One of the great things about Bloom Day is that it provides a record against which to compare current events in the garden. As I've been blogging less than 2 years, I have only last year's posts to look at but, by and large, 2014 has closely paralleled 2013 in terms of what's blooming in any given month. That isn't true for November, however. Last November, I had early blooms of
Agapanthus,
Alstroemeria, and Iceland poppies, none of which are blooming yet this November. In addition, some plants that were still blooming last November, like
Grevillea 'Superb' and
Plectranthus ciliatus, have already thrown in the towel for the season this year. Still, here in coastal Southern California, I know I'm lucky not to face the frost and snow already hitting many areas of the country.
Yellow flowers are making the biggest splash this month, as they light things up under gloomy skies.
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When Senna (Cassia) bicapsularis 'Worley's Butter Cream' blooms, I wonder why I don't have more of these shrubs in my garden |
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Like the larger variety, this Tagetes lemmonii 'Compacta' tends to flop but I love the flowers for their color and their scent |
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All it took was a little rain to send Euryops 'Sonnenschein' into a paroxysm of flowers |
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Gazinia 'New Day Yellow' produces large blooms for the size of the plant |
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Even the succulent Graptoveria 'Fred Ives' is getting into the action, producing a large flower stalk |
There are also flashes of orange and red here and there.
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Aloe 'Johnson's Hybrid' is a relatively new acquisition - I wish I'd bought more (It looks especially nice with the Alternanthera tenella, doesn't it?) |
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This unidentified Aloe (maybe A. 'Pink Blush'?) is a vigorous bloomer with stalks that stand straight |
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Senecio fulgens (photobombed here by a flowering Echeveria) is producing another round of blooms |
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This Bougainvillea provides a dash of red in the front yard |
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The Gomphrena haageana blooms keep coming |
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Hemerocallis 'Spanish Harlem' keeps on blooming, albeit usually producing only one flower at a time |
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The recent heat took a toll on Rudbeckia 'Cherry Brandy's' foliage but the flowers keep coming |
Adding more red and orange, berries are popping up everywhere.
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Heteromeles arbutifolia, named the official native plant of Los Angeles a couple years ago, is starting to produce a mass of red berries |
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Berry production on Nandina domestica has been in process for some time |
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Even the chlorotic Pittosporum (Auranticarpa) rhombifolia is producing berries |
Although the yellows, oranges and reds draw the eye, pink flowers are making a stand in the garden as well, outnumbering their splashier and flashier companions.
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After struggling with the heat in early fall, Camellia sasanqua is now hitting its stride |
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Close-up of Camellia sasanqua bloom |
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Flowers are usually present almost year-round on the Arbutus 'Marina' but, after being pruned early this year, they're only now returning in force |
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As you can see here, my Arbutus are making up for lost time, making the hummingbirds very happy - the flowers look coral here but they're really more pink |
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Bauhinia x blakeana has begun another bloom cycle since the temperatures cooled |
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A Geranium sanguineum I have no record of planting has begun blooming |
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Leptospermum scoparium 'Pink Pearl' has pumped out more flowers since the weather cooled too |
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This Pelargonium peltatum (aka ivy geranium) has decided that it wants to climb |
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The Pennisetum 'Fireworks' have settled in comfortably despite regular digging around their base by raccoons and skunks |
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All the Pentas lanceolata are blooming - this one is 'Nova' |
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Even the 'Pink Meidiland' roses, shown here with Cuphea ignea 'Starfire Pink,' have produced a few blooms despite a sorry performance earlier this year |
There is a scattering of blue and purple blooms too.
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Ageratum houstonianum 'Blue Horizon' looks better now than when I planted it in spring but I don't know if I'll grow it next year |
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Aster x frikartii 'Monch' is taking its own sweet time to get established but I love it anyway |
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Barleria obtusa has a sprawling habit, which makes it hard to photograph |
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The beautiful Eustoma grandiflorum 'Borealis Blue' is back in bloom |
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Lobelia erinus may not be exciting but it self-seeds freely here and, after disappearing during the peak of the heat, it's reappearing all over (shown here coming up in a pot underneath a blueberry shrub) |
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This new Osteospermum ecklonis is 'Berry White' - I like it just as much as '3D Silver,' which has been a mainstay in my garden |
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Salvia leucantha is coming to the end of its bloom cycle |
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Solanum xantii, a California native, is one of my latest finds - the purple color is even brighter than it looks here |
There are only a few white flowers, making me wonder why I haven't added any
Argyranthemum to my garden this year.
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Eustoma grandiflorum 'Echo White' isn't quite as double or as vigorous as the blue form but it's still pretty with its bright green throat |
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Hibiscus trionum (aka flower of an hour), sold to me by my local botanic garden, turns out to be a weed in parts of the country but it has been well-behaved here thus far |
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All my Leucanthemum x superbum (Shasta daisies) were hit hard by the heat this year but they're slowly making a comeback |
That's it for my November Bloom Day round-up. Please
visit Carol at May Dreams Gardens, the host of the world-wide gardening event that is Bloom Day, and you'll find photos of what is lighting up gardens elsewhere this November.
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© 2012-2014 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party