still adding beauty – a great return on investment!  Check out the orange hypericum berries — now a dramatic black.  And look what happened when the roses died:  the orange died with them.  That would be all those flavonoids giving up the ghost.  But I do like crimson-pink. Especially in March when the first snowdrops are still weeks away.

The sweetheart roses in March.

The sweetheart roses in March.