Photo Friday: June Bloomers

Here’s a quick look at some of the things we have blooming here in early June. I’ve got petunias planted in various containers and planters, and they are all in full bloom now. This one in the below photo in the hanging basket is Easy Wave Red. The red flowers are attractive to hummingbirds, and I have also seen swallowtail butterflies getting nectar from them and other petunias. The spiderworts are blooming behind the petunias, and I have several of the seed grown South Pacific Orange cannas nearby that should be blooming in a few weeks.

petunia and spiderwort

petunia and spiderwort

This year I planted Tidal Wave Red Velour in our old wheelbarrow. I set three plants in there about a month ago, and they have really taken off.

Tidal Wave Red Velour petunias

Tidal Wave Red Velour petunias

Tidal Wave Red Velour is a 2015 AAS Winner, and this is my second year growing it. The blooms do like they are made of velour, though the photo doesn’t really do that justice.

Tidal Wave Red Velour

Tidal Wave Red Velour

This spiderwort is one my wife had growing at her old place and dug up to move to Happy Acres. It looks much like the one my parents had growing in their backyard for many years. The blooms only last for one day but they keep blooming and blooming for a long time.

spiderwort blooms

spiderwort blooms

Another spiderwort we have blooming now is Blue and Gold. The bluish purple blooms contrast nicely with the golden yellow foliage. Spiderwort is a troublesome and invasive weed in some areas but is pretty well behaved in our garden. It does throw up a few new plants here and there but no more so than our coneflowers, which should be blooming soon.

Blue and Gold spiderwort

Blue and Gold spiderwort

The next bloomer is a plant that is perhaps more fragrant than showy. The flowers of Valerian are quite attractive to pollinators, and offer up a sweet aroma when we are working nearby. The roots of the plant are the parts that are used for medicinal purposes, and it is a popular tea to help with insomnia.

fragrant blooms of Valerian

fragrant blooms of Valerian

Another white flowered plant is very showy, but not so fragrant – at least not to me. The Brandywine Viburnum (Viburnum nudum) has large, rounded clusters of white flowers now that are followed by pinkish-purple berries later on. The flowers are attractive to pollinators and butterflies, while birds eat the berries when they ripen. This shrub is native to the eastern parts of the U.S. and gets about six feet tall. The deer leave it alone too, which make it a plus for our location.

Brandywine viburnum

Brandywine viburnum

In the edible department, the first blooms on a container grown Patio Baby eggplant mean that fruits will not be far behind. I did a Variety Spotlight on this 2014 AAS Winner last year, and it is a great eggplant for growing in containers.

Patio Baby eggplant blooming

Patio Baby eggplant blooming

Another edible that’s flowering is some mizuna I have planted in a cold frame bed. It has bolted, and I will leave the plants for the pollinators and beneficial insects. Some of the brassicas do have fragrant blooms, but not this particular mizuna.

mizuna flowering

mizuna flowering

I hope you have enjoyed this look at some of the things we have blooming here this first day of June. I will be back soon with more happenings from Happy Acres!

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6 Responses to Photo Friday: June Bloomers

  1. Sue Garrett says:

    I’ve always thought aubergines/egg plants were as good decoratively as they are for producing a crop. I’ve sown nasturtiums in an old wheelbarrow- they’re a bit tougher for life on the allotment.

  2. Phuong says:

    Your plantings are looking lovely, the varying heights and textures add a lot of interest. And the flowering mizuna is very interesting looking. My grandma had a small section of the garden where she would move things that she wanted to save seed from, especially wild greens she’d collect in fields.

  3. Jane Strong says:

    I want that wheelbarrow full of red petunias.Will you zap it over to me? No? I guess I will have to plant those red petunias next year for myself. I lovelovelove them

  4. Margaret says:

    All of your blooms are lovely and wow – that’s quite the display in the wheelbarrow from only 3 plants! I just potted up a number of annuals last week so they are still settling in – this year I’m trying a grouping of pots for the first time. Now we’ll see if I can keep on top of the watering!

  5. Michelle says:

    I second Jane, love the wheelbarrow full of red petunias! I had spiderwort growing once upon a time in a garden long ago. They were never a problem, probably because of our dry summers, just quit watering them and they disappear.

  6. Shawn Ann says:

    That red velour is just gorgeous. I love viburnum. At the old house we had a very fragrant one. I just assumed they were all fragrant, but I planted a snowball viburnum here and it is beautiful but no fragrance sadly! 🙁
    We live near a nature preserve so I’m glad the deer don’t like it.

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