The Dragonflies have certainly been appreciating these beautiful sunny days and are everywhere in the garden right now.
The plants are also welcoming this lovely weather. So there are a few that are able to put their best foot forward at last for this Bloom Day post.
It's a truth that some spots in my garden show little variation in the way they look from year to year, as there's so many all-year-round bloomers here. This means they're usually always a part of my GBBD posts ... and here they are again.
Pentas, Impatiens walleriana, Pseudomussaenda flava, Dragonwing Begonias, and red flowering Hibiscus.
The trauma inflicted by torrential rain and cyclonic winds experienced during the sumer/early autumn means there are quite a few things that are out of whack in my garden. They should be blooming during May. But, there are no flowers on my Spathodea campanulata or African Tulip Tree ... it's still a stump. Nor is the pink Calliandra surinamensis or Pink Powderpuff flowering as it continues to recover from its' severe cut back.
There are however lots of other plants showing their beauty right now though including ...
Bracteantha bracteata, Angelonia angustifolia, Crossandra infundibuliformis, Viola hederaceae, Dianthera nodosa, Barleria obtusa and, in the middle, Plectranthus 'Mona Lavender'.
I've had far more success getting some of my Pelargoniums through the 'wet' season/summer at the beginning of this year, and it was a doozy. Not only was there plenty of heavy rain and almost no strong sunlight, the air is just laden with moisture as the humidity levels reach 90% some days. Pellies hate these conditions, so I'm very pleased that I've finally managed to coddle a few through these horrors. The survivors are now beginning to bloom once again.
This is a Pelargonium hybrid from the 'Caliente' series. It blends the best characteristics of the zonal and the ivy pelargoniums. I'm so impressed with its' staying power, not to mention its' stunning blooms.
Now for another of my great Pellie survivors.
It's this pretty Pelargonium peltatum. I adore the clusters of double, white flowers with these magenta markings in the middle. I think this is 'Blanche Roche'
The Torenia fournieri seedlings are now all potted up and starting to bloom. They will keep on showing off for months now ... at least until the next 'wet' when they find it hard-going. It's amazing to see that there are little ones that have self-seeded from the last flowering season and are now popping up in between the bricks on the courtyard floor ... I will have to move them so they don't get trampled underfoot.
I've managed to pot up a few other annual seedlings as well and I'm pleased to see them take off.
Sweet Alyssum, Snapdragon 'Strawberry Crush' and Shock Wave Petunia 'Pink Ice'.
Elsewhere ...
Bromeliads are blooming.
My Cordyline cannifolia or Palm Lily is showing off its' first sprays of flowers.
My red Gerberas are showing their faces and there's a few sprays of flowers on my Bougainvillea.
Flowers are popping up on the Scuttellaria suffrutescens, the Gomphrena globosa, the Salvia leucantha, the Cleome spinosa, the dwarf Scaveola ... and those orange and yellow flowers that have just showed up in my garden all by themselves. There are clumps of these growing in spots next to the roads up here in the hills, but this is the first time I've ever seen any of these on our property. I think they look like Cosmos sulphureus to me. I don't think I would mind if they stayed.
This is the time of year that I enjoy the most out in the garden. I can wander around all day long without getting scorched or sunburnt or drenched. I find myself pottering about, under the watchful gaze of the local birdlife, for hours and hours and it's bloomin' marvellous!
For lots of fabulous GBBD posts,
visit Carol in the U.S. at May Dreams Gardens
and pop over to see Gesine at Seahorse Garden in Germany.
Both these sites are hosts for fantastic posts about what's blooming this May in gardens around the world.
I'm also joining in the Mosaic Monday meme
... and in the Today's Flowers meme with this post. Go and take a look.
... and in the Today's Flowers meme with this post. Go and take a look.
Your garden is looking great. I love those pelargoniums - such delicate colour. Even though it's got a long way to go it must be be heartening to see the recovery after Yasi.
ReplyDeleteOMG. Those sulfercrested cockatoos in a tree. I have one Moluccan and can not fathom a flock of them. My bird was wild caught 35 years ago and came from Australia. I bet he misses all the beautiful blooms you have in your garden. Are the cockatoos destructive in a garden?
ReplyDeleteMissy ... there's lots of recovery happening but I'm really interested to see how they all do during the dry months ahead. Hopefully, as they're drought tolerant plants, they will continue to do well.
ReplyDeleteGarden Walk ... that group of Sulphur-Crested Cockatoos is only part of the flock that live around these hills. I see them heading off to roost for the night every evening and I'd guess there would be around 25 to 30 of them. These birds are not destructive at all. But because they feast on the fruit and flowers high up in so many of the trees around here, they do leave a bit of a mess underneath ... although nowhere near as bad as the mess left by the Red-Tailed Black Cockatoos, I have to say!!
Bernie, always a delight to swing by your blog and see what's happening in your gardens. Your mosaics are beautiful! Cheers, Jenni
ReplyDeleteYour autumn looks wonderful. I'm not a fan of the common annual begonias grown in my area, but I love dragonwing begonias! Some varieties are hardy here, and I really want to add them to my garden, if I can find them. I also think your pelargoniums are so beautiful. I'm glad some survived the bad weather you had earlier in the year.
ReplyDeleteThose birds look amazing! If I had those in my yard, I'm not sure I'd ever be able to tear my eyes away from the birds for long enough to plant anything. But you seem to be succeeding marvelously, and I'm sure the birds appreciate the show.
ReplyDeleteevery post is a great source of information. i have photos of flowers whose names are unknown to me, and i've found them here. thank you! your garden is fabulous!
ReplyDeleteLive in the Moment
Bernie your garden is beautiful and I have to agree the autumn weather has just been beautiful. It's very hard to stay out of the garden.
ReplyDeleteOur cockatoos are not so popular. They have stripped all the oranges off the trees- dropping them on the ground to come back and eat the seeds at a later date!
Thanks for the tour of your beautiful garden. Those pelargoniums are absolutely stunning! I also love the last shot!
ReplyDeleteDear Bernie, you have the same name like my husband ;)
ReplyDeleteThank you for partizipating the german GBBT!
I really like all your colourfull flowers but the most I love your local birds, wow!!!
Have a nice weekend!
Gesine
you've such a beautiful garden Bernie. great collection of flowers and i like your collages.
ReplyDeleteBernie, I can't get over how much you have flowering in your garden in Autumn. Its Autumn here too and I have very little flowering. As for your birds ... they are beautiful!!
ReplyDeleteJenni, it's nice to see you again. Glad you like the mosaics ... they let me show more and use less space so there's not endless scrolling down the page.
ReplyDeleteDebgarden ... Dragonwings are fabulous for the climate and conditions here. I don't have many of the Begonia semperflorens, just one or two, but I prefer the Dragonwings. Great waterwise plant.
Queerbychoice, we spend a whole heap of time watching the birdlife around here. We get to see some marvellous species and the bird song is just brilliant.
Luna, I'm glad to be of help with plant names. I try my best to use their correct botanic name to avoid confusion associated with the common names. It's been such fun learning these names.
Hobos ... those pesky Cockatoos up to no good! Sorry to hear about your oranges. What a shame. The weather has indeed been marvellous ... here's hoping it continues for ages.
Kanak, great to see you again too. Those Cockatoos are fabulous to watch although they can be rather nosiy.
Gesine ... it was terrific to see you visiting. I was only too pleased to join in with your GBBD and see what's blooming over there.
Thanks you very much Life Ramblings. I appreciate your generous comment.
Christine, I've been working hard over the last two years to add lots of potted plants to provide colour for most of the year. I can't plant in the ground here any more so it's been the only way to get the flowers into my garden spaces.
Wonderful blooms and wonderful photos Bernie. I like the collages you made with the pics. I too love to potter in my garden with the birds overhead. Mine aren't quite as exotic as yours though! Love those cockatoos!
ReplyDeleteThe end of autumn in your garden is a very floriferous time. Just beautiful!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful blooms!
ReplyDeleteMy entry.
Bernie those Pellies sure had a stressful time with that weather - they look fabulous just now esepcially that double white one with the pink eye. Hopefully those other plants will recover and flower later in the season for you.
ReplyDeleteAm I right in saying that those cordyline flowers have a scent?
Such lovely beauty and variety!
ReplyDeleteI love the photo of the bloom coming through the pavers - nature is amazing!
You have a beautiful garden.
Carletta's Captures
A joyful post, Bernie and loved every step of the GBBD tour. Effulgent and overflowing with colourful life but the Pelargonium peltatums blew me away...
ReplyDeleteLaura
My mouth flew open in delight a couple of times in this post - once with the little torenia in the cracks - how cute! And the second time with the flock of cockatoos in the tree! Fascinating! Lovely blooms, and a great shot of that red dragonfly! Happy GBBD!
ReplyDeleteI love your garden and your flowers are beautiful.
ReplyDeleteWow - so many wonderful blooms in your autumn garden! Great dragonfly photo Bernie! They're one of my favorite insects - I haven't seen a red one like that here.
ReplyDeleteWhat a treat to get such a beautiful glimpse of your autumn. Great job keeping the pellies going!
ReplyDeleteLovely! Your flowers are stunning. I really appreciate your combinations of colors and textures...so well done. Those pelargoniums are awesome! Happy GBBD Day!
ReplyDeleteAutumn is certainly a beautiful time in your garden with so many gorgeous, colourful blooms. I wonder if Pelargoniums can be grown here in my country as I have never seen it before. The pure white cockatoos provide an interesting backdrop for your lovely garden. Happy GBBD!
ReplyDeleteLooks like you have a wonderful array of things blooming! I know how hard it can be to grow pelargoniums when its wet, but the ones you pictured seem to be flourishing. I've never seen Torenia before- love it!
ReplyDeleteBernie,
ReplyDeleteI am always amazed by your lovely flowers, the pelargoniums are beautiful. Try as I might I just cannot grow them here, so just keep posting more of your fabulous photos.
Your garden is gorgeous even to the end! WOW! Cathy
ReplyDeleteYour garden always look full, healthy and enviting. There is not a sign of the typhoon anymore. Ours dont make that view of lushness even in the rainy season, maybe because ours are not fertilized at all. But among the flowers, the last white flowers are what i love best, haha! I recall when in Sydney, an old pet cuckatoo like that in a park told me in a really cuckatooic voice "hello, hello, would you like a cup ot tea"! Till today it is still my most wonderful moment, to be offered tea by a bird! It inspired me to try teaching a green local parrot in my landlady's house the vernacular of what the sulfur crested said. I was successful in my secret lesson, and one dawn my landlady knocked early at my door asking if i taught the parrot! She apparently got scared because it suddenly blurted asking her if she "wants a cup of coffee" in Tagalog. hahaha!
ReplyDeleteWonderful post and such beautiful photos... and those birds... wow! I hope you are feeling like things are pretty much ok after all you went through with that horrible storm a while ago... hopefully in addition to the sadness and destruction, some new gardening opportunities were created that give you some peace with the horrible event... Larry
ReplyDeleteThat was like a trip to another planet. The colours are so intense, while here we are still all green, grey-green, blue-green, yellow-green...and raining.
ReplyDeleteWow. Beautiful flowers, and amazing local birds! We only see those in pet stores around here!
ReplyDeleteYour garden looks fantastic. So good for you to have nice and warm weather and so much still flowering to enjoy.
ReplyDeleteGorgeous photos. The one thing we have similar down here in the south right now is trees full of cockatoos.
ReplyDeleteI am coveting that p. peltatum - absolutely stunning. Isn't it funny how seeds plant themselves in the most inconvenient places? I'm overwhelmed with the number and variety of blooming plants you have - amazing!
ReplyDeleteBernie your garden is just tremendous and I loved all the mosaics. V
ReplyDeleteFor an Autumn garden it is so much more lush and beautiful than mine would be...your beautiful flowers are only annuals for me but much loved annuals...I am just stunned at the beauty and the wildlife...plan to visit more often...
ReplyDeleteYour garden looks as if it is in its prime. It's always interesting to see the similarities and differences between your garden and those here. Some of the names are familiar; others seem exotic and lovely. May they keep right on blooming...
ReplyDeleteWow Bernie, what a mouth watering selection of Blooms! Love the faces on the Pelargoniums, the double was my fav there.
ReplyDeleteWhat wonderful wildlife to be watching you as you work. I can hear them chatter... 'she missed a weed... she missed a weed' :-)))
Have Bloom Day from Scotland :-)
Hi Bernie
ReplyDeleteFantastic series!
Thanks for sharing.
I would like you to become a Guest Friend in TODAYS FLOWERS.
If you agree send me pictures so I tell your Guest Friend date.
Thanks
Luiz
Wow, wow, wow! No, I'm nor barking out a greeting, just amazed at what is going on in your garden! You have showcased your GBBD flowers in pretty collages,and that makes a difference. Love your post.
ReplyDeleteRosie
I love everything thing that I see here! You left me do not know where to start. Ok. I must point out that the pelargonium is very stunning!
ReplyDeleteThese mosaics are just wonderful! I love the color combinations and the flowers that made them so vibrant!
ReplyDeleteI also loved seeing the parrots, which I remember from my trip to Cairns.
Have a great day,
Barb
Look at all those Cockatoos!!!!! That is incredible!!!! That would be so much fun to see.....I love your dragonfly pic!
ReplyDeleteHi Bernie, gorgeous post! Your collection of blooms is truly remarkable. But the picture of the cockatoos is my favorite of the day, just amazing.
ReplyDeleteeverything's looking beautiful - my favourite photo is of the brave plucky PF seedlings between the bricks.
ReplyDeleteI think your garden is recovering beautifully, Bernie. Great variety and color in your blooms.
ReplyDeleteBernie - I don't even know where to start! Your flowers are simply fabulous and who could even pick a favorite? The Pelargonium peltatum are certainly charming! ... that is a new treat for me! Thanks for sharing! :)
ReplyDeleteLove those pelargoniums – and your blog! It's wonderful to visit tropical Australia when the Northern hemisphere shows its adverse side. Like now, summer months are just around the corner but the weather is +12... on the other hand we have plenty of light right now: the Midsummer Day is just a few weeks away and there's over 18 hours of light daily here in Finland. That helps plants grow even it's a bit chilly :)
ReplyDeleteWish you a lovely week!
Bernie, this is just wonderful, and amazing to have such a lush garden where it's so dry! Love those cockatoos too!
ReplyDeleteWhat beautiful flowers.
ReplyDeleteHi Bernie,
ReplyDeleteMy comment just got erased! Ugh.
I mentioned how beautiful everything was by NAME. Oh, I suffer with these machines.
Take care and thanks for the kind words regarding my 30th year in education.
David/ :-)
That top photo of the dragonfly with, I think Blood rose is awesome! Everything looks so beautiful fall is my favorite time also.. I'm off in search of a Firecracker Plant. Seeing yours reminded me how much I love them.
ReplyDeleteHappy Friday hope you and yours have a beautiful weekend.
hugs from Savannah, Cherry
Beautiful images, everything's looking amazing!
ReplyDeleteShort Poems
Such an array of blooms and the are all gorgeous! The last picture with all the white parrots is amazing.
ReplyDeleteHi. Seems that we have more in common than blogging about our gardens. We are moms, grandmothers and teachers! What do you teach? I teach the ever exciting freshman composition course at our local university and an introduction to literature course. Love the wild cockatoos in your trees. We have the exotic red breasted robins. Thank you for visiting.
ReplyDeleteOgród piękny i ptaki też Pozdrawiam
ReplyDelete