During morning coffee a visitor surprised us. Perhaps he wanted to communicate his disappointment that we’d harvested the apple crop just the day before and hadn’t left him any…
🙂

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© SVSeekins and Garden Variety Life, 2013
joy in every season
Yes, this title is cheeky, but it’s true. It’s no secret I like Naked Ladies. Last fall, I admitted it. At the time, I was referring to Colchicum. The common name made sense to me because the flowers & stems appeared so naked without the leaves as to clothe them.

Recently, while travelling in northern California, I learned that the common name Naked Ladies can also refer to Amaryllis belladonna. Through the countryside, even in ditches & deserted farmyards, these Naked Ladies danced happily. Everything else seemed to have died back from dehydration. Wow. I figure they’re very sun & drought-tolerant to thrive in those places.

There’s a very similar pink flower that also blooms in the fall: Nerine Lily. Apparently, it’s also part of the Amaryllis family, but the flowers aren’t naked; the leaves show up along with the blooms. I thought I’d identified some Nerine Lilies in our neighbourhood last year, but now I’m not so sure. Some leaves are showing, but not many. Nerine? Not So Naked Ladies? It’s tricky.
This lovely patch of pink blossoms is in a yard along Mayfair Drive on Mt. Tolmie. What’s especially impressive is how well they’ve stood up through the torrential rains of the past week! Wow! Sun & drought-tolerant… deer-resistant… and downpour-durable!
Just imagine: Naked Ladies– dancing in the rain. Woo hoo !!
🙂
PS – Last night chatting with a couple of Garden Club ladies, a couple other fall-blooming, pink flowers were mentioned.
SK recommended Schizostylis (Kaffir Lily) from the Iris family. (aka Hesperantha)
JJ recommended Crinum from the Amaryllis family.
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Here are some other pink autumn bloomers:

© SVSeekins and Garden Variety Life, 2013

Now there’s Proof the deer really do hang out in our garden.
Photographic proof!!
AND it turns out he’s a 3 Point Buck! Isn’t he a beauty?
This moment holds me still.. until I gather my wits & move carefully away from the window to get my camera. I’ve been trying to get a decent shot of this fellow for over a month now but all the photos have turned out blurry….

Slowly moving back to the dining room window, I pretend to be calm & oblivious of the animal just a few yards away. I don’t want to spook him.
He’s so close!
Surprisingly, growing up in the-back-of-beyond certainly never presented an experience of a deer so near – – unless it was already dead & being prepared for the oven. But that’s just not the same.

I’m a little in awe. And quite glad to have the window between me & those antlers. (There’s no fear when it comes to the doe & fawn. I ‘shoo’ them out of the yard quite regularly.)
As I watch, it becomes clear he’s not just looking for a little shade. He has a taste for apples.
Is nothing safe?

Well, there are plenty of apples this year, so sharing those is not really an issue. I guess that if there is anything in the garden that I really want to be left alone, it’ll need to be caged in or sprayed with some of that stinky stuff.
But then, I dislike the smell of that stinky stuff and don’t like the idea of fencing the whole yard. (& I do enjoy seeing the deer)… So, that leaves the challenge of finding lovely plants that are deer proof… or at least some the deer don’t tend to munch on… that often.
I’m feeling kind of discouraged right now, in the heat of summer, because this year the buck seems to have a taste for the Rudbeckia, the Coreopsis, & Chinese lantern. (Those were left alone last year) But I have to keep in mind we’ve had better success with other plants.
At different times of the year, this patch of the garden can look pretty good. Many early spring bulbs survive just fine:

By May there are some other successes:

Check out this photo below from early June:


Later in the summer, there are other gems that I can be fairly confident that the deer will turn their noses up on:
Even into the fall & winter – – when the deer are especially hungry, there are some successful survivors in the garden:

No doubt there are other ‘deer resistant’ plants in our garden that haven’t been mentioned in this list. The more important thing to realize is that ‘resistant’ is as good as it gets. Those critters are unpredictable when hungry. Fawns are curious & just don’t know any better. ‘Deer Proof’ does not exist.

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P.S. The deer saga continues: