Garden Blogger Bloom Day, January 15

I had an ulterior motive when I started participating in the Garden Blogger Bloom Day.  I wanted to add more winter interest to my garden.  And that meant plant shopping binges in the winter!  I was all prepared this weekend at Portland Nursery to purchase a new witch hazel, edgeworthia, purple daphne, and more hellebores, but I was advised to wait until the cold snap passed later this week.  I was bummed, but not deterred.  I will be back.

However, I was delighted to discover that the violets have started blooming in my back yard.  They have such sweet faces.

The hardy fuchsias refuse to die and I continue to be scolded daily by the Anna's Hummingbirds patrolling my garden like the Secret Service at the Presidential Inaugural Parade. 

Don't forget to drop by May Dreams Gardens to explore all the other Garden Blogger Bloom Day posts!  

Snow Day in Portland

Today, I took a field trip with my friend Cindy, that didn’t involve a high school marching band.  I’m still smiling.

First, we went out to lunch at Olympic Provisions in SE Portland.  It’s tucked back in an industrial area and the restaurant reflected that style and the minute we stepped in, we smelled meat.  Cured meat.  Salami.  Mmm…
We ordered the chef’s choice meat and cheese platters.  And Cindy ordered us some juicy Clos de Noi Monstsant 2009 red wine that smelled like raspberries and spice.

Then we looked through the huge window to watch the falling snow and sipped wine.  I looked around the room and imagined tasting a bite of everyone’s lunch.  The orange salad topped with squidgy pinches of white cheese, olives, and tarragon captured my imagination.  But, the pastrami sandwich practically started talking to me like a Sesame Street puppet.  I will definitely return, if only to try the pastrami sandwich: the pastrami sandwich that got away.
 


Then our lunch was served.  We nibbled on cheeses and meats.  Took some pictures of our food. 


picture by Cindy Zosel

Then we headed off for Portland Nursery on Division Street.  I wanted to show Cindy my favorite winter get-a-way on a budget.  Whenever the winter rains start weighing on my soul, I visit the greenhouse at Portland Nursery.  I usually go sit in a chair and take in the humidity, water feature noise, tropical foliage, and the soft light.  My miniature Hawaiian vacation.  But today was different…
Can you see the snow falling?

It was snowing.  

And we brought our cameras!  Cindy has taught me almost everything that I know about photography.

We captured light through leaves.
 Avoided the hungry venus flytraps.
The snow outside made the musty sweet scent of the gardenias that much sweeter.  
I savored the sound of the water and wished for the hundredth time that Portland Nursery would add a tiki bar that sold Mai-Tai's.  And add some background music for mood...I'm thinking Hawaiian music or maybe some Beach Boys.  Then we went outside to explore and took pictures of snow on the plants.


Cindy took shots with her new iPhone with attachable camera lenses.  I've been wavering about updating my phone, but not after seeing her pictures.  I loved how her macro shots turned out. Don’t you agree?  
picture by Cindy Zosel
picture by Cindy Zosel
picture by Cindy Zosel
picture by Cindy Zosel
picture by Cindy Zosel
picture by Cindy Zosel
picture by Cindy Zosel
Then we headed back across the river to Vancouver and stopped off at Peet's for a warm beverage to complete our afternoon. Snow days rock.


P.S.  If you have any questions about the plants in the greenhouse, check out my favorite garden blogger, Danger Garden, and read about her latest trip to Portland Nursery on Division.  

A Frog Observes


I celebrate myself, and sing myself,
And what I assume you shall assume,
For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you. 
I loafe and invite my soul,
I lean and loafe at my ease observing a spear of summer grass.
 -Walt Whitman

Reflecting Back on My Community Garden Plot


Every year, I grow a vegetable garden.  And for the past two years, I've grown two vegetable gardens. One in my parking strip at home, which I refer to as my Victory Garden, and the second is my community garden plot at Haagen Park.  My community plot was 20' by 20' and cost $40 for the whole season and included a spring tilling and water.  In other words, a great deal.


Every year in January, after I write my garden plant hit list, I start designing my vegetable garden plans.    The picture above, was the plan I created for the community plot.  

The garden plan kept me busy dreaming until April.  I decided that I wanted to design a garden that would attract park visitors into my garden to explore.  I chose to add a bench that I found cheap at a garage sale and refurbished and painted in bright colors.  My theme was an orange and purple garden.
I painted 'come take a seat and rest your feet and watch our garden grow' on the back of the bench.  And visitors responded to the invitation.  I found many people sitting on the bench when I would come tend the plot.  And it always made me feel happy.  One thing that I didn't expect, was that the kids would come sit on the bench and chat with me while I weeded and watered the plot.
I guided kids, parents, and camp counselors through my garden and invited them to touch the tassels of the corn, the prickly cucumbers and taste the sweet sungold tomatoes.  Their life stories filled my ears while they explored.
Everyone loved the green ladder with purple flowers painted on it.  I found the ladder for free two years ago.  After I painted it green and put it in my 2011 garden, I received a note under a rock asking if they could paint flowers on it.  I was thrilled, but the flowers never arrived, so I painted them on the ladder this past spring with my outdoor paint pens.  An easy project.
The most popular plant in the plot was the Indigo Rose Tomato that was introduced this past summer by OSU.  The tomatoes started out a dark purplish black and everyone wanted to touch them.  When the green spot on the bottom of the tomato turned red, they were ripe.  And I shared them with everyone who asked.  They tasted mild and were pretty mixed into tomato salads.


I decided to try mulching with straw for the first time in my vegetable garden.  And the slugs loved it!  I've never seen such big slugs in my vegetable garden.  I cut them in half with my scissors.


Now, I need you to use your imagination here...look closely under that cucumber leaf and you will see the profile of a brown wild rabbit.  The rabbit moved into my cucumber bed in June and began snacking on my zinnia seedlings.  I didn't know that rabbits liked zinnias until this summer.  And when I tended the plot it would sit under the tomato plants and twitch it's ears at me.


Then I would sit on my bench and take in the noise of the park; soccer practice, kids playing on the playground and families enjoying time together.
And snack on tomatoes and nasturtium blossoms.

I snapped pictures on my phone, like this bee on a cardoon blossom.


I picked massive bouquets of sunflowers.


And I was asked for seeds from my garden this year for the first time, even at home.


This next year, I have decided not to grow a second vegetable garden.  Instead, I will volunteer my time at a local teaching garden and the garden at Fort Vancouver.  I can't wait.

Now the Garden Sleeps

Akebia quinata vine hanging off of the pergola
My garden was slow to slumber this season due to the record breaking late hard frost. On Christmas morning, I watched the brilliant green and rose feathered male Anna’s hummingbird tickling the hardy fuchsia flowers as it fed in my backyard.  It was an enjoyable Christmas treat. 

Ladies' Eardrops, Fuchsia 'Aurea'
The weekend following Christmas, the hard frost finally hit and I went out to capture the results with my camera.

Grass seed head in the sun


Castor Bean
Tiny Tim Spurge bloom 
Petasites japonicas 
And then it snowed!



And now the garden sleeps, except for the hardy fuchsias and Anna's Hummingbirds that complain to me with a smacking tsik-tsik whenever I enter their garden.  

Ladies' Eardrops, Fuchsia 'Aurea'