Last fall, I put in a new garden bed in my yard. Three days ago, I put my foot on the working end of a shovel and moved a lot of heavy clay soil from this new bed to make way for a dozen or more perennials, transplanted from the old bed of which this new one is an extension.
OK?
I used a lot of fresh compost in those transplant holes, then watered the fresh transplants deeply.
Then came the rains, and look how the new garden uses them.
| This heuchera and lamium, instead of drooping over in shock, as might be expected after a transplant, are rising up green and juicy after the rain. |
Here's the bigger picture, with the new transplants in the foreground and the older garden, from which they were taken, in the background:
Meanwhile, just across the yard, in a study of whites and greens, St. Francis hangs out with the hanging white blooms of Solomon's Seal, polygonatum:
All the plants that love cool temperatures and lots of moisture are loving this rain.
| Like this Brunnera Jack Frost |
| And this dicentra eximia |
| Like this ajuga burgundy glow, putting out a show of purple flowers this spring |
| And this shade-loving hosta sieboldiana elegans, with the blue flowers of Spanish bluebells, hyacinthoides hispanica, peeking through its leaves |
| And this lovely clump of Spanish bluebells. |
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