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Focus on Flowers
Show #35: Garden Clean Up
As gardeners put their gardens to bed at the end of the growing
season, it is a time to think about the flowering plants that performed
so heroically in the summer past. As we pull out the annuals, now
so sad and defeated by frosts, we remember their earlier vibrant
colors. Werent the petunias wonderful - especially the wave
petunias that bloom so exuberantly without needing to be dead headed?
And the dwarf single marigolds that have become so popular in recent
years - starry, innocent flowers on bushy plants. We should thank
the hybridizers for those. As we cut down the perennials, we give
thanks for the gaillardias, often called blanket flowers because
they remind us of Indian blankets - they bloomed so well this year.
The cone flowers still have their seed heads, so we wont cut
those down yet - let the birds enjoy them awhile longer. We are
eager to cut down the asters though. They look so dilapidated -
but what a mass of pink and purple they were earlier. The Russian
sage is still standing and its skeletal branches are graceful enough
to be spared awhile longer. But the mums look sad, full of brown
deadheads - they really must be neatened up. And so we snip away
with our shears - cutting off what is now brown and dreary - but
musing about the flowers of summer.
This is Moya Andrews and today we focused on garden clean up.
WFIU
Created and maintained by Michael
Toler
Last updated: Friday, September 3, 2004
Copyright 2004, The Trustees of
Indiana
University
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