Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts

The first snow

Winter has been slow in coming this year; with the result that our surroundings have been brown, grey and dull instead of being blanketed in snow. Yesterday I woke up to snow on the ground and, as I stepped outside, was greeted with the sight of gently falling snow. It left a beautiful white blanket over my apartment complex. I love early mornings and undisturbed snow. By afternoon it had all melted, but I am still grateful for the peace and serenity that comes with a gentle snow. 














Healing Garden

Echinacea, Sage, Lavender, Chamomile, Basil

A healing garden can take many forms but always provides interaction with nature. It is a place to relax, pray,  reflect, connect and be comforted by the gifts from God that are the healing elements of nature. Studies show that natural environments can have a positive effect on your health and well being.

Creating a place with elements that represent life and health, such as trees, plants and flowers; and features that stimulate the senses, such as fragrances, the sounds of birds and water, and the feel of sunlight or a gentle breeze will be beneficial to healing.

Visually plants provide inspirational colors or peaceful tones. The design and development of a healing garden, just like the process of healing and recovery, takes place over time. It is that journey and the time spent with nature that heals our body and soul.

Healing Plants 


Aloe Vera:: Digestion. used externally as a natural astringent and emollient for the skin.

Basil: Flatulence, lack of appetite, cuts, and scrapes. Harvest the young leaves of this annual plant as needed.

Chamomile: Indigestion, anxiety, skin inflammations. Most commonly used in tea, it’s leaves and flowers are full of oils that have natural relaxing, sedative qualities and it’s also used as anti-inflammatory for arthritis, rheumatism, etc. Use the flower heads for infusions and salves.

Echinacea: Used in teas or tinctures to increase the body’s immunity to colds and flu.

Feverfew: Headaches (including migraines), arthritis, skin conditions. Use leaves and flowers for teas; chew leaves to ease headache pain.

Lantana:  add to steam for a great natural expectorant, and the oils are also used as an anti-inflammatory in tissue healing

Lavender: Can help clear up headaches and calm anxiety.  Lavender is a good insecticide. Pouches of dry lavender put in the drawers among clothes keep clothes smelling good and can keep moths away
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Lemon Balm: Anxiety, insomnia, wounds, herpes, insect bites, flatulence, upset stomach. A relative of mint, lemon balm is a versatile medicinal herb.

Parsley: Flatulence, bad breath. This herb is loaded with nutrients as well as healing powers.

Peppermint: Commonly found in everything from toothpaste to gum, sweets, balms and cough medicine, Peppermint can be used to freshen everything from your breath to your home. It’s also used to relieve indigestion, heartburn, allergies and more.

Poppy: The California poppy has similar medicinal benefits to the opium poppy, although it is much milder, gentler and less addictive. It is even mild enough to be given to children. As an herbal remedy, California poppy tincture or extract is a relaxant and antispasmodic. It has been used to treat such ailments as insomnia, delirium, motion sickness, stress, nervousness, tense jaw and attention deficit disorder.

Sage: Mouth and throat inflammations. Sage's genus name, Salvia, means "to heal," reflecting its early use as a medicinal, not culinary, herb. The natural oils and tannins in sage have a variety of homeopathic qualities, including being a great antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, astringent and antiseptic.

St. John's Wort: Mild to moderate depression. (Talk to your doctor first.) The glossy leaves and yellow flowers are this herb's active parts.

Thyme: Coughs, congestion, indigestion, gas. The active principle in thyme, thymol, is a strong antiseptic.



Summer Gardens

 This garden features native perennials, flowering plants, and shrubs that provide year-round greenery. Aromatic herbs abound- basil, parsley, rosemary, thyme, lavender, sage, and mint



Moon Garden

While many lucky gardeners have ample time to enjoy their gardens during daylight hours, there are others who on most days get home from work just as twilight is coming on. The weekends are often filled with catching up on garden maintenance, with little time to simply sit back and savor the fruits of their labors. And then there are those who love nothing more than to host outdoor evening soirees.

Either way, consider creating a garden that’s just as fascinating at night as it is from dawn to dusk. This can be a separate area devoted specifically to an evening garden, or simply the inclusion of evening elements in your existing landscape. Pick an open location that is washed by moonlight when the moon is out, and avoid areas with deep shadows from big trees or structures like the house or garage. 

Then comes plant selection. You’ll notice that as the sun disappears over the horizon, a garden vibrant with rich colors like red and purple during the day can become a muddy mix of grays. To transform the garden into its evening look, choose light-colored flowers in white, yellow, pink, and lavender, which seem to glow by the light of the moon, and silvery, gray, and variegated foliage.

A short list of flower options includes Cleome ‘Helen Campbell’, Cosmos ‘Sonata White’, ‘Snowdrift’ and ‘French Vanilla’ marigolds, dianthus, astilbe, Zinnia ‘Profusion White’, daisies, ‘Casablanca’ lily, petunias, impatiens, alyssum, phlox, peonies, foxgloves, light-blue asters, iris, dahlias, gladiolas, clematis, and bellflower. There are even nocturnal daylilies. A few shrubs with light-colored flowers are lilacs, viburnums, mock orange, spirea, deutzia, abelia, hydrangeas, roses, and althea.

Some plants have light-colored flowers or release their fragrances after dark specifically to attract night-active pollinators like moths or bats. A few examples are flowering tobacco (Nicotiana alata and N. sylvestris), angel’s trumpet, yucca, evening-scented stock (Matthiola longipetala), night jasmine (Cestrum nocturnum), four-o’clocks, and night phlox (Zaluzianskya capensis). And a night garden is not complete without moonflower, whose big flower buds snap open as evening comes on, releasing a delicious lemony fragrance into the night air to draw large sphinx months from blocks away.

For silvery and variegated foliage, try artemisia, lamb’s ears, Cuban oregano (Plectranthus), Santolina, dusty miller, Russian sage, yarrow, hostas, and thyme. Even bright green or yellow leaves will show up in the dark, like sweet potato vine ‘Margarita’ and coleus ‘Fishnet Stockings’ or ‘Life Lime’.

Plants are only part of the picture. You can also highlight the landscape at night using light-colored hardscaping elements like paving, fencing, arbors, benches, and garden ornaments such as a white obelisk. Reflective surfaces like glass objects, mirrored tiles, or water in a birdbath can catch and amplify ambient light and make the space really sparkle. And for those times when the moon is on the wane, add outdoor lighting to fill in. But avoid really bright lights (no floodlights – that will kill the magic) in favor of soft lighting such as tiny white Christmas lights or candles and luminaries.

To give the garden balance during both night and day, integrate the moonlight elements carefully. Use a variety of colors rather than just white and spread them throughout the space (in other words, don’t put all the pink flowers in one spot). And be careful when putting different white flowers near each other. As anyone who’s been shopping for white paint knows, white isn’t just white. A really white flower planted too close to a sort-of-white flower can make the latter look dingy.

Just as when designing any garden, for the moonlit landscape include different flower shapes and sizes, foliage textures, and plant heights. Keep in mind focal points and repetition. And don’t overdo the addition of ornaments, which can make the space seem cluttered. Even a small-space garden can display just enough nighttime elements to make it worthy of an evening gathering to revel in the light of the silvery moon.