for a number of years, I’ve been overwintering dahlia corms, but haven’t had tons of luck… sometimes I know what they are and other times they are a surprise when they get put away…
one white one has proven very prolific and it has produced at least a dozen blooms so far this year in three different pots…
these are about the size of my palm…
a delightful feathery one that I purchased last year at Lilystone Gardens has come back nicely and has a number of blooms and buds in one pot…
each bloom is bigger than my hand…
these have all been white so I was particularly excited to see one come up in a pot that looked like it was pinky/purple…
it is a bit smaller than the white pompom-looking ones, but stands out in all its pink and purple hues…
Monday, the weather was perfect for being in the garden and my middle grandson came over and worked on the most current project… the soil in this garden bed kept sliding down and covering the stepping stones…
he removed some miscellaneous rocks, dug a trench and then, with my oldest grandson, moved and placed large rocks, which were located all around the garden…
it was interesting to watch as they decided together which rock worked and looked best where…
with my direction, of course…
the rock wall looks good…
so pleased that this project, which has been on my list for quite some time, is now completed…
recently, I wrote about all the caterpillars and the butterflies that emerged and my hope that, as the milkweed has new leaves, another monarch mother might stop by and leave a feweggs…
well, on Thursday, this happened;-)…
I was very excited and after she left, and a bit of searching, made the discovery of at least four eggs…
when we got home from our time at the Airbnb we discovered twenty monarch caterpillars…
I had five milkweed plants but toward the end of their growing phase, the caterpillars were running out of leaves to eat…
they had stripped every leaf and I was able to cut some stalks from a friend’s yard…
I tied the new leaves to the old and we had just enough for them before hiding under leaves and building their chrysalides… two died, although there was still some leaves left…
we watched one caterpillar for a while once it moved into its j-shape but didn’t catch it weaving the chrysalis…
we only spotted two chrysalides, one of which vanished… not sure if it fell or something came along and ate it…
I watched it daily and then one day it turned black, which meant it was ready to eclose…
I watched all day, but nothing happened… late that afternoon I spotted the butterfly which had emerged…
it sat for quite a while before finally opening and closing its wings, but it was still on the iris leaf when I went to bed…
during the night the city came around and was spraying for mosquitoes…
In the morning it was hanging in a strange fashion and I was worried whether it would survive…
but, later I went out and she was gone;-)…
since then I’ve seen a total of eight butterflies flying through the garden;-)…