Spring, a magical time of year, where every day brings new delights, new surprises, new colour…
Red Oak (Quercus rubra) leaves unfurling and starting to expand. This photo is from a very young sapling – only in its third year. Leaves on the mature trees are still a week or so from enlarging to this degree.Umbrella Magnolia (Magnolia tripetala) leaf escaping its protective winter parka. The leaves will eventually be up to 18 inches long; the white flowers can be quite spectacular as well.Canada Redbud (Cercis canadensis) flower buds about to burst. This is such an interesting native flowering small tree – the flowers form along the stems, not at the tips like most other flowering shrubs or trees, and well before the large heart shaped leaves emerge.
Gee, I posted pictures of our trees leafing out a long time ago. That magnolia looks like what the obnoxiously loud Italian guy does when he is telling the patrons at his restaurant how good his Mamma’s pizza is. No one seems to know what it means or what he is saying, but he is probably exclaiming, “My fingers are stuck together!”
Magnolia stellata flowers have come and gone; soulangiana are in full bloom; it’s their country cousins here, tripetala and acuminata that are late to the game! Sounds like you’re really familiar with that Italian guy 😉
I wrote an article about dago gardening several months ago. Yes, many of us grow nasturtiums, and citrus, and grapes and figs and oleanders and all that stuff that people make fun of. However, the only people who I know who covered their front lawns with moon stone and lava are old white people.
Gee, I posted pictures of our trees leafing out a long time ago. That magnolia looks like what the obnoxiously loud Italian guy does when he is telling the patrons at his restaurant how good his Mamma’s pizza is. No one seems to know what it means or what he is saying, but he is probably exclaiming, “My fingers are stuck together!”
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Contrary to what my name suggests, I neither speak nor understand more than a few words of Italian.
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. . . and my fingers never stick together.
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Phew!
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Magnolia stellata flowers have come and gone; soulangiana are in full bloom; it’s their country cousins here, tripetala and acuminata that are late to the game! Sounds like you’re really familiar with that Italian guy 😉
and
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Related perhaps.
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I wrote an article about dago gardening several months ago. Yes, many of us grow nasturtiums, and citrus, and grapes and figs and oleanders and all that stuff that people make fun of. However, the only people who I know who covered their front lawns with moon stone and lava are old white people.
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Love the red oak buds.
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