Wisteria (Wisteria Sinensis) is a true botanical outlaw. And seduces with enchanting scent and flowers. Then strangles all your trees with its vines.
It takes many kinds of plants to make a world.
The first time I saw dogwood (Cornus Forida) was on train trip to Atlanta. From North Carolina through South Carolina, bloomed en masse beside the train tracks.
That was decades ago. But I'll never forget travelling through a dreamscape of white blooming dogwood trees.
Cornus Florida, native to the eastern United States. I think it needs a festival.
March. April. May. I've seen eastern redbud bloom in all these months.
From afar, it's a tree with bizarre bright purple branches. Up close, a mass of tiny pea flowers grow along the branches.
Perfectly heart shaped leaves follow the teeny, tiny flowers. See the eastern redbud leaves dance in the wind.
Eastern redbud is a tree conjured from a romantic mind.
It's not a mystery why cherry trees get their own festivals. Just look at them. Look at the tree structure. Look at the blossoms. Look at the colors. And it's all here for a limited time.
If cherry trees are where you are...please go out and enjoy their fleeting brilliance.
It is a mystery why there aren't more tree festivals. Trees need more celebrations.
It fills me with joy that a graceful tree such as the Weeping Higan Cherry Tree (Prunus Subhirtella 'Pendula') escapes aggressive pruning.
Thank you to whoever decided to plant a Weeping Higan Cherry Tree (Prunus Subhirtella 'Pendula') between a medical building and a parking lot. Kudos for allowing it to naturally weep.
Part of cherry trees' allure is when the blossoms shatter and petals fall to the ground like snow... or float along a spring breeze.
All the daffodils in the photos below weren't growing in a garden. They grew on land where there was once a house garden. These daffodils prevailed. Just one of my reasons for writing daffodils over tulips.
Like camellias, saucer magnolia (Magnolia x Soulangeana) flowers look like they belong to summer. But here they bloom in early spring amongst still sleeping plants. Except forsythia, another showy early riser.
People make rude comments about callery pear (Pyrus Calleryana 'Bradford') trees. "The flowers stink," you say. It's structure is weak. And it's an invasive pest, a real botanical outlaw. Poor thing. To go from ideal tree to trash tree in less than a century.
But it's stunning in spring...and autumn.
People describe callery pear blossoms as smelling like various body fluids. It figures. Flies, not bees, pollinate the flowers.