In a Vase on Monday: Winding Down

The snow we had over the weekend has melted, but more is due later today… just in time for the start of Advent and the Christmas Markets. I always think Advent is celebrated so nicely here in Bavaria with the markets and with people putting up lights in their gardens and hanging wreaths on their doors. Advent wreaths for the table, with four candles – one for each Sunday in Advent – are also really popular and are on sale everywhere.

The garden season is winding down, with the last tasks completed just before the snow arrived; mulching tender plants, putting garden equipment away, and tucking my pots up tight against the barn wall in case of snow ‘avalanches’ falling from the roof. So, although it was bright and sunny yesterday, I opted for a vase that would reflect the fact that the garden is now resting.

I have been adding to this vase since the spring, and it has been waiting for its moment of glory on In a Vase on Monday. 😃

The fluffy round seedheads are Pulsatilla, gathered late spring. It was a gamble whether they would remain intact, and some did in fact disintegrate, but I must have picked and dried these specimens at just the right time. I love the tall, dark and rather dramatic Siberian Iris seedheads.. There are still a few standing in the garden. And I managed to save some poppy seedheads too – they often get bent in the wind or burnt by the sun, but these were picked fairly early and hung upside down in the cellar for a few months.

On the right is some Calamagrostis and Pennisetum. I find that the grasses last better if picked just as they are starting to ‘flower’. On the left is a golden sprig of Stipa gigantea. (Have they changed that name?) The dried pink flowers in the photo above are Helichrysum’Silvery Rose’.

And tucked into the vase on the right you can see some little white flowers which I dried successfully for the first time this year; Anaphalis triplinervis ‘Silberregen’ (Silver Rain). Again, these are best picked early if you intend to dry them, just as the tiny flowers are starting to show their golden centre.

Do you dry any flowers or grasses from your garden?

Do visit our hostess, Cathy, at Rambling in the Garden to see her vase today. We had a lovely zoom meeting yesterday with her and some of the other contributors to this Monday meme – I feel very self-conscious on zoom, but really enjoyed seeing your friendly faces again and hearing about your gardening experiences. ❣️A big thank you to Cathy for organizing it, and to Karen for her slideshow. 🤗

Finally, a reminder that my Week of Flowers 2023 will begin on Friday 1st December. Please join me in posting a photo or two each day for a week, to brighten up this dark time of year. Hope to see you then!

A Week of Flowers 2023:

Starting Friday, December 1st through to Thursday, December 7th.  

Join me for ‘A Week of Flowers’ 2023!

It is time for my annual Week of Flowers series!

For the fourth year now I am inviting my blogging friends to join me in posting a photo of a flower or two from their 2023 gardens each day for a week. There are no rules, so just one photo (or two or three!) with or without text is fine, and if you leave a link in the comments of my daily post, others will be able to find you and share in the fun! And this year I will start on Friday December 1st, continuing through to Thursday December 7th.  

A splash of colour works wonders at this rather dull time of year (my garden is under a thin layer of ice and snow already!), so do join in if you can! See you on Friday. 😉

In a Vase on Monday: Falda

My lovely friend Simone visited me last week and gave me a pretty miniature vase from the Rosenthal mini vase collection. There was a little leaflet inside the box, which read ‘You can never have enough vases’; she chose the gift well!

After some heavy rain I wasn’t sure what I would be able to find to put in it so I could join in with Cathy’s Monday meme. (See Cathy’s blog ‘Rambling in the Garden’) But I needn’t have worried as there is plenty of pretty foliage still, and the Herb Bed also had a few things to offer.

This vase is called Falda – from the Spanish for skirt. And, as you can see in the photo above, the top of the vase does indeed have a pleated frill at the top, like a pleated skirt, which is perfect for resting foliage on to form a kind of base to a floral arrangement. 😃

I used a deep purple Heuchera leaf, some reddening Geum leaves and a green Geranium leaf at the base. The flowers are Tansy and Fennel. And a sprig of dark green mint freshened up the whole thing.

Some Pennisetum and another grass (Panicum?) went in too. I do love all my different grasses, but can’t always remember their names! 😉

I love picking fennel seeds off the Fennel plant to nibble at when I am in the garden – they remind me of the aniseed balls we used to have when I was little! The plant is almost two metres tall and will probably topple over soon, as it has grown very lopsided this year and the sparrows and Great Tits love hopping around in it too. 😃

I wonder what is still flowering in your gardens?

Have a great week, and Happy Gardening!

 

In a Vase on Monday: Ten Green Bottles…..

Today we are celebrating ten years of In a Vase on Monday!

😁

Cathy at Rambling in the Garden is the host of this lovely weekly meme, and when she invited fellow bloggers to join her in sharing a weekly vase one November day back in 2013, she probably did not suspect how much pleasure it would give to so many over the years. It has made me look at Mondays, and my garden, in a different way. Some post a vase regularly, some only now and then, but Cathy has been the unwavering stalwart not missing a single week. Friendships have evolved and we all look forward to sharing, commenting and being part of this little community. A big warm thank you to Cathy!

To mark this anniversary we have been given a challenge – to NOT use a vase! So I am combining the number ten with my green bottles (some hastily retrieved from the recycling bin!) which may resemble vases but are definitely all bottles since they all had a lid, cork or seal of some kind. 😉 In case you are not familiar with the children’s song, here is a link:

Ten Green Bottles

Ten Green Bottles

Lacking a wall to stand them on, they are standing on the stove instead. From left to right: Scabiosa ochroleuca and Scabiosa columbaria ‘Pink Mist’, an Echinacea seedhead, a dried sprig of grass found in the meadow (possibly flattened by tractor wheels? 😆)…

… the pink Chrysanthemum ‘Anastasia’ featured two weeks ago, some Tansy, and some Miscanthus ‘Red Chief’ at the front…

Siberian Iris seedpods, a burnt orange sprig of Spiraea, an old arrangement of various dried flowers and seedheads from last winter, and the last half decent blooms of my golden Chrysanthemum ‘Bienchen’.

There is very little flowering now as we have had quite a lot of rain and temperatures are in single digits with the occasional frost thrown in. But looking at this little collection makes me incredibly grateful for what my garden gives me – even in November – and grateful for being able to share it too. Without these Monday vases, my blog would be like the garden in winter and simply whither away! But Cathy and the other participants are always an inspiration to me to make an effort and find something to bring indoors each week. 🤗

Congratulations to Cathy on keeping this meme alive so long! I look forward to another year of vases from all over the world! 😁

In a Vase on Monday: Rusty

Despite a frost in October, a couple of mauve Mallow flowers have survived, tucked up behind grasses or other plants. I can’t remember their name, but I grew them from seed and was very unimpressed with them all summer…. until now. A couple of weeks ago they started to fill out with fresh leaves and buds. Yes, they do have rust, but never mind! I put them in a rust coloured (but shiny) ikebana vase as a tenuous link! 😉

I found a couple of other single pink flowers to complement the pinky mauve Mallow… a Scabiosa ‘Pink Mist’ and a Salvia viridis ‘Pink Sundae’. The Scabiosa often produce a single flower here and there in winter, but the plants really need cutting back as they get mildew.

The foliage is from two different Physocarpus shrubs, one of which still has some rather attractive seedheads attached. Their leaves are dropping rapidly, so I caught them just in time.

While writing this, the sun has started shining and when low in the sky at this time of year it streams through the windows and lights up the sideboard where my vase stands…

Many thanks to Cathy at Rambling in the Garden for encouraging us to join her each week and share materials from out gardens in a vase. She has a challenge for us all next week too, to celebrate the tenth anniversary of ‘In a Vase on Monday’. So do visit her to see her vase today and find out more.

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