Sweet September flowers
The cooler mornings lately have drawn me into the garden, and I’ve been taking more photos than usual. It’s impossible to resist these fat, pink rosebuds appearing on the ‘Belinda’s Dream’ rosebush.
The pillow-like flowers are even sweeter, with a dreamy fragrance.
The kidneywood (Eysenhardtia texana ), a tough, native, shrubby tree, is in full bloom, attracting moths, flies, bees and other eager pollinators. Its airy form makes it difficult to photograph, as Lee at The Grackle pointed out recently.
A close-up gives a better sense of its beauty. The flowers smell faintly like a mimosa’s, and the feathery leaves, when crushed, are lemony. It makes a modest accent tree that provides a little shade, but not too much—great for a xeric garden filled with sun lovers.
The year-old ‘Muskogee’ crepe myrtle in the front garden put most of its energy into growth during this long, hot summer. But it did flower, and here’s a look at its tissuey, lavender-pink bloom. I’m sorry not to be here to see this tree grow to maturity. I hope the next owners let it grow into a graceful, vase-shaped tree rather than hacking it back and creating knobby elbows every year. Maybe I should leave a set of instructions behind. Or would that be too pushy?
All material © 2006-2008 by Pam Penick for Digging. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.

