Entries in Japanese maple (20)

Wednesday
Nov252009

With the Voice of Thanksgiving

May I proclaim with the voice of Thanksgiving and declare all Thy wonders.

This is a view today of the woodland garden. The green Japanese maple has brilliant red foliage. 

I photographed this overview of the woodland garden from our drive.

Red and blue-green colors pop against each other in late November.

"Lady in red" hydrangea foliage complements the out of season blooms of an azalea.The fall colors of a viburnum I once purchased for two dollars. It had no tag, so I don't know its name.

Rosa mutabalis is still blooming in the front garden. The Japanese maple on the left is our "marriage tree".

The sky today was clear blue, after several dreary cold days. I am thankful!I am blessed with many trees. These are behind our house, on the edge of forest land.

Another view of the Japanese maple we have owned for thirty-four years, since our marriage.Hundreds of birds were in the trees today. Their songs filled the air.Rejoice!

May you all be blessed throughout this holiday season, Deborah

Saturday
Nov142009

A Perfect Day in November

Another perfect day. Sixty-eight degrees, clear sky, fresh, clean air. Spring is my favorite season, but fall is a close second. I watch as my garden puts itself to bed, and there is beauty and peace in this place as winter's rest approaches.

In my last journal entry, a walk through my garden, I posted a photo of a Japanese maple with golden leaves. Look what happened to it overnight.

 In the woodland garden, a blue hosta, which was about three feet tall in its prime earlier this year, is yellow and wilted with age, but still beautiful as it composes itself against the remnants of an old stump.

I love old stumps, as long as they are where they belong and not in the middle of my lawn. They provide shelter and nourishment to little woodland creatures, and I like the look of them when they are covered with moss and lichens.

This old stump, near the lady garden, is host to variegated ivy.

What else to share with you today? There is so much out there. A lot of it I have planted, and a lot of it I have not. I am blessed with some great native plants, including oakleaf hydrangeas. I have heard that there are more oakleaf hydrangeas in Alabama than anywhere else in the world. It is our official state wildflower. I have plenty of them in my yard. After the leaves have fallen, the seed heads will persist through the winter. 

As the days are shortening and the nights getting cooler, the hydrangeas in my yard are putting on their final show.

 

One kind of hydrangea I did plant is Hydrangea arborescans 'Annabelle'. This was my mother's name, so I planted a half dozen in her memory. They have smooth green leaves and huge white flowers through the summer. Now the flowers are shriveled and brown, but this morning's sun caught one of them and gave it a golden glow.

I hope the sun is shining in your heart, wherever you are, whatever the weather may be. Have a great weekend.