Tuesday, 31 May 2016

:: unknown beauty ::

Funny how things low to the ground can easily be overlooked...like this startlingly bright pink sweet pea-type shrub with its amazing contrast of lime green foliage.
I have no idea what it is, but the flowers that bloom develop into a pea family-looking flower.
Do you know what it is?

Monday, 30 May 2016

:: lamium purpureum ::

Finding a flower each day is a challenge, for sure - sometimes in finding the time, sometimes in remembering and sometimes just finding a flower!  It is really getting cold here now, with snow to low levels predicted for the South Island over the next few days.  I'm partly highly excited by this idea and partly, because of how cold it will be, apprehensive. Mostly excited.
With the colder weather comes the dramatic slowing down of growth and the struggle to find flora.
In between 'real' plants in the unkempt parts of our garden (most of it at the moment! LOL!) there are loads of these little flowers peeping in between...what are they? Well, after using the best words I could to describe them, I did find them fairly fast on the internet.  
I believe they are 'deadnettles', from the mint family, with the square stem and with the hairy scalloped leaves, only not stinging as the hairs on the leaves are 'dead'. 
They're not particularly interesting other than that...and now that I know what they are I think I might just acknowledge them a little more happily when I come across them while weeding.

Sunday, 29 May 2016

:: taraxacum iii ::

This dandelion seed head (or what's left of it!) is a little bit how the season feels at the moment - all but completely spent and ready for the bare and barren time of Winter...

Saturday, 28 May 2016

:: african flower blanket WIP ::

 I've noticed lots of pretty flowers today...a miniature bridal veil hanging from a basket...some meagre golden yellow daisies existing in the cracks in the pavement...and a swathe of cool-coloured anemones leaning away from the wind in a city-centre garden bed...
...but did I manage to pull out my camera? NUH!
 Instead I bring you a glimpse of a crochet project I've been working on - an African Flower Blanket, bringing together my love of flowers and hexagons. The colours are much warmer - the red is a crimson in real life and the darker blue is a bright turquoise, while the pale pink is, well, pinker! Still, you get the idea :-)


Friday, 27 May 2016

:: narcissus iii ::

Much mirth for me when I spied this young erlicheer 'thrusting' upward, striking out..doesn't it look like it's going "YEAH!!!"...or is it doing the fingers? I giggled, anyway :-)

Thursday, 26 May 2016

Wednesday, 25 May 2016

:: narcissus i ::

Nature is full of surprises - on the morning walk this morning the last thing I thought I'd see, flowerwise, was the harbinger of Spring, the earlicheer, standing cheerfully enough in thick pockets behind a small brick fence on our way back home...

Tuesday, 24 May 2016

:: xerochrysum bracteatum ii ::

...wondering whether these bright pink strawflower buds will open up...
...I'm not sure if I'd want to on these very Wintry, chilly, damp days...
...more inside time as Miss P was still unwell today...almost jumping around by the end of the (hopefully very boring) day at home...
...will definitely be at school tomorrow...I'm almost gasping for air now :-)

Monday, 23 May 2016

:: dianthus caryophyllus iii ::

I only noticed the ant in the middle of the carnation bloom now...and it is dark...won't be re-shooting that one! LOL!
Maybe it is ants that chomp all the pretty petal-edges into such delicate frills? ;-)

Sunday, 22 May 2016

:: ameria maritima ::

Over the river from school is a fabulous front garden - I have a feeling the owners might have something to do with a landscape gardening company...
...there is no grass to mow and it is a textural sensory pleasure to gaze upon all year round...
...in particular I like the clumps of these thrift scattered throughout the sloping perennial plantings...
...like pompoms on stalks and oh so beautifully PINK!

Saturday, 21 May 2016

:: rosa xxii ::


A broody Autumn afternoon - stormy Southerly lashing at the front of our house with what feels like more moisture inside as we have the heat pump pumping and it is less than 10 degrees outside...brrr...
...perfect for hunkering down and making stuff, reading, baking, cooking, chatting and sipping lots of tea...
...more rosiness here today...
...these perfectly wrinkly little wonders are some flower carpet rose blooms that were lovingly arranged at my bedside by Miss P, perhaps, 3 months ago...
...as they gave way from fresh and pert to soft and droopy and browning slightly at the edges I looked at them sideways from time to time...
..."should I put you in the compost bucket today?" I thought...nah...
...this went on for several months as you can see...a couple of times others in the household have asked me how long the dead flowers were going to stay on the shelves...
... at some point I noticed the softness had dried to a delicately-crumpled rose petal leather...
...and I fell in love with these pretty pink mini-roses all over again...









Friday, 20 May 2016

:: rosa xxi ::

How beautiful is the spiral wrap of petals in this stunning deep red rose?
...I also am moved quite deeply by the darkness between the velvety petals - sometimes looking closer describes remarkable characteristics I am awed to either purely observe or cogitate on...
...this here rose could be called the 'gratitude' rose, for that was the intention with which it was warmly given...
...It got me to thinking a bit (or a lot, maybe!) about gratitude and its far-reaching effects...
...when I feel appreciated, I feel so much more than just the thanks for a job done. Somehow I feel boosted(and usually surprised, too) by the thought that someone else noticed and it made a discernible difference for them...
...and when I feel gratitude, I feel so much happier and however I might have been feeling before, my new lens seems to give me a much more content view of my world...

Thursday, 19 May 2016

:: cosmos v ::

An appreciation of the simple beauty of the cosmos is entirely appropriate tonight as we are now home and debriefing (as you do!) after a 'cosmic' class play experience - entitled "The Order of the Heavens"...
...what an interesting and intense experience it is being on the periphery of the journey a class of 29 takes in the creation and performance of a play and all it entails...
...so many parts, props and people, so much excitement bubbling and fizzing, taking on responsibilities and the mantle of another, literally, just by being in costume...
...of course there are the awkward moments, the mis-timings, the forgetting of lines memorised and when the curtain just stays open too long...and each of these things are just small little parts of the whole - the fantastic, colourful, energetic whole that is 29 kids all working together to put a cohesive story (or in this case three stories!) to an audience...
...what a great day for them all - proud as a parent - especially of a child who has grown immensely more confident during the time she has been at the school - from shrinking away from a speaking part two years ago to offering to take a second part in this year's play...
...the mysteries and wonder of the way things work...cosmic!

Wednesday, 18 May 2016

:: rosa xx ::

where's my motivation gone...? 
time to get my astrology stuff out again and see what the planets are doing...
...maybe that might help...

Tuesday, 17 May 2016

:: rosa xix ::

...super bright and vivid colours - what a wonderful sunny surprise after such a stormy start to the day...
...you got to love the hope in flowers that still bud up at this time of year, with plummeting temperatures on the cards... 
...this particular rose (mutabilis) has this intense cerise red colour at bud which then softens through apricot and ends up another kind of brightish lighter pink on its last day...
...pretty darn chilly here...won't be long until the garden becomes skeletal...

Monday, 16 May 2016

:: calendula ii ::

Today has been all about the colour yellow, sunshiny yellow, even though now the wind is battering the side of the house with a powerful, relentless Southerly gale...and...it is dark!
Very often we connect with others just exactly when we need to hear what they have to communicate with us and this morning as I was heading back home from a (these days unusual) school run I had a very inspiring talk with another woman, also deep in mothering and creating.
All day since I have been surprisingly aware of the colour yellow - in many varied and unexpected ways - what a fun day it has been - and it's good to get surprises, isn't it?

Sunday, 15 May 2016

:: rosa xviii ::

...on a roll with roses...the rock'n'roll rose - making the most of the little bit of sunshine today...

Saturday, 14 May 2016

:: rosa xvii ::

...on a roll with roses...
...this is one that I nearly ripped out - there is definitely much scope to improve our rose, ahem, 'patch'...up close this one is way more attractive than its 'flower carpet' growing form (scraggly!)...and Miss P would not be easily forgiving if I had...

Thursday, 12 May 2016

:: rosa xv ::

Still got some late-blooming beauties in the front garden, though judging by the crazy blasts of wind this evening, there may not be many roses left out there in the morning!
These three made me think of the three of us...and how much we hang together.

Wednesday, 11 May 2016

:: chrysanthemum ii ::

Accompanied on my morning walk today by Mr M...guest photographer of this stunning monarch butterfly, on the chrysanthemums around the corner from home.
Still slick from not being long out of the chrysalis, perhaps?
... and drying itself in this very lovely warm wind we are enjoying here in May.

:: geranium iii ::

Looking more closely than I have before I am amazed at the variety of shape within a genus - this pretty geranium has very flat-shaped flowers by comparison with some others I have spied upon...just fascinating to me - I think of types of flowers as being pretty much the same - but, really, they aren't at all...yet they have common binding traits or characteristics that make them take the same name or label.

Monday, 9 May 2016

:: carpobrotus edulis ::

Wandering onto the beach at Sumner from the carpark is done through the sand dunes and the masses of ice plant that populate in great swathes...
...reminders of many happy sandy holidays at the beach at Orewa, North of Auckland, as a child, enjoying the 'beach flowers', as I remember them...
...a rather prolific plant and far too efficient at the task it was introduced to do in some countries, the ice plant colonises sand dunes very quickly, from the hundreds of seeds per 'figgy' fruit or rooting from a stem strike...
...growing at the rate of up to 1m per year from one individual stem segment and one ice plant can occupy up to 50m alone...
...here in New Zealand it is now on the National Pest Plant Accord due to its invasive nature, covering huge areas in a monoculture, lowering biodiversity and - it was discovered that it actually contributed to faster dune erosion in some instances of heavy rain - the ice plant flesh holds so much water that it is really heavy, whilst not very deeply rooted and in heavy rain can cause large amounts of slippage, due to the large areas it covers...
...ice plant arrived here from South Africa in 1883 as an ornamental plant and goes by other names such as 'pig face', 'Hottentot fig' and 'Sour Fig'. The botanical name comes from the Greek, karpos for 'fruit' and brotus for 'edible'. Indeed in some countries a very sour jam is made from the fleshy fruits...

Sunday, 8 May 2016

:: echium candicans ::

echium or 'Pride of Madeira' at Sumner Beach
What more could one want to celebrate being a Mum with her child than to spend the whole day together...? 
So wonderful - it consisted of a delicious breakfast, some amazing homemade and treat gifts plus a very touching card, a visit to the Farmer's Market, then a MEGA-SCRABBLE session right through the middle of the day, with lots of tea and sunshine, then a walk on the beach at Sumner, with a dog off-leash (who actually came back to call!), bagging 8 big sacks of dry leaves for the compost and a fish and chips dinner...oh - and we're about to embark on Scrabble game #3! LOL! BEST!

Saturday, 7 May 2016

:: osteospermum ::

Looking more closely at a flower, as I have been known to do of late, leads to much deep appreciation of nature and observation of complexities I guess I just hadn't had time to notice before.
...I am amazed at how perfect each part of the flower actually is, how the surface is so pristine and patterns and shapes seem 'by design'...
...the way a flower might only open when the strength of the sun is at a certain intensity and remain carefully closed if not...
...the way a flower is like a 'pollinator funnel' for the creature to literally be guided to the parts it needs to 'communicate' with...
...the 'bullseye' for this bee is very obvious on this African daisy aka Cape daisy aka South African daisy or Blue-eyed daisy...
...in awe of Mother Nature...

Friday, 6 May 2016

:: rosa xiv ::

Feeling the love on a Friday...less words, says more today...
Happy Friday people X

Thursday, 5 May 2016

:: agapanthus ::

Although not a lily, the common agapanthus also goes by the name Lily of the Nile and has a romantic-sounding origin, the name deriving from the Greek 'agape' (love) and 'anthos' (flower). A bit more salubrious than the "Agatha-panthers" that we bandy about or even, dare I mention... 'Agatha's Panties'...ooops!
What surprised me most on the morning walk was that it should be making brand new flowers of this size and vigour at all - it is Autumn, advanced now...!
I did admire it anyway, for its brilliant colour and contrast against the Boston Ivy on the wall behind it...nevermind that it is very close to becoming banned as a weed pest plant...

Wednesday, 4 May 2016

:: salvia azurea ::

What a beautiful morning it was today - big fat spitty raindrop weather with heavy grey skies hanging in thick smudgey grey clumps from the heavens...balmy in short sleeves, [although tights under my shorts!]...no socks weather - lovely.
How lucky to be out in it walking Miss O.  
Although she does create some difficulty with taking photos - likes not to sit patiently, but wander curiously, checking things out - hmmm...I think I can relate!
Plenty of pretty things blooming happily and this wild blue sage or prairie sage or azure sage is what took my eye - with the rainbow it summed up the morning for me.

Tuesday, 3 May 2016

:: stellaria media ::

A tiny flower for today's flower - I believe it is the common chickweed. Almost overlooked and yet, as Autumn progresses it becomes very difficult NOT to notice the swift growing clumps of chickweed colonising any bare areas and squeezing itself in between the Winter crops. It does this quickly as it flowers and sets seed at the same time - a clever tactic!
Pretty useful as it is edible and quite nutritious with a decent amount of iron.  Both humans in salad and poultry can be well-satisfied by it, although, after rain, it is rather a fiddle to clean off the soil, being a groundcover.
The colour is an amazing zing of green at a time of many things dying off and the oncoming brassicas looking fairly glaucous!
In times past it has been used as a cooling herb medicinally, helping ailments such as arthritis, anaemia, itchy skin conditions and ...wait for it...mange!!

Monday, 2 May 2016

:: calendula ii ::

I've been reading a book about different inspiring women who all work away diligently and persistently at their craft, some from a background of having learnt skills already, others who have begun a career knowing absolutely nothing at all about how to create the items they now are renowned for. 
These women have just stepped into their 'work' and worked and worked away repeating and creating consistently, learning as they go.
While gathering in the washing this afternoon I pondered this as I cast my eyes across the calendula 'swathe' (self-sown magical cluster of plants that popped up in the middle of the mulched area where I don't have the heart to rip them up and move them to more practical homes).
Spying on the bees and bumble bees diligently and persistently practising their good works over and over until they are now expert pollinators...the constancy of nature.

Sunday, 1 May 2016

:: henna flower ::

Today I learned a little bit about Henna art from Sathyasri of Tamil Henna, here in Christchurch.  We hosted a little workshop for Miss P and her friends to celebrate the end of the holidays.
Henna cools the body and is used commonly as decoration for brides.  
While the woman is being decorated, for perhaps 4 hours, she can't move about...and then the henna needs at least 2 hours and preferably overnight for it to penetrate giving the deepest colouration...
...so she must...well, do not much...allowing a potentially highly-excited and busy bride-to-be some pretty good relaxation, downtime and nurture...how wonderful, I thought!