But instead...

Below are the lilies I was looking for, which Hawk helped me transplant a few days ago. As you can see, each bloom seems to last only one day, and then the next bud blooms.


A close up of one so you can get the colors, as best as my camera can reproduce them. So, what kind of lily are they?


On the left, the mangled looking things lying down... that's what the new lilies look like now, which is why I clipped the flowers and put them in water. Some three year old came along and danced on them, apparently. >:( Hawk saw the end of the carnage, and that the kid's father apparently did nothing to stop it. (To the right is garlic, doing fairly well. He didn't touch those.)


And since I was out there I decided to take a few more pics of the garden in it's present state... down the row of arbor vitae, looking from the road into the property. Our oregano is particularly huge.


Thyme, surrounded by garlic.


A row of radishes, and then the yellow flowers are pak choy all bolted. Garlic beyond, doing well.


Shooting through the tree (you can't see the stair steps in the tree from this angle) down the row of blackberries. Monster berry plants, they loop up over the lower branches of the trees. Possibly about the same as the last pics we might have posted of them, only the path is getting encroached upon at the far end.


More garlic, doing well. Peppers to the right, not doing quite so well because they're in the shade of the stair tree.


The paleolithic dalek is a great place to put the water sprinkler (not shown, here). We're opening up the area where we previously just tossed spare rocks and wildflower seed and Eor has put in some herbs at the base of the dalek.


And from the other side of what was previously the wildflower pit, peppers which are doing pretty well because they're in the sun. Also, more bolted pak choy, leftish.




I think I started this because of Ironicbees post of pictures of the Japanese garden in Portland, Oregon. I don't think ours is anything like as beautiful. Maybe some day. ;)
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From: [identity profile] derien.livejournal.com


Pretty much. :) You plant them in the Fall (September/Octoberish), though. Put them pointy end up about 5 inches, I think it is, down, and they're one of the earlier things to come up on the spring. The scapes are really the cool part, we eat those all summer, and then you pull up the plants (in late July or August around here) and you have eight cloves where you had one a year ago. Shouldn't plant them in the same place two years in a row, though, because of mildews... although we have done so, because I think we didn't read that until too late. We'll see how our root crop comes out.
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