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OBSERVATIONS AND IDEAS ON BEAUTY IN EVERYDAY LIFE

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Archive for BEACH

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A weekend of weeding and the beach garden looks great!

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I know that summer is almost here when I start cutting roses and bringing them inside for arrangements.

The Rhododendrons and Azaleas have just finishing their brilliant displays and the roses and sweet peas are beginning their exuberant splash of color and fragrance!

The buds are forming on my lavender at the beach.

Summer is a time of rich rewards with the splendor of flowers and lush verdant growth.

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The first thing I do when I get to my beach house, even before I unpack the car or go inside, is to cut a bouquet of sweet peas for the house.

Here it is the end of September and they are still blooming prolifically and it seems that the cool fall air makes them even more fragrant!

trim back lavendar every year
Sometime around Labor Day is a good time to trim back lavender. In colder climates I believe this trimming is recommended to be done by Labor Day. There is a little more leeway for my lavender at the beach because of the very mild climate.

The deep purple lavender heads were still so beautiful it was difficult to cut them all off, but I knew that this trimming would keep my lavender plants shapely and healthy. My labor was pleasant with the air pungent with lavender perfume.

Now I can look forward to another year of elegant and luxuriant blooms.

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This last weekend I gardened at the beach. My main job was a deep watering for my new lavender field.

Last summer in August we replanted the lavender that I had originally planted in front of my beach house over ten years ago. I had not been diligent to trim the bushes every year and the old plants grew huge and leggy and lost their elegant forms.

It was a big project to remove the 60 plants, many of which had achieved a diameter of five or six feet and an accompanying root structure to match. After many weekends of work, the lavenders were pulled up and removed. We were ready to replant.

We spaded the beds before adding and working in the mixture of compost and top soil that I had trucked in and dumped.

Finally we planted sixty new Grosso Lavenders, each only a 4” potted plant. The smaller plants are so much easier to haul and plant.

I had purposely waited until late summer to replant because even though there is so much moisture in the air at the beach it does not rain much in the summer.

And now only a year later these lovely lavenders are so big and full of blooms. They love it at the beach and thrive in the dry summers once they are established. This last weekend was only the 2nd time I have watered them this summer.

In a few weeks I will be faithful to do my yearly trimming. I’ll trim each plant down to a tight mound. Lesson learned!

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