Our first guest post of the season!
I am immensely grateful to Janet for giving me a great flower to think about in this season of frantic lab report grading and committee convening. The piece below first appeared in the Denton, Texas newspaper and the photograph on Janet's facebook page. Remember, you, too, can be a guest star on this blog.
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The cardoon in my backyard has been one of my favorite plants for a few years now. It is a perennial with large, silver foliage that grows most of the winter. It is a bit of a weird and wild plant, maybe even dangerous looking. I enjoy the drama of watching it grow larger all winter while nothing else is making much movement. It begins to spike in height late spring, often, it’s the tallest thing in my yard, just peeking over my six foot fence. And in June, I’m rewarded with flowers that are a gorgeous blue/purple (but very macho and tough!) After the blooms, the plant usually turns brown quickly and gets invaded by all kinds of insects. Chop it back and try not to dwell on it: people still have children and nobody’s a huge fan of changing diapers, right? The cardoon will come back from the roots later in the summer or fall and the performance begins anew.
2 comments:
What an outstanding post!!!!
Indeed!!!
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