First of all, crocus and daffodils, those bravest of early flowers daring to lift delicate blossoms out into the cold air.
"Little Gems" painting |
I followed their example and dared to try a different technique, printing my photo of the dark purple crocus onto watercolor paper instead of drawing it. I discovered that the moisture in my paint made the printer ink melt away and I would lose my place. It was ok to try, the color values were easy to match, but I think I will stick with drawing in the future because my pencil lines stay put!
In the front yard, female Western Tanagers stopped to snack on the crab-apple tree buds. I know now that these little birds will only stop by for a day or two so I don't hesitate to take a photo of them if I can. I felt really lucky this year to have these little birds visit on a sunny morning with no wind.
"Golden Visitor" painting |
The tall daffodil corner doubled this year with two lovely blooms per bulb instead last year's one bloom each.
"Heralds of Spring" painting |
A new landlord arrived this spring too and unfortunately, he wanted all of my flowers moved away from the house. :(
Over several long days digging, I managed to get them all into containers, making my own Tina's Flower Ark on the patio. The next challenge will be figuring out how to arrange them into a smaller garden area.
One surprising silver lining did occur from moving all the flowers. I had only seen one faded bloom on this iris bed two years ago. I took two thirds of the bed apart in March, but ended up leaving the remaining third to remove later. I was so surprised when these iris formed dark purple buds and started blooming in April!
Happy creating,
>^-^<
Tina