Lots of H plants are blooming in the garden, specifically the Heliopsis, Hollyhocks, and Hostas. We've finally gotten some warm/hot weather and the heat loving plants are finally starting to thrive.
The Summer Sun Heliopsis (heliopsis scarbra) is in full bloom, and I'm glad I planted them together in masses in the front yard. As you can see below, they look great planted in a mass together, and they're in the bird feeder area, so any stray sunflowers that the birds drop that sprout will look right at home and blend in nicely. Heliopsis are also known as "false sunflower".
These were root divisions that we got from BloomingBulb.com. I've proclaimed the awesomeness of them before in a previous post - Paprika Yarrow and Awesome Customer Service from BloomingBulb.com. I'm not getting paid to shill for them, I'm just a super satisfied customer.
Hidden amongst the field of heliopsis are the first hollyhock (alcea rosea) flowers of the year.
The first pink blooms of the year, back-lit by the morning sun. I'm not sure of the variety. We got these as free seeds on a garden tour a few year back, so other than "Pretty!!", I don't know much about them. Hollyhocks are a bit unusual in that they're a biennial plant, they grow the first year (occasionally throwing up a flower), then die back and grow significantly larger and bloom magnificently in the second year before dying off completely.
The Summer Sun Heliopsis (heliopsis scarbra) is in full bloom, and I'm glad I planted them together in masses in the front yard. As you can see below, they look great planted in a mass together, and they're in the bird feeder area, so any stray sunflowers that the birds drop that sprout will look right at home and blend in nicely. Heliopsis are also known as "false sunflower".
These were root divisions that we got from BloomingBulb.com. I've proclaimed the awesomeness of them before in a previous post - Paprika Yarrow and Awesome Customer Service from BloomingBulb.com. I'm not getting paid to shill for them, I'm just a super satisfied customer.
Hidden amongst the field of heliopsis are the first hollyhock (alcea rosea) flowers of the year.
The first pink blooms of the year, back-lit by the morning sun. I'm not sure of the variety. We got these as free seeds on a garden tour a few year back, so other than "Pretty!!", I don't know much about them. Hollyhocks are a bit unusual in that they're a biennial plant, they grow the first year (occasionally throwing up a flower), then die back and grow significantly larger and bloom magnificently in the second year before dying off completely.
























