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Do you remember stories from your childhood about ‘Jack Frost’ turning the leaves bright colors ? I remember stories and poems about Jack Frost, and making Crayola drawings with a wild assortment of brightly colored leaves on my brown stick trees. It seems a ‘given’ that leaves change their colors when the nights begin to turn cool.
But neither our nights nor our days have cooled substantially, and yet the community is definitely taking on autumn’s hues.
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We noticed it as we drove across College Creek today, admiring the first hints of yellow and gold in the trees along the opposite bank. But we also see it in our own garden, as scarlet creeps across some dogwood leaves and the crape myrtle leaves begin to turn, even as the trees still bloom.
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The Williamsburg Botanical Garden shows its autumn colors.
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We are running 12 to 13 degrees above our ‘normal’ temperatures most days lately, and it is a rare night that has dropped even into the 60s. And yet the plants are responding to the change of season. Perhaps they sense the days growing shorter; perhaps they are just getting tired.
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I. ‘Rosalie Figge’ has just come back into bloom in our garden.
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Our ‘re-blooming’ Iris have sent up their first autumn stalks. We’ve been blessed with plenty of rain, recently, and so the Iris will have a good second season. Some of our neighbors have Encore Azaleas covered in flowers
I was dumbfounded to see how gigantic some of the Colocasias, Alocasias and Caladiums grew in the catalog garden at the Bulb Shop in Gloucester. I can’t remember ever seeing these plants grow so huge in Virginia.
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The catalog garden at Brent and Becky’s Bulb Shop is filled with some of the largest Colocasias I’ve ever seen. Do you recognize C. ‘Tea Cups’?
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But with good soil and near constant moisture, these amazing tropicals have shown us their potential for growth when they get all the warmth and moisture and nutrition they could possibly want. I spoke with some of the staff there about how popular tropical ‘elephant ears’ have become in recent years, as coastal Virginia becomes ever more hospitable to them.
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We ventured up to Gloucester this week to pick up our order of fall bulbs. It is admittedly too warm, still, to plant most spring bulbs. But I retrieved our order, shared with friends, and now will simply hold most of the bulbs for another few weeks until the nights finally cool.
There are a few bulbs that need to get in the ground right away, like dog tooth violets and our Italian Arum. Both are actually tubers, and shouldn’t be allowed to dry out. Our Muscari, left in pots over the summer, are already in leaf.
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I’ve planted the first of my autumn four season pots filled with bulbs and mulched with moss. This one will begin with autumn Crocus and Cyclamen in a few weeks, and then begin the early spring with snowdrops, Crocus, Muscari and dog tooth violet. Finally, it will finish the season with late daffodils. The pot is anchored with an oak leaf Hydrangea and a deciduous lady fern.
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If the daffodils and tulips get planted too early, they might grow too much before the really cold weather finds us. We can continue planting spring bulbs here into late December, maybe even early January. I’d much rather do it in October though, wouldn’t you?
As the weather cools down a bit, I’m wanting to get back out in the garden to do a bit of tidying up before the fall planting begins.
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Pineapple Sage is already blooming in our garden. I have several still in 4″ pots I need to plant one day soon.
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I’ve got a backlog of plants sheltering in pots, just waiting for their chance to grow. I visited a friend today who was weeding and digging her Caladiums to store for next summer. Some of our Caladiums are beginning to die back a little, so she was probably wise to dig them while she can see a few leaves and find their roots.
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This is one of our favorite Alocasias, often called African Mask. It spends winter in the living room, and summer in a shady part of the garden.
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Bright orange wreathes are showing up on neighbor’s doors, and by Monday, the calendar will say ‘October.’ I suppose it is time to get on with it and embrace the changing seasons.
While I believe we will have another month, or two, of ‘Indian Summer’ before our first frost; I suppose we all just assume it is time for pumpkin lattes and chrysanthemums. Some of my friends are already setting out huge mums and pulling their annuals.
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Hardy Begonias are at their peak, blooming and so beautiful this week.
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I’m not there, yet. I’m still admiring our many ‘elephant ears’ and Begonias and watching for butterflies. In fact, I came home from Gloucester with a sweet little Alocasia ‘Zebrina,‘ that I’ve had my eye on all season. They had just two left, and then they had one….
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Alocasia grown huge at the catalog garden
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The display plant, growing out in the catalog garden, was a bit taller than me. Its leaves were absolutely huge!
I don’t know that my pot grown aroids will ever get quite that impressive, especially when they are forced to nap all winter in the basement. But we enjoy them in their season, and their season will soon close.
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We found both Monarchs and a few chrysalis at the Williamsburg Botanical Garden this week.
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I have been admiring our garden today, and celebrating the successes we’ve enjoyed this year. I am intentionally procrastinating on any chores that hasten our passage into autumn.
That said, the pumpkin bagels that showed up at Trader Joes this week are truly delicious.
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Even in the Los Angeles region, where the weather is very mild, trees know what time of years it is. Cooler weather certainly helps with color, but is not the only factor. Trees are coloring in San Jose, but the days are still pleasantly warm. Only the nights are feeling like autumn.
Plants are just endlessly fascinating, aren’t they Tony? So you have color already in San Jose? I’m glad you are beginning to have some autumn temperatures. Ours will settle in soon….;-)
San Jose does not get much color, but there are a few plants, such as the Boston ivy on the freeway sound walls, that color no matter what, even though the days are still pleasantly warm.
Fascinating! Virginia Creeper turns scarlet in October here, but our English Ivy remains vibrantly green. The colors changing help to make up for shorter days to come.
Boston ivy is more closely related to Virginia creeper. English ivy is of course evergreen.