Monday, July 13, 2009

Spring bouquet edwin kowles






Dove... flying around. This tiny flower, with mostly with white colour, plus a little spot of yellow. The formation of dove.





Asim Shah posted a photo:

the basket


Blkvt.jpg
White flowers - Blkvt.jpg

wwwandelskeobrazyblogcz


Exotic flower

Exotic flower



Pink tulips, Ottawa Tulip Festival


Dove... flying around. This tiny flower, with mostly with white colour, plus a little spot of yellow. The formation of dove.



beetography
cherry-DSC_1606.jpg

cherry-DSC_1606.jpg


GardenFlowers4.jpg
Garden Flowers - GardenFlowers4.jpg



Flower with Jade Ring, On The Middle...




When take this flower, i just curious in the middle of this flower, it's take couple days to figure out what to name this photo, finally name of "swirl" comes out... flower with combination of white and red, somehow it may like the flyi ng bird.



beetography
Ants on a bird of paradise flower

Ants on a bird of paradise flower


Robert Nyman
Like, flowers

Like, flowers



Purple Flower

beetography
Dalia flower

Dalia flower


This year there are nine entries in the Inspiring Spaces category, all designed to inspire you to think creatively about container planting.

box_spaces.jpgThe Gold medal winning entry by the Ebrington and District Gardening Club chose a day out at Wimbledon as its theme, with an umpire's ladder chair be-decked with strawberries and a panama hat planted with white alyssum as the cream. The rest of the planting was mainly white including some lovely clematis, which sprawled over a lush green lawn, demonstrating that they can be grown as a trailing plant where there is no room for them to climb.

The simple plant combination of graduating box balls, marigolds and spider plants in copper-effect boxes was the dramatic entry from the London Gardens Society. It demonstrated that for smart, urban spaces, a bold, limited palette is often the better choice.

birdbath.jpgThe idea that could probably be incorporated into most people's garden comes from the Capel Gardener's Society. Their inspiring space is called 'We'll keep a welcome in the woodpile' and shows what can be done if you have an old dead tree and a few bits of wood in a corner of your garden. The top of the tree stump is cleverly carved out to form a birdbath and the logs are piled up around it. Plants such as violas and ferns are poked in among them. The whole area becomes a haven for all sorts of wildlife and looks really pretty.

Bourne Valley Garden Centre has gone all out to show that fruit and veg can be grown ' Anyplace, anywhere' and they've got some old wellies with chives sprouting from the top to prove it!

I'll be taking a look at the contents of my attic in a whole new light when I get home...


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