My magnolia fuscata, called "Banana Shrub" by some folks due to its fragrance of ripe bananas from their yellow flowers in May, is already showing small fuzzy buds. I don't recall seeing them bud out in January so I hope this is a sign of an early spring. I'm sick of winter and more than ready for the rejuvenation that spring always brings to me.
My Banana shrub is budded, too - but seems to me that mid-January is normal here. If I kept better entries in the paper journal instead of blogging that could be a more definitive answer. But without blogging there'd be no one to share the answer with! Some dilemma, eh?
You say Magnolia fuscata and my tag said Michelia figo - but if we're lucky we'll both have the same fragrant flower in a few months!
Hi Annie, Yes, I am aware that in recent years botanists and horticulturalists have renamed "Magnolia fuscata" as "Michelia figo". Obviously I am still stuck in the past...my grandmother loved these nice evergreen shrubs and never called them anything but "Magnolia fuscata". The ones she planted 70 years ago at our homeplace in the country are now like fat short trees as they have never been pruned or limbed up. The one I have here in town is young and still the size of a shrub.
I feel the same as you when looking at my camelias which seem to open their buds pretty soon. But I know that Spring still is far away. However, the thought of Spring already rejuvenates ;-) !!
Welcome to an online ramble in our small cottage garden located in Vicksburg, Mississippi. There are several hundred pictures on this blog so click on OLDER POSTS under the bottom of the last center picture of this page to see previous older posts and pictures on the other pages. Have a look around and feel free to click COMMENTS under the pictures if you wish to type a question or to leave a remark. Scroll or page far down to the bottom of this page to see my automatic slideshows of about 400 photos of this little garden. Feel free to copy, take, use or enjoy anything on my blog as nothing is copyrighted by me in this amateur blog I have deliberately put in the public domain. You may have the shirt off my back if you want or need it.
"The world is so empty if one thinks only of mountains, rivers and cities; but to know someone here and there who thinks and feels with us, and though distant, is close to us in spirit, this makes the earth for us an inhabited garden." --Goethe
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Another Favorite William Faulkner Quote
William Faulkner wrote:"To understand the world, you must first understand a place like Mississippi."
A Favorite Quote By William Faulkner
"The past is never dead. It's not even past."
From Act 1, Scene III,Requiem for a Nun
Mississippi Historical Marker
The Magnolia State
Magnolia Grandilflora
Mississippi's State Flower and Tree
3 Stages Of Magnolia Flowers and Buds
The Most Beautiful Native Tree and Flower In Mississippi
My Favorite Magnolia Painting
by Martin Johnson Heade
Mockingbird
State Bird Of Mississippi
Mockingbird Singing ..It's A Southern Mockingbird...Your Cats Will Love To Listen To It!
Vicksburg National Military Park
Siege of Vicksburg in 1863
Siege of Vicksburg Historical Marker
The Worst Chapter In Our History
Cannons and Flags
Just 4 of hundreds of real Civil War cannons on display in Vicksburg
Mississippi River Car and Railway Bridges At Vicksburg
Tow Boat and Barges Under Both Bridges
Vicksburg, Miss. River Bridges
Crossing Over Ole Man River To Louisiana
Vicksburg's Two Mississippi River Bridges
Looking West Over to Louisiana Between the New And Old Bridges
Vicksburg Old Courthouse Museum
On National Register Of Historic Buildings
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A Quote from Henry Mitchell's, The Essential Earthman
"Gardening is a long road, with many detours and way stations, and here we all are at one point or another. It's not a question of superior or inferior taste, merely a question of which detour we are on at the moment. Getting there (as they say) is not important; the wandering about in the wilderness or in the olive groves or in the bayous is the whole point."
Favorite Gardening Books by Henry Mitchell
The Essential Earthman, One Man's Garden, Henry Mitchell On Gardening
5 comments:
Hi Jon,
My Banana shrub is budded, too - but seems to me that mid-January is normal here. If I kept better entries in the paper journal instead of blogging that could be a more definitive answer. But without blogging there'd be no one to share the answer with! Some dilemma, eh?
You say Magnolia fuscata and my tag said Michelia figo - but if we're lucky we'll both have the same fragrant flower in a few months!
Annie at the Transplantable Rose
Hi Annie,
Yes, I am aware that in recent years botanists and horticulturalists have renamed "Magnolia fuscata" as "Michelia figo". Obviously I am still stuck in the past...my grandmother loved these nice evergreen shrubs and never called them anything but "Magnolia fuscata". The ones she planted 70
years ago at our homeplace in the country are now like fat short trees as they have never been pruned or limbed up. The one I have here in town is young and still the size of a shrub.
Hope you have a great 2009 gardening year.
I feel the same as you when looking at my camelias which seem to open their buds pretty soon. But I know that Spring still is far away. However, the thought of Spring already rejuvenates ;-) !!
Thanks for sharing with us.. Nice blog..
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Jessica
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Thanks for sharing with us.. Nice blog..
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Jessica
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