Happy summer!

Happy Summer. We have had two days of sunshine, Yay! Now today it is raining. As if we need it. The good thing is I don’t have to water the plants outside, but I do have to water the high tunnel. The plants in the garden that have a high leaf area are not happy and they will have very interesting stems if i don’t cut them down out of frustration. I am talking about you, bachelor buttons and cress. Anyway, everything else is getting well watered, but when it dries out will need a good feed I am sure.

Now that summer is here, the ranunculus and anemones are done for the year. I am sad to see them go because they are so beautiful, but they filled a floral gap, and now it is time for them to rest and recover and get ready for next spring.

Flowers come and flowers go as you know. The tulips are gone, the ranuncs and anemones are done, the camapanula are going full tilt, and I should have planted more. Feverfew, bulbplurum are being harvested by the armful. The godetia is looking good but coming to an end already. Note to self, plant more godetia and less clarkia. More stock, more phlox Creme brulee series, more dianthus. If the sun comes out, the zinnias and other hot summer flowers should start producing faster. The dahlias have had their pinch and are branching nicely, and Jager seems to have scared off the tunneling rodents for the moment. Things are looking good I think. The sweet peas are baulking. They are loving the cool but when we have those days are are hot, like in the eighties, they drop all their buds. So frustrating because I just love my sweet peas. The chrysanthemums are growing nicely and it will be interesting to see what I have out of the mystery box.

In case if you are worried, don’t be. I have plenty of flowers, and will have them until November, so all you needn’t worry. And they will be interesting, colorful, and plentiful. Can you say I have flowers?

On that note. For you locals, the flower shed will be closed this coming week. Tuesday is the Fourth, and Friday is because we have house guests. I will be at the farm on Friday working in MY gardens, so if you need an arrangement, or bouquet email me, text me and let me know and I will have them ready for you, but I plan to be upside down in my garden.

I leave you as usual with my #windowframethursday because I can….

#windowframethursday. Consisting of eremerus, kinophia, icelandic poppies and more.

Have a happy and safe fourth of July, remember if you want to have flowers on Friday, let me know and I will have them ready for you. Otherwise I will see you on Tuesday the 11th and beyond. Allie

It’s Summer.

Here we are finally at summer, and it actually feels like it today. Hazy and hot. Just the way the summer flowers like it, and now that it looks like the summer temps will be here for awhile, the summer flowers might actually put on a little bit of growth. The segue between the tulips, the cool flowers and the summer flowers is always interesting. Sometimes there is a gap, sometimes they get confused because of the interesting weather patterns and sometimes it all works. I think that this might just be one of those years…fingers and toes crossed.

I think, and I say this with hesitation, that the last of the spring flowers for next year have been ordered. I am beefing up my range of anemones, dutch iris and alliums for the most part, along with a handful of some fun things to round out the spring flower offerings. Alliums are supposed to be deer and rodent proof, I don’t know who got to the bulbs, but out of the 100 alliums I planted last year, I had two, yup, two come up this spring and bloom. So like any good flower farmer, I am ordering more. We shall see what happens. I do love the alliums, but not as much as my dahlias, and the damage right now is bad enough I am letting our dog Jager in the garden when I am in there working. At this point, who can create the most damage?

The last of the sunflowers have been planted out, and the pumpkins will go in the ground on Tuesday. We shall see. The willows have been planted and I am creating a new bed for the last? of the shrubs that I want to plant for cutting. I am also starting more perennial beds amongst the taller shrubs because I want to make it easier on my body in my later flower growing years. I just don’t want to get bored because you all know what happens then. Maybe not. If I were to be bored, no, let’s not go there. Poor Steve.

I leave you with not a flower picture, but this.

I am not a grumpy flower farmer!

I am not a grumpy flower farmer, I just don’t have Steve making funny faces at me to make me smile. I took this photo myself and was concentrating. Maybe a bit too hard?

Until next week. Summer is here! Allie

Here it is Mid June,

But for the most part you would never know it. What strange weather. Cold, damp, with just nuisance rain, enough to get your feet soaking wet, but not enough to water the plants which just is not kind. Then a few days scattered of wicked hot weather. Neither the plants or I know what to do, It’s a farmer’s lot. We just need to be prepared for anything.

The peonies are beautiful this year. Spring has been cool, see that is a good thing, so the flowers have come on slowly, and most of the varieties have been harvested and are in storage so I can have peonies for you for many weeks yet. The sweet peas are coming on quite nicely and I have harvested the first bunch. Joining the harvest now are the foxgloves, feverfew, geum, phlox, dianthus Icelandic poppies and just so much more. The flower shed is a riot of color and fragrances.

Coral Charm

Most of the garden is planted now, I just have a few things to go in yet, then the woodies…but at the moment and for quite a while now, watering and harvesting will be taking up most of the flower time.

Armloads and bucket loads being harvested daily

Until next month when I need to start sowing the perennial seeds and the dirty room will become dirty again.

There isn’t much else to report this week. Harvesting, watering, harvesting, watering, but that is all good because I am producing some stunning flowers, if I must say so.

So every Friday afternoon I make a bouquet for myself. I put it in a go cup and take it to the lake where it gives me such happiness, then Sunday afternoon it comes back to the farm where I can enjoy it for the rest of the week. since I spaced #windowframethursday this last week I am sharing this week’s bouquet.

Peonies, poppies, ranunculus, phlox, clematis, aruncus and stock.

Until next week. Allie

Moles, Voles and Deer. Oh My!

Welcome all. Well it has been another crazy week here at the farm. But really, what would you expect at this point right? Friday was a bittersweet day for me here. It was the last day of the tulips. I had been growing them since September, offering to you my amazing flower people and many more since Mid February and Friday it was their last day. They were an amazing crop, each week providing spectacular flowers and yes, I will miss them, but there is so much more beauty coming on that to be honest, I need the room and their time has come to move on. Thank you all for enjoying them as you did.

I don’t know what is worse in the gardens. The mole/vole tunneling and destruction, the chipmunk nibbling of the branches or the deer that are grazing through the garden on weekends when the dogs are away. I stomp on the tunnels, I don’t think it works, but i do get a bit of pleasure out of it, and we have fenced off the roses to keep the deer away from them and we have hung bars of Irish Spring soap on the branches of the shrubs they seem to be enjoying the most of. I would put Jager in the garden to do his job, but I think at this point he would be more destructive, but if the action picks up, I just might let him at it.

The last of the tulips bouquet with ranunculus.

So now that the tulips are gone, there is room for the next batch of flowers which is, drumroll….Peonies. Yes, the peonies will be coming in strong with this week’s heat in the forecast. (So they say). Steve will be on flower harvest duty Monday and Wednesdays which he is not looking forward to but he will do fine. Some varieties there will be only three stems available, looking at you Coral Charm, but other varieties will have many many stems, like the stunning Red Charm. I figure harvest will last about two weeks, but I will have peonies to offer until July. Fingers crossed.

The ranunculus and anemone in the tunnel are still going strong, despite a little creature that is also harvesting stems but this one is just letting them fall. Argh. Also the cool flowers, which are the ones that got planted in the high tunnel back in early March, are just now starting to come into flower so by the end of the week there will be bunches of Icelandic poppies, stock, clarkia, bachelor buttons, and orlaya available. AND… another drumroll, the first sweet peas are showing color! That first harvest might just be mine though. You can say that we are now going to be a flower farm instead of a tulip farm. Variety reigns.

Some of this afternoon’s harvest. Ranunculus and stock.

The chrysanthemums have been planted, and the first of the cuttings will be taken this week. The pumpkins have been sown, as well as the next batch of sunflowers that I wasn’t going to grow. The first crop of ranunculus will start to be dried off to be stored for next year, and the cycle continues.

So I leave you with flower photos, and words of wisdom. “Flowers create happiness for the receiver as will as the giver”. So make some flower bouquets and make the world, or your space a happier place.

Honestly, how can this not make you smile. It certainly makes me smile for the joy it brings.

Thank you for bringing joy. Allie

And the Heat is On

This weekend it’s not the weather, that is for sure. But the flower heat is on! The flowers are being harvested several times a day now they are coming on so fast. I have to get them early for perfection and vase life but it does make things a little crazy around here. So crazy in fact, that I am going to train Steve tomorrow on the finer art of harvesting so he can do the 11 and 2 o’clock row walking and harvesting, and I will do the 7am and 5pm row walk and harvesting. Such fun.

The heat of last week has finished off the ranunculus in the greenhouse. It is a shame because they had really just come into their own and were looking really good, but despite my efforts to keep them cool, they will be done by the end of the week. Lucky for us I have a second planting in the tunnel that are starting to come on, so fingers crossed I will have those for another week or two. The forecast looks to be in our favor. Fingers crossed. I will let the ones in the greenhouse begin their dormancy after the harvest is complete, then they will be stored for next year.

The anemones are still going strong and the Icelandic poppies are just starting. Another crop that needs to be harvested multiple times during the day to get them at peak condition. I am also harvesting the stock, what a divine aroma they have, like cloves, and one stem to a bouquet is all that is needed. The Clarkias are all budding up beautifully and they too will joining the offerings soon. Like I said, things are heating up.

Outside of the every other week of sunflower sowings and plantings, everything is in the ground. Oops, I forgot one thing, but that will be in the ground on Tuesday afternoon. The pumpkins and gourds will be sown this week…I have cuttings to take some of the heirloom chrysanthemums, oh, and I have to plant the chrysanthemums, right. Not done yet.

So last week I think I said I would show you drone shots of the flower farm. Here you go.

So the photo on the left is the gardens that you see when you come and pick up your flowers, the flower shed being on the right. The right hand photo is back behind the house and garage which is added growing space, where the tulips are grown in ground, the cool flowers are grown and a handful of veggies.

Farm overview

This photo is the kit and kaboodle. Growing beds, house, back gardens, barn, orchard, and see all those rocks? That is why we are called Flowers at Lottarock. Because I have a LOT of rocks.

I just find these photos so interesting. Even I really had no idea of the scope of this little flower farm. The farm might be small, but I would say we are mighty.

As usual, I like to leave you with a few flower pics to inspire you.

So, until next week, dream flowers. I do, and so should you. Allie

May is almost in the rearview mirror

It is very near the end of May and the push is on to get everything in the ground. I think I have figured out where everything is going, but we shall see. I finally decided where the pumpkins and gourds are going in the two o’clock sleepless moments a few days back so that is good. I have figured out where the sunflowers are going so that is good. I have planted 80% of the dahlias and that is very good, now I just have to get all of this planted.

The summer annuals on deck, waiting to go in the ground this week.

The cool flowers are starting to come into their own,

That is correct, after waiting for months, not very patiently, and in my mind writing off both crops of anemones and ranunculus I have flowers. As the weeks progress and, if we can stay away from the wicked hot temperatures, I should have bucket loads of these stunners. The other cool flowers, the godetia and the clarkia are showing buds so along with the tulips, I will have beautiful late spring bouquets on offer. Speaking of tulips, I still have a wide variety to offer. Their beauty just knocks my socks off.

These and so many more!

Even though the seedlings will hopefully all be in the ground by the next blog posting, I will still be doing successive sowings of sunflowers, then I need to sow the perennials so they will be well established by the time they go in the ground in the late summer. Not like this year with the seedlings being so small I am not sure where they are. They are growing, but I would like to be ahead of the game. I would LIKE to be ahead of the game.

I want Steve to send up the drone to give you all an overview of the gardens this year. They have expanded just a bit. You won’t see color, but you will see masses of green plants. I think it is pretty cool to see and I think you will enjoy an arial shot as well. Especially if I can fine a shot of the gardens 4 years ago. I will see what I can do.

Come on around and see the farm and get a floral fix. The flower shed is open on Fridays from 9-2 and on Tuesdays from 2-5. I always enjoy seeing you, and it gives me a chance to stand up and stretch. If you have seen me garden, you will get it.

I leave you with a missive outside a flower shop in the UK. Thank you KD. I think that the sign is just so true.

Until next week. Allie

On Your Mark, Get Set….. The Flower Dam is About to Burst!

It is Sunday afternoon and I am sitting on the screen porch writing this flower missive. It is something I enjoy doing, letting you all know what is happening on the farm. It is an exciting placer to be, especially at this time of year, and I love sharing it. That, and it is a great way of taking notes for me, something that I am dreadful at, farm notes, but this way we can all be happy.

My most exciting news has nothing to do with flowers, I know, shock, horrors, but yesterday we got 1.6″ of rain, and my 1500gal rain tank has about 500gal of water in it. Our newly installed gutters are working just fine. Now when I need to get water out to those far flung places that I never thought I would plant, I fill up the little bowser and drive out to the new spaces and water. This will make life so much easier. I just have to hook up the pump and away I go.

Inaugural filling of the water tank.

In answer to your burning question, yes, I still have tulips, all shapes and colors await you. I have a few handfuls of narcissus left, and the anemone and ranunculus are budding and showing color, so soon, like Friday, maybe even Tuesday, I will have a lovely assortment of flowers to go with those most amazing tulips.

Not only are the anemone and ranunculus showing bud, but the Icelandic poppies are budding up as well!

The flowers are coming on fast now.

I bet you couldn’t think it could be any more exciting, but wait, there’s more! the early peonies are starting to show color. They could be a few weeks out yet, but who knows. It certainly is something to look forward to for sure.

This week coming up is going to be crazy. This is about the time I plant out all the summer annuals and the dahlias, which I have yet to divide. I have to keep an eye in the forecast though. The nights are still cool, and at this point I don’t want to loose the seedlings by jumping the gun. If I have to wait another week, I will. Also the dahlias’ soil should be around 60 degrees and I haven’t taken its temperature yet….So many things to do, so little time to do it in, but I am told, Patience is a gardening virtue.

So I spaced last week’s flower arrangement, so I will leave you this instead.

Until next week, may we all have “Plants in our Souls”. Allie

Blooming Surprises: Latest News from the Flower Shed

The gardens are ramping up and only half are planted. The high tunnel is going gang busters and miracles of miracles the anemone are starting to bud up! I had written them off in my head thinking “oh well, thee is always next year” but lo and behold, I will have two for show and tell on Tuesday. By Friday, I might even have a bunch to sell. Amazing. The next most amazing thing happening at the farm is that I also have a ranunculus bud, and that crop I had really written off, but surprises do happen Allie. No photos, you have to come see them for yourself!

Did I say that you have to come Tuesday to see the flowers yourself? That is right. I’m beginning open flower shed on Tuesdays now, from 2-6. I will have plenty of flowers now to support two open days a week. What that also means is no more flowers at Cranberry Meadow Farm. It worked out really well for the winter months when many of you didn’t want to drive to Hancock, and I only had tulips to offer, and only four varieties a week to that, but now there is so much more to offer. So, thank you very much Carolyn for allowing this to happen, and hopefully we will be able to do it again next late winter early spring.

You might be asking what is happening on the farm now in mid May. Well, so glad you asked. The tulips are completely harvested!

Empty tulip beds . Add a smile emoji

That doesn’t mean the end of the tulips by any stretch of the imagination. No, they are all safely tucked in the cooler, away from the vagaries of the weather. They will be processed just before you get them so they will be fresh.

This was last week. Tonight it is full. Can you say tulip?

The beauty about this system is I can process the day before an open flower shed day what I think I will sell, and you will have the perfect tulip. Imagine, tulips neat, tulips with the cool flowers that are coming on, tulips with peonies, oh my goodness. I will be honest though, six months of tulips for this flower grower might be a bit much. I am looking forward to new flowers, and they are coming. Soon. Promise.

So if you haven’t been to the flower shed because of distance, here is a look at what I had for sale this week.

Todays, Mother’s Day offerings

I will leave you now but with a few reminders. Tuesday flower shed hours start this week. Shed is open from 2-6, and on Fridays from 9-2 and flowers will now only be available here at the farm.

As usual, I leave you with this weeks arrangement. I had fun with this one. Crabapple, lilac, purple and pink tulips, storm damaged magnolia (yes, I still have some for arrangements), leujocium, narcissus and bleeding heart.

Have I every said how much I love flowers? I love flowers and the joy that they bring.

Until next week. Allie

Spring Blooms: A Floral Update from the Farm

Spring is upon us. After weeks of cold, raw and damp days I think the tide has turned and we are in for great things to come. Finally, but honestly it has been so worth the wait. The narcissus are abundant, the tulips are knocking my socks off with their colors and shapes and even just a handful of flowers make a stunning posey or bouquet. The peonies are rocketing skywards, the lilacs are starting to bloom as well as the other flowering shrubs and the farm can’t be more beautiful right now.

So let’s start with tulips. The harvest has begun and I’m gathering bucket loads and storing them in the cooler to keep them perfect for you. Just look at these beauties.

Today I harvested a single lipstick pink that has fringed edges. Pair that with lilacs, or the narcissus with the pink center, oh my goodness, it doesn’t take much to have a stunning posey or an arrangement to give as a gift.

I have been crazy busy planting in the gardens. Almost all of the cool seedlings are in and, for the most part, are looking good. I might have to replant the snapdragons, maybe I was a bit over anxious, but everything else is in as well as all of the plants I had ordered during the winter. The roses are planted, the chrysanthemums are potted up to get established before they go in the ground and the hellebores are planted. The cool flowers in the tunnel have had the netting put over them so they grow straight and tall. In fact when you look at the garden the entire right side, or rather 90% of the right side is planted. I still have the dahlias to divide, pricking out the seedlings, mulching what isn’t in weed mat, getting chips in the pathways…you know, normal stuff.

So here is a test to see how well you know your flowers. Do you know what flower this is?

I know, it’s not in focus. Is it a rose, a ranunculus, a peony or a tulip? Answer at the end.

This Friday will be the last Friday that flowers will be sent down to Cranberry Meadow. I know that it has been great for me and that you wonderful flower people didn’t have to navigate the roads to come to Hancock to get flowers, but the flower selection is getting really good now, I can offer far more than just tulips. So. After Friday you will have to come to the farm. The good news is then the following week I will be beginning Tuesdays again. Pay attention to the newsletter for more updates. Besides I have really missed not seeing those of you who have been picking up at Cranberry Meadow.

What else? Ah Yes. I will be open on Mother’s Day. Stay tuned, I will give you the hours by Friday. I will have bunches and if I must say so, some beautiful bouquets.

So I think that is about it for now. I thank you from the bottom of my heart for loving my flowers as much as I do. Oh. The answer to the question. It is a tulip, but I know you got that correct.

Until next week, may you dream flowers. Allie

Windowframe Thursday.

The Beauty and Chaos of Spring Planting

The last day of April is here and although most of the month has felt like March, we will see what May brings. I know what May brings, and it will be lots of flowers. The narcissus are rolling in gangbusters and the tulips, after siting for weeks, are ready to be pulled to hold until needed. Whoa, there are some stunners coming in.

Look at that color coming on.

I will soon be awash with color which is very exciting. And look at this stunner,

Gudoshnik Double

All I can say is I think it is going to knock our socks off. The fritillaria are starting to bloom as are the leucojum which are like giant snowdrops. The flowers might be dainty, but they add such a wow factor to any posey.

Being spring, it hasn’t been quiet on the farm. Seeding is going well, many of the heat loving crops are finally being seeded because believe it our not, in 30 days it will be Memorial Day and most of the heat loving annuals will need to be in the ground. Yikes! Will I have enough space? Time will tell. I still have ten? heirloom chrysanthemums to arrive and be planted, plus the five roses that are to arrive on Tuesday, and more hellebore plants. I might be intercropping this year and planting on top of the narcissus once they are harvested. Hopefully they won’t mind if I give them a good feed first. Then I also have to find space for the sprawling pumpkins and gourds. Hmmm, I may not be growing that handful of vegetables this year. The old vegetable garden might become flower garden number two.

The dahlia tubers have all been hauled out of the cool room and are now sitting in the dirty room waiting for me to divide them. They are looking really good and healthy, I would just like to se some eyes before I divide them but it will have to happen in the next few weeks because Memorial Day is looming.

I will leave you with Thursday’s Window frame photo. I find it fitting with the dark grey skies we have been having. It also matches the bruise I have on my hip from something I ran into.

Windowframe Thursday. Fritilarria, hellebore, mertensia, hyacinth and honeysuckle foliage.

Until next week. I hope you will dream flowers. Allie