Wednesday, August 19, 2015

bugs in the blooms

Not sure what this guy is - maybe a cicada or a fat grasshopper?

Many people shudder when the insect world comes in contact with their world.  But most insects don't do any damage to the garden.  They are an indication that all is well in your environment - that pesticides which can kill them all are not doing unseen damage to other creatures.  Insect adults, larvae, and eggs also provide an important food source for birds, amphibians, and reptiles who depend on them to survive.

Hers is a look at what is crawling and flying around my garden:
Green iridescent bug (perhaps a hover fly) on a daylily.
Honeybee in the butterfly weed


This longhorn beetle came too close to my environment.
I found him on the livingroom rug.

I talk a good game about being friendly with the insects in my world, but now I'm eating my words.
A steady stream of bees is buzzing in and out of a spot under the step just a foot from my front door.
I want to be a good steward of the environment, but I also don't want to get stung.

Haven't decided if I'm going to bring out the big pesticide guns, or if I will just choose to use the side door for the rest of the summer.

This moth was hitchhiking on the side of my car.

Friday, August 7, 2015

darling day lilies

Lots of plants have common names that don't really indentify them correctly.  For example, Rose of Sharon is not a rose.  Lily of the Valley is not from the lily family.  And neither are day lilies.  They are called Hemerocalis. They are actually quite different.  Lilies have bulbs, and day lilies have roots.  Lilies have leaves along their stems, and day lilies have bare stems and separate long leaves.

Day lilies are also (I hope that by writing this, a new and destructive insect does not suddenly finds my garden) not bothered by insects or disease, while my poor Asiatic and Oriental lilies are chewed mercilously by Scarlet Lily Beetle adults and larvae.








Sunday, August 2, 2015

a visit to South Korea

In July, we visited our son, who teaches English in South Korea.  The weather was hot and humid, and we enjoyed the overcast days and the rain, and I loved the flowers and trees and the unique aestetic of Korean architecture both old and new.

A garden on the grounds of the National Museum of Korea
is a cool oasis in a hazy city of skyscrapers.


The site of the 1988 Seoul Olympics has beautiful gardens 
ringed with the flags of the world. The purple flower is phlox.
Olympic park has huge pieces of art framed by hedges
Another piece of art at Olympic Park - foot bones
The national flower of South Korea is the Rose of Sharon (mugunghwa in Korean),
 which blooms across the country from July to October.  
This small tree is very hardy and is not bothered by disease or insects.

Other varieties of rose of sharon include doubles in pink and white,
and my favourite, white with with a red eye.

Crape Myrtle (Lagerstroemia indica) grows everywhere.

Korea has been experiencing drought this summer.
Many trees have been fitted with bags of water that slowly irrigate them.

I thought this was a toad lily - but I'm not sure.  The leaves look like a small iris, and it forms big seedheads after the flower fades.
Loud raucous screeches of the Korean magpie, or "kkachi" in Korean 
are drowned out by the sawing of cicadas high in the trees.
The rose garden at Olympic Park has many varieites of floribunda and tea roses.
framing our son Dylan in the roses
The roses were beginning to fade in the summer heat, 
but the display of varieties was stunning.


The rear garden of Changdeok Palace in Seoul. 

An egret posed at the edge of the lotus pond at the rear garden.
glorious tiger lilies
The beautiful colours and patterns of the underside of this pavilion 
is a motif found in traditional structures all over Korea.