The two baby fantail pigeons, born in the nest on the crowded ledge, are doing fine and growing rapidly:
Another baby was born in a cake pan nest on a bottom shelf, but kept jumping out. Its parents keep feeding it anyway and I keep putting it back in the cake pan:
The little bantam hens continue to ignore their xylophone, but then I guess when I ordered baby chicks, I forgot to specify the musical variety :
Nevertheless, they seem both happy and healthy:
I've been bringing vases of flowers to church, but one Sunday all I seemed to have were yellow Asiatic Lilies. I put a bunch of them in a red vase and took them with me:
And I began buying leftover perennials on sale at local stores. Some of my purchases included these two Delphiniums and two Veronicas (often called Speedwells):
And these two Echinaceas. All of these plants are supposed to be hardy down to -40 F:
In the place where my Armenian Basket Flower seeds never came up, I put some half priced Red Hot Poker roots. Now I don't know for sure if these are them or weeds. I'm guessing they are the Red Hot Pokers, but they will probably not survive our cold winters. Maybe I can dig them up and replant them in the spring if that's what they turn out to be:
The sunflowers are growing so fast that this picture is already out of date. I can almost see the increase in height each day when I walk past this row:
A closeup of the Veronica flowers:
And a closeup of the two colors of Delphinium:
And then another one of the six baby roses began to bloom, and it was extraordinary. This is the Emily Carr variety, a continuous bloomer and Zone 3 hardy:
Lovely flowers, enjoyed them very much. The Veronica is quite a wonderful purple!
ReplyDeleteRB and Alice
Thanks. My seeds didn't grow well, so I am trying potted perennials which are already started.
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