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Flowers

07/04/08

Permalink 10:31:38 pm, by Karen Email , 104 words   English (US)
Categories: Journal

Flowers

As the plants come into bloom around here, there are many that I am unfamiliar with. One of my favorite websites is Dave's Garden. They have a forum there where you can post a picture of your mystery plant and usually within minutes you'll have one or more posts answering your question. Here are some of the plants identified for me recently:

Oenothera spp. - Evening primrose

Lamium maculatum - Spotted Dead Nettle (such an odd name for such a pretty plant)

Tradescantia x andersoniana - Virgina Spiderwort, possibly cultivar "J.C. Weguelin"

Valeriana officinalis - Valerian

Achillea millefolium - Yarrow, probably the native variety

Malva moschata - Musk Mallow

4 comments

Comment from: Roger Crassi [Visitor] Email · http://rmc1-alampuntomyfeet.blogspot.com/
Hey, if you do not have a "native" form of "creeping charlie," I'd be happy to help you introduce it to your New England area :-) No flowers, but cute little scalloped leaves! And in return, send me some of these samples. They are beautiful!
07/06/08 @ 14:09
Hey Karen... Thanks so much for your comments at my blog! It's so much fun learning more about our place here and of course, I had to dash out the back door after I read what you said about the 1939 being in the cement at the barn. :) I found it! Surprised I didn't see it before and I'll have to point it out to Tom who also loves that sort of thing. Thanks for all the other information--the car out in the barn, etc... I really do love knowing all those details! I'd thought for sure you and Ken had remodeled the bathroom--seems like your real estate agent told us that. Oh, and thanks for removing the shower doors--I hate those, too! Especially in such a *small* bathtub (oh my... do they *make* them any smaller? I doubt it). :) I would have felt so very claustrophobic in there with those shower doors.

I am so enjoying reading your blog! In fact, I think I read the entire thing yesterday--just couldn't stop. It reads very much like a book (you're a great writer!) and I couldn't wait to see what would happen next. :) Keep up the good work! I've sent a couple people so far over here and I know they will enjoy reading about your adventures, too.

Oh! And thanks for your part in clearing the back meadow here. That's my favorite place and every day I'm out there picking up sticks so it can be mowed more easily (a friend of ours mowed it with his tractor to get it under control and now it's up to me to keep it that way). We hope to put a screened gazebo out there as a quiet getaway for us and our guests. In fact, if you and Ken are ever back out here please stop by (with your parents, too, if you'd like) and we can all sit back there and share more stories. We'd love that. Oh, and I'd love for you to see the floors--they are so beautiful in-person. Blessings, Debra
07/06/08 @ 17:51
Comment from: Karen [Member] Email
Debra, we didn't see the "1939" for quite a while! It was only when we were finishing putting up the new barn doors (which I think was in 2005), in the dark, with the worklight on and the light just happened to shadow the numbers so that they stood out.
07/07/08 @ 02:15
Comment from: Karen [Member] Email
Dad, no thanks on the creeping charlie - we have it! Luckily it does not grow too fast here as the soil is not quite as fertile.
07/07/08 @ 02:16

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Sharing ideas from our small farm in NH, where we raise Icelandic sheep and assorted poultry. We are members of ISBONA (Icelandic Sheep Breeders of North America) and the CLRC (Canadian Livestock Records Corporation). We also participate in the Voluntary Scrapie Flock Certification Program (NH54). Contact us at karen [at] birchtreefarm [dot] com. Please also visit the farm website at Birchtree Farm.
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