Everything (almost) dies under the front black walnut, so this year I’m going to plant some tall grasses in containers for a little screening.
I like this new one because the open frets of the vintage button offer an easily identifiable spot for needles.
Your green green garden is beautiful … FERNS .. I love them so much!
The ostrich ferns are so big and resilient they amaze me every year. We have Christmas ferns, staghorns, and Japanese as well.
Can I buy and pay postage for some black walnuts in the green husks? For dye and ink.
I father them every year and only once out them to any use. Email me your address and I’d be happy to send you some. Don’t think these can ship internationally, though?
love seeing your garden springing into life as we start slowing down and letting go like autumn leaves!
Yes. We’re getting our first summery day as the chill sets in for you fills down under.
I’m always amazed when I’m reminded that we live on opposite sides of the earth .. at the same time so closely connected. Big Wowza .. 😘
It is such a testament to the bonds of friendship
Our green is heading toward summer-dormant brown … and yeah, we always had too much shade to grow veggies in Virginia … now we have too many deer (and armadillos and raccoons and heat)
I do miss rhododendrons … thanks for the memory
beautiful greenery ~ love the piece on your doorway & love the colour of the door too!
I’m a sucker for barn red.
OH MY!!! Your greenery is gorgeous! Those ferns…fantastic! The cloth on the door, so dashing and the Cupcake pin cushion sounds like a perfect project! Such an uplifting post!
The cup cake project is a nice way to use up wool scraps.
The ferns! So fine. Container gardening is a good idea for the black walnut, but have a look at these suggesstions – http://www.ecosystemgardening.com/what-to-plant-under-black-walnut-trees.html
Thanks Michelle. I’ve researched lists of plants that tolerate the jingles toxin before, of course, and one result is that thriving currant bush almost next to it. But I hadn’t read about organic matter and its relationship to the poison’s uptake. Thank you!
So beautifully green! Our bounty is mushrooms from the compost this week (shared 3kg today alone), oranges which are being juiced and made into marmalade and cakes; and avocados – a rich mix at the moment. So nice to see summery things your way!
Wow what delectable things to have in one’s garden! It was in the 80’s yesterday. Did the crossword puzzle out on the deck. Yeah!
Your yard has many things in common with ours, including rhododendrons, but your ferns are really impressive. The red of the door and its enticing cloth make a perfect complement to the green of the garden.
The ferns were nearly wiped out after an excavator occupied our backyard for a month (to dig a basement for an addition). But boy did they come back. It’s nice to have something thrive because we’ve been losing a lot of plants, too. This spring I’ll be replacing two holly bushes on the south side of the house that looked gorgeous for about ten years and then precipitously declined. A spice bush did the same a couple years back.