#fall asters
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whatnext10 · 5 months ago
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Colorful Climbing Asters Attract All Types of Little Pollinators
Aster and Skipper Climbing asters (Ampelaster carolinianus) are one of the most common and beautiful fall blooming flowers that grow in our wetlands. As their name implies, they love to climb anything that they get near, so come fall, there are carpets of bright pink flowers covering fences, trees, other shrubs, and even patches of ground if there is nothing to climb. And covering all those…
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ediblegardenspointloma · 2 years ago
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In My San Diego Garden and Kitchen
Warmer days and less fog kick-started the red bell pepper plants. These were the first four of the season and there are another half dozen in various colorations. Stuffed green bell peppers are ahead and some will be diced and frozen for winter uses. I can be patient for a week or two as the cauliflower starts need to size up before supplanting the peppers.
Over the last ten days I’ve removed the three dwarf tomato plants and the black cherry. Though the Rosella Purple were often “cat faced,” they echo my favorite tomato, Black Krim. A recap of the “dwarf tomatoes in the fog belt” experiment is coming soon. Capsule summary: we got tomatoes though the months June through September were the cloudiest in four years as measured by our solar panel production.
With the messiness of end-of-season tomatoes and dry beans cleared, I refreshed the beds with compost, organic fertilizer and gypsum in readiness for the second season garden. Premium Crop and Jacaranda broccoli thrive in the bright winter sun and cool winter days. Netting protects the plants from cabbage moths for a few weeks and 40% shade cloth is at hand for hot, dry Santa Ana conditions
We’re still in strawberry guava season with the total harvest at 75 pounds and another 20 percent of the crop to come. That is thousands of guavas. The fruit is larger and more abundant this year likely due to excellent winter rains last season and two inches of rain in August with the tropical cyclone. Yesterday I did guava drops at church (pizza pan) and three pounds or so to a friend’s front porch. If they weren’t so perishable, I’d give to a local food bank.
Click on the square in the lower right corner to expand the guava shake. You can hear them plop down on the trays below the tree. We harvested 15 pounds on the weekend. There appears to be a smaller winter crop coming on as well, guessing around January or February.
Light is everything and late season roses are enchanting. Hot Cocoa and Ambridge.
This is most of the dry bean harvest from a 3 x 4 foot area, drying on the warm stone patio. The reveal comes next week. I may struggle with tomatoes, but my garden in amenable to beans. I doubled the ground devoted to dry beans this year.
October brings the asters and fond recollections of the ones I grew in my Massachusetts garden.
Check the What I’m Planting Now page as I transplant and sow seeds for the cool season garden. Then head today to Harvest Monday, hosted by Dave at Happy Acres blog and see what garden bloggers around the world harvested last week.
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boschintegral-photo · 6 months ago
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Aster Ueno Toshogu Autumn Dahlia Garden Ueno, Tokyo, Japan
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fisheito · 4 months ago
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there's somethin about maid eito and bookworm yakumo
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After i drew ⤴
i woke up the next day and said, NO. I NEED BALANCE!!!!
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theeeere we go
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michaelnordeman · 7 months ago
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October colours. Värmland, Sweden (October 13, 2019).
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whimzycle · 1 month ago
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First meetings, awkward greetings.
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awakeningthevioletswithin · 9 months ago
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Spicy
Watercolor On Black Cotton Paper
2024, 10"x 14"
Red China Asters, Callistephus chinensis
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onestellarghost · 7 months ago
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twelve-year-old me and twenty-year-old me are shaking hands and losing their mind over gravity falls
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wolfasketch · 3 months ago
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Honestly, half of these characters have just been waiting for me to draw them again
Also, everyone here is in a romantic relationship except for Kristy and the Doey trio
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bamboo-bees · 1 year ago
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/slams hands down/ Dammit I love these boys
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vandaliatraveler · 7 months ago
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Autumn on Snake Hill.
Elevation makes a huge difference in the Central Appalachians. Canaan Valley was at peak color almost two weeks ago. A thousand feet lower, at Snake Hill Wildlife Management Area, the leaves are just starting to approach peak. From top: red maple leaves drape fan clubmoss; the white-glazed, blue-purple berries of common greenbrier, an important food source for wildlife in the fall and winter; oldfield aster, also known as frost aster; milkweed pods release their precious seed; goldenrod gone to seed; the blue-black berries of mapleleaf viburnum, whose blushing red leaves are one of autumn's great joys; the brilliant yellow foliage of wild yam; the fiery red bolts of sourwood's dying flame; red oak burning away at the trail's edge; eastern teaberry loaded up with its distinctive red berries; a gorgeous Maryland golden-aster, one of the last beauties standing before the frost; and a spotted cucumber beetle, which despite its innocent appearance is a bane of late season gardens.
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whatnext10 · 6 months ago
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Sharing Can Often Be a Great Thing
Crescent and Bee Last week on my way home I discovered a beautiful climbing aster bush on the banks of the Wacassassa River. When I stopped to take some photos of it, I realized that not only was it loaded with flowers, but those flowers were loaded with pollinators. There were tons of bees and wasps, which I expected, but I was surprised to discover quite a few butterflies, too. It’s getting…
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limeinaltime · 4 days ago
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So let me fly with you
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boschintegral-photo · 4 months ago
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Aster Ueno Toshogu Autumn Dahlia Garden Ueno, Tokyo, Japan
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indigrassy · 4 months ago
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Focal point
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rabbitinthemeadow · 1 year ago
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Those evenings when the hills sang with voices like bells // Part 31
October 9th, 2022
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