Things have been blooming since the month of May began. Apple blossoms, for instance:
And wild Violets in the lawn:
And my old-fashioned Bleeding Heart:
I couldn't neglect to mention the beautiful Dandelions:
And along three local roads I saw strips of white flowers:
Of course I stopped to see what they were and they turned out to be Large-Flowered Trillium. I'd been accustomed to thinking of Trilliums as a somewhat rare woodland plant, but around here they can be a roadside weed!:
And they are beauties, these flowers. Their common name is Large-Flowered Trillium or White Trillium, and their scientific name is Trillium Grandiflorum. Here's a closeup:
And not far from the Trilliums were these boggy areas of yellow flowers:
A little closer look revealed them to be Marsh-Marigolds, or Cowslips:
There is an introduced alien, called Lesser Celandine, which is easily confused with our native species. But Marsh-Marigold has more petals and slightly different shaped leaves. After much inspection of my field guide, I was happy to pronounce these the true native, Marsh-Marigold:
My Rugosa Roses have done so very well that I dug up some runners with shoots and transplanted them to the front of the house. They looked a bit droopy:
But the old-fashioned roses I transplanted last year by inverting a glass jar over them did so well that I decided to use the same technique, supposedly the way the pioneers moved their favorite rose plants with them as they moved westward. I needed a jar with a wider mouth for this one, though, so I inverted a plastic pitcher. So far, it seems to be working:
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