Architecture theme photograph for my camera club's May meeting...
Thursday, May 14, 2015
Friday, May 1, 2015
Daffodil Gardens
After I spent an exhausting morning lugging camera equipment around and crawling around on the ground taking pictures of wildflowers with my camera club, Eric and I went with a friend to see Joe Hamm's daffodil gardens this past Saturday afternoon.
Joe's daffodil gardens |
Joe Hamm is a daffodil grower in Hopewell Township, Washington County. He is a member of the American Daffodil Society and grows over 1,500 varieties of daffodils on his farm. Also at Joe's place this Saturday was an American Daffodil Society show and flower arrangements by a local garden club. The gardens are free and open to the public during the month of April.
From the Miniatures category |
For me, the afternoon in the daffodil garden meant more crawling around on my knees taking photos. Fortunately, the weather was cool and cloudy, so I didn't have to deal with heat and sun.
One of the volunteers explained to us that daffodil bloom times are divided into 6 overlapping periods. Because it was late April by the time we got to the gardens, we saw the late blooming daffodils. Many of the varieties were past their prime or were already done blooming.
I regret that we came so late in the display and that we didn't take more notes of variety names. If we go again another year, I would like to go earlier and I would like to plan to pay more attention to variety names. As it was, Eric and I got a good idea of what we like to see in a daffodil and what we want to look for when we buy bulbs for our own yard.
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
A Trip to Cedar Creek Park
My camera club took a field trip to Cedar Creek Park in Belle Vernon this past Saturday. Every year we try to get there around the same time. This year the weather was cool and cloudy, but we were fortunate that the rain held off the entire morning.
It seems that the wildflowers we went to see were not as far along as in previous years, but there was still plenty to see if you took the time to look. Two prime examples were the jack-in-the-pulpit and the trout lily. I knew they would both be in bloom (or at least they had been the last two years we went), but they are not brightly colored or particularly showy. Many of my fellow club members walked right past them without seeing them. When I pointed them out, the other photographers were happy to take photos, but would never have noticed them on their own.
Because the jack-in-the-pulpit is mostly green with some brown, it is hard to see. Also, the jack-in-the-pulpit does not colonize an area quite the way some other wildflowers do.
The trout lily flower is yellow with brown on the outside of the petals. In cool, cloudy weather it tends to keep its pretty little face turned down, so it can be hard to see. But it does form colonies of thick, fleshy, mottled, almond-shaped leaves. The patch of leaves is pretty easy to spot, but without showy, colorful flowers, it doesn't attract immediate attention. Unlike trillium, woodland phlox and Virginia bluebells.
By the end of the morning, I was sore and exhausted from climbing up and down the paths, getting up and down from my knees and lugging my camera equipment around. But this was just the first half of my day...
Here's a link to part 2 of last Saturday.
It seems that the wildflowers we went to see were not as far along as in previous years, but there was still plenty to see if you took the time to look. Two prime examples were the jack-in-the-pulpit and the trout lily. I knew they would both be in bloom (or at least they had been the last two years we went), but they are not brightly colored or particularly showy. Many of my fellow club members walked right past them without seeing them. When I pointed them out, the other photographers were happy to take photos, but would never have noticed them on their own.
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Jack-in-the-Pulpit |
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trout lily |
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red trillium |
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white trillium |
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woodland phlox |
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Me in action (taken by another club member) |
Here's a link to part 2 of last Saturday.
Labels:
jack-in-the-pulpit,
Photography,
trillium,
trout lily,
wildflowers,
woodland phlox
Friday, April 10, 2015
Hellebores
The Hellebores in my garden are blooming. These sweet, delicate-looking flowers belong to some seriously tough perennials.
In addition to these two unknown varieties, I have an Ivory Prince and another unknown variety that blooms in a deep mauve shade.
They do well in the dry shade under our giant oak trees, they are deer resistant, flower prolifically, and (best of all) flower early. In my garden here in Southwestern Pennsylvania, I have seen them sending up flower stalks as early as New Year's Day.
Thursday, April 9, 2015
Spring
Spring theme photograph for my camera club's April meeting...
These beauties are Pulmonaria, commonly called lungwort. I don't know the variety name of this one. Pulmonaria are one of the first flowers to bloom in my garden here in Southwestern Pennsylvania and they bloom for a long time. The flowers start out pink and change to blue as they age. The plants self-seed readily in my garden and have spread throughout the garden.
These beauties are Pulmonaria, commonly called lungwort. I don't know the variety name of this one. Pulmonaria are one of the first flowers to bloom in my garden here in Southwestern Pennsylvania and they bloom for a long time. The flowers start out pink and change to blue as they age. The plants self-seed readily in my garden and have spread throughout the garden.
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