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Gardening, Home and Nature Thread, May 30

lilaccs.png

Good afternoon KT

The Lilacs are in bloom and smelling nice here in Southern NH. Mrs. R says she smells Lily of the Valley too but my old nostrils detect nothing!

Not an easy time of year for the flora and fauna. 95 Tuesday and 45 the next day...

Thanks as always for all the wonderful threads on Ace.

Rodent

lilaccs 2.png

Don't you love lilacs? Time for changeable weather, eh?

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Edible Gardening/Putting Things By

Would you like to try growing some perennial vegetables? Take a look at Skirret or Nine Star Broccoli, among others.

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Some techniques to try, courtesy of Biden's Dog. I would probably stick with rooting hormone for the first one. Anybody tried this?

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How about this?

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Ah, Nature


I don’t know what this wild bush is but my mom used to say the strands looked like little chandeliers. Thank you for gardening thread.
NorCal Sierra Nevada Foothills Lurker

chandl bush.PNG

Name that plant!

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History of Photography

From Dr_N0

Hi, KT … Here's a bit of interesting material about autochromes from Public Domain Review that the Saturday Readers will likely not have heard of - but will still be interested to learn about. There's so much to know and share about flowers that just never sees the light of day that it's good to see a venue like PDR present it for inspection. I hope things are going well for you, and you're still producing a KILLAH column every week. Good on ya!

Harold A. Taylor's Autochromes of California Flowers
(early 20th century)

Today, the Coronado Flower Show, hosted each spring in the small San Diego Bay resort town for which it is named, is the largest tented flower show in the United States. But when it began in 1922, the display was little more than a few shaded tables of wildflower arrangements; the pet project of the photographer Harold A. Taylor (1878–1960), who had arrived in California from England in 1896, at the age of eighteen.

A true working photographer, Taylor documented Yosemite National Park (developing in an onsite darkroom), historical Spanish missions up and down the Pacific coast, and took some of the earliest aerial photographs (many destroyed by a studio leak). As the Hotel del Coronado’s resident photographer, he captured visiting dignitaries; more informally, he immortalized sports teams for the local high school yearbook. His images illustrate volumes of poetry, a 1920 historical romance, and the 1916 “pictorial survey” of the San Diego Exposition. “No man has done more to exploit the attractions of southern California or to spread a more general knowledge of the beauty of its scenery”, wrote San Diego chronicler Samuel T. Black in 1913.

Despite his range of subjects, it was flowers that were perhaps closest to Taylor’s heart. . .

See image at the link. Lovely.

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And recent flowers on a hot day in the UK:

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Gardens of The Horde

From a Long Time Lurker:

My cousin saved an amaryllis bulb from her grandmother’s funeral a decade ago. The blooms this year were spectacular. Wish this pic did them justice. Her granny would be so pleased.

amaryl wt.jpg

A lovely flower. Amazing that it has persisted for a decade!

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Hope everyone has a nice weekend.


If you would like to send photos, stories, links, etc. for the Saturday Gardening Thread, the address is:

ktinthegarden at g mail dot com

Remember to include the nic or name by which you wish to be known at AoSHQ, or let us know if you want to remain a lurker.

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Week in Review

What has changed since last week's thread? Gardening, Home and Nature Thread, May 23


I closed the comments on that post so you wouldn't get banned for commenting on a week-old post, but don't try it anyway.


Posted by: K.T. at 01:34 PM




Comments

(Jump to bottom of comments)

1 y56b5rejhu5ebu

Posted by: Blonde Morticia at May 30, 2026 01:35 PM (n7rxJ)

2
Latin name for something growing in my front yard.

Posted by: Blonde Morticia at May 30, 2026 01:35 PM (n7rxJ)

3 70°, sunny in van nuys.

Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats at May 30, 2026 01:36 PM (Kt19C)

4 Latin name for something growing in my front yard.

Bigus Dickus.

Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats at May 30, 2026 01:37 PM (Kt19C)

5 We don't get lilacs down here in Texas; I hear they are lovely both to see and to smell.

My rosebushes from the Antique Rose Emporium here in Texas are starting to bloom. They are all powerhouses in the Texas climate. I had to be without them for a long time, due to the yard being in constant flux during construction projects; now things have calmed down enough that I can have my favorites back in the rotation!

Duchesse du Brabant is my personal favorite, and we purchased 10 of them to line our fence line facing the side street. No sidewalk on that side of the street, so they can spread to their heart's content!

Posted by: Teresa in Fort Worth, Texas, AoSHQ's Plucky Wee One - Eat the Cheesecake, Buy the Yarn. at May 30, 2026 01:44 PM (SRRAx)

6 >>>Latin name for something growing in my front yard.

Bigus Dickus.

Posted by: Commissar of plenty and festive little hats

>Maximus Clitorus

Posted by: Rev. Wishbone at May 30, 2026 01:48 PM (D1E+2)

7
I'm amazed at how Amaryllis perform. From nub to big, colorful trumpet in no time! Then they do it all over again.

Posted by: Blonde Morticia at May 30, 2026 01:49 PM (n7rxJ)

8 " Latin name for something growing in my front yard."

We've got a couple of anuli faeriarum growing in the front yard. One in the back too.

Posted by: fd at May 30, 2026 01:49 PM (vFG9F)

9
42 degrees and raining here in SW Wyoming.

Rain glorious rain. Hopefully this bit of rain will help with the severe drought we have here.

We have strict rules about no outdoor watering this year.

We get it, but sure miss planting our vegetables and flowers.

Posted by: four seasons at May 30, 2026 01:53 PM (3ek7K)

10 I have begun my annual fight with Pokeweed. Let the glyphosate flow!

Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at May 30, 2026 01:53 PM (XeU6L)

11 Those were wild videos of roses and ginger propagation! Will have to try, altho all of my roses are David Austin's. A science experiment for the grands.

I'd love to have all of that ginger as well!

Rainy day, which we need in the Intermountan West. Roses in full bloom beauty.

Posted by: ChristyBlinkyTheGreat at May 30, 2026 01:54 PM (WONhk)

12 Good afternoon Greenthumbs

But I am not one of them, never put anything in my garden this year yet

Posted by: Skip at May 30, 2026 01:55 PM (Ia/+0)

13 Wait...we're doing Latin?

Pokeweed = Phytolacca americana

Posted by: Mike Hammer, etc., etc. at May 30, 2026 01:56 PM (XeU6L)

14 They did that purposely to keep Latin from going extinct

Posted by: Skip at May 30, 2026 02:01 PM (Ia/+0)

15 We have 1 asparagus plant that managed to keep from getting torn out over the years. Thing produces like crazy; unfortunately, there is only so much asparagus 2 people can eat, and it doesn't produce enough stalks at 1 time to feed both of us. By the time enough stalks do sprout, the ones that were ready to be cut originally have already bolted.

We tend to just use it as an ornamental "fern".

But every so often, we get to eat tender little fresh stalks. Microwave them for a couple of seconds with some butter, add salt and pepper, and yum!

Posted by: Teresa in Fort Worth, Texas, AoSHQ's Plucky Wee One - Eat the Cheesecake, Buy the Yarn. at May 30, 2026 02:04 PM (SRRAx)

16 Love the English bouquet.
I miss my hybrid teas. Don't miss the effort, I miss the result.
Garden basically in cept for the viners.
Using buckwheat as my rotation crop cause it makes such great honey, and if I don't protect it from the deer, I get nothing.

Posted by: MkY at May 30, 2026 02:09 PM (q6tQZ)

17 I still have stuff to plant. The latest is a rosebush and sweet potato slips. And I bought a pecan tree. The fruit trees look good. All three Asian pears are lagging behind, so I don't know how well they will do.

Historic Iris Preservation Society is doing a rescue of an Iris garden and the sale is going on right now. I didn't know if I should get anything, but of course I did. The regular sale is in July. You do need to be a member but dues are cheap.

And I am waiting for the new fence to be put in.when complete, I can finally let Jake loose inthe yard. He knows where his boundary is, but wants to go visit the neighbors.

Posted by: Notsothoreau at May 30, 2026 02:12 PM (7T8ei)

18 TIFW, we have a 6'x6' patch of asparagus, and we put our spears in a jar of water in the fridge. They'll keep for a week or so.
We have too much for just us 2. Starts to get old after a while. That's when you know you have enough!

Posted by: MkY at May 30, 2026 02:12 PM (q6tQZ)

19 Lilacs and wild roses are done blooming here.

Mystery plant reminds me of pieris.

Posted by: JQ at May 30, 2026 02:12 PM (rdVOm)

20 I've spotted four asparagus patches down at the lake. Never noticed them before. I do have my own asparagus planted so I don't need them. Just goes to show you how well it can do on its own.

Posted by: Notsothoreau at May 30, 2026 02:14 PM (7T8ei)

21 Pickled asparagus is fantastic, like green beans, garlic, olives peppers. If you're into that and want to try something new.

Posted by: Rev. Wishbone at May 30, 2026 02:17 PM (D1E+2)

22 Pickled asparagus
Rev. Wishbone

Never heard of it. We pickle everything else, so why not?

Posted by: MkY at May 30, 2026 02:18 PM (q6tQZ)

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