Salvia “Hot Lips” In The Garden via Instagram
Salvia “Hot Lips” In The Garden Follow Me On Instagram! From my Instagram Feed Find more books on Bookshop and Help Indie Book Stores! Read more on this topic: In Continue Reading
Come and join me in my garden!
Salvia “Hot Lips” In The Garden Follow Me On Instagram! From my Instagram Feed Find more books on Bookshop and Help Indie Book Stores! Read more on this topic: In Continue Reading
Part of a series from A Gardener’s Notebook In the garden…Salvia “Hot Lips” @douglaswelch In the garden…Salvia “Hot Lips” ##garden ##gardening ##sage ##salvia ##plants ##flowers ##inthegarden ##nature ##outdoors ♬ original Continue Reading
Dress Up Your Home With These Abutilon Shower Curtains, Pillows, and More From Douglas E. Welch Design and Photography [For Sale] Drowsy abutilon flower nods in my garden Available exclusively Continue Reading
Today Ellie Gilbert is sharing the results of 14 years of hard work. When my husband and I moved to our newly built house in Plymouth, Massachusetts, I used my Continue Reading
Dazzling Dahlias – 27 in a series – Dahlias: one flower, infinite beauty via The Los Angeles Times DAHLIA aficionado Pat Cunningham likes to say he has either 40 years Continue Reading
DON’T be frightened of mixing colours: it is the hard artificial shades that clash, but very seldom the soft, melt- ing ones of Nature. Read and Download the entire book Continue Reading
Historical Garden Books – 78 in a series – Our sentimental garden (1914) by Agnes Sweetman Castle & Egerton Castle Download in Text, PDF, Single Page JPG, TORRENT from Archive.org Continue Reading
Interesting Plant: Tacca chantrieri (Black Bat Flower) By geoff mckay from Palmerston North, New Zealand – Bat Flower or Cat Whiskers (Tacca Chantrieri), CC BY 2.0, Link Discovered this via Continue Reading
Acanthus (Bear’s Breeches) In The Garden The acanthus is the logo for A Gardener’s Notebook. The leaves are represented on the ancient Greek Corinthian column design found in many historic Continue Reading
In late nineteenth century America, botany was understood as implicitly feminine. Young women took to studying botany in a conjoining of interest, social acceptance, and readily available schooling and textbooks. Continue Reading