My dear K. took some pictures of our beautiful garden last weekend. The gardening season is more or less over for this year - we picked our last tomatoes and aubergines/eggplants a fortnight ago, this weekend we harvested the last of beets, carrots and potatoes, as well as Jerusalem artichokes (the latter could stay in the ground until the Spring, but we wanted them out from a certain raised bed).
Despite the cold nights and heavy rains, the garden still has some amazing colours on display.
Cornus alba "Sibirica" aka red bark dogwood or red twig dogwood:
Quercus rubra aka northern red oak or champion oak:
The bright red and ripe fruit of Podophyllum emodi aka Himalayan mayapple or Indian may apple:
Hydrangea paniculata 'Grandiflora' aka panicled hydrangea:
The autumn look of Ligularia stenocephala aka leopard plant:
Hylotelephium spectabile (Sedum spectabile) aka showy stonecrop or ice plant in its full glory, Echinacea purpurea aka Eastern purple coneflower or purple coneflowe is finally loosing its beautiful colour:
One of my favourite apples back in Scotland was Egremont Russet - perhaps because it's very dissimilar to all the popular apple varieties in Estonia. The russet apple is often described as having a sweet and dry "nutty" flavour, and I agree. When establishing our garden 4 years ago, we ordered two Egremont Russet plants from England to complement some of our local varieties. Although we got 2 beautiful ripe apples last year, then this year we've been blessed with almost twenty large and perfect russet-coloured dessert apples:
Aster novae-angliae aka aster "New England" is still looking pretty:
Sambucus nigra or black elder (lace black elder), variety 'Dissectum', has really been thriving in our garden. Earlier this year I used the blossoms to flavour raspberry jam and make several bottles of cordial for the forthcoming winter. Now the berries are ripe and I hope to make some black elderberry jam next weekend:
And last, but not least - our beautiful Rosa rugosa aka rugosa rose "Ritausma" has began to blossom again, for the third time this season, if I'm not mistaken:
Here's the garden update from May 2012, and here's the garden update in Estonian.
Despite the cold nights and heavy rains, the garden still has some amazing colours on display.
Cornus alba "Sibirica" aka red bark dogwood or red twig dogwood:
Quercus rubra aka northern red oak or champion oak:
The bright red and ripe fruit of Podophyllum emodi aka Himalayan mayapple or Indian may apple:
Hydrangea paniculata 'Grandiflora' aka panicled hydrangea:
The autumn look of Ligularia stenocephala aka leopard plant:
Hylotelephium spectabile (Sedum spectabile) aka showy stonecrop or ice plant in its full glory, Echinacea purpurea aka Eastern purple coneflower or purple coneflowe is finally loosing its beautiful colour:
One of my favourite apples back in Scotland was Egremont Russet - perhaps because it's very dissimilar to all the popular apple varieties in Estonia. The russet apple is often described as having a sweet and dry "nutty" flavour, and I agree. When establishing our garden 4 years ago, we ordered two Egremont Russet plants from England to complement some of our local varieties. Although we got 2 beautiful ripe apples last year, then this year we've been blessed with almost twenty large and perfect russet-coloured dessert apples:
Aster novae-angliae aka aster "New England" is still looking pretty:
Sambucus nigra or black elder (lace black elder), variety 'Dissectum', has really been thriving in our garden. Earlier this year I used the blossoms to flavour raspberry jam and make several bottles of cordial for the forthcoming winter. Now the berries are ripe and I hope to make some black elderberry jam next weekend:
And last, but not least - our beautiful Rosa rugosa aka rugosa rose "Ritausma" has began to blossom again, for the third time this season, if I'm not mistaken:
Here's the garden update from May 2012, and here's the garden update in Estonian.
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