
Paeonia dahurica
Well this is the magic time of year for a Garden Blogger Bloom Day Post. It seems everything is in flower or in bud. The peony shown above is actually the second to bloom. The first for us is always Paeonia caucasica.

Paeonia caucasica
In addition to sharing some of the abundant flowering happening right now I wanted to share the Open Garden Day which we held last weekend. We had a lot of visitors who asked many questions and made me focus on what I do and don’t remember about some of the plants we have put in.
The Viburnum which is providing amazing scent to the backyard (for those who still have the ability to smell which is not me) is either Viburnum carlesii or a relative bred from V. carlesii called Viburnum carcephalum and as near I can tell I’ve used both names to describe this wonderful plant.

Viburnum calesii or carcephalum?
In the backyard is a wonderful little spreader called Hacquetia epipactis.

Haquetia epipactis
And I was incorrectly describing it as Hylomecon which is another part of the yard and just coming into flower.

Hylomecon japonica
A number of people were asking about the Epimediums and I inevitably focus on the fifteen year-old plants which came to us as Mother’s day gifts from our kids.

Epimedium grandiflorum ‘Lilac Seedling’

Epimedium x rubrum ‘Sweetheart’
But there are a great many other Epimediums around the property that we got from Garden Vision Epimediums until Karen Perkins closed up shop three years ago.

Epimedium grandiflorum ‘Bicolor Giant’

Epimedium wushanense ‘Sandy Claws’
Notice the new leaves are red and the old ones green. There are many Epimediums in the woods as well because it turns out that many are four season plants with little need for regular care.
Also in the woods is a bamboo (Fargesia rufa) that survives with little care or tending.

Bamboo (Fargesia rufa)
Of course the obvious thing in the woods at this time of year is Virginia Bluebells.

Virginia Bluebells (Mertensia virginiana)
And we have a great many daffodil varieties that can be enjoyed.

Narcisus ‘Badgeworth’

Narcissus ‘A Million Kisses’

Narcissus ‘Arguros’
Also in the woods are a few special flowers that have managed to take hold.

Erythronium ‘Pacific Sunset’

Sanguinaria multiplex
Back in the yard we have a small phlox that is always an early charmer.

Phlox sileniflora
And I added a very nice little Anemonella to a trough last year.

Anemonella thalictroides ‘Kikuzaki White’ (from Japan Engei Nursery)
In the same trough is a lovely Pulsatilla from Edelweiss that has been blooming for about a month now.

Pulsatilla ambigua
One item that received attention was the Golden Pea and I realized I should look at moving more of these into the forest where it should spread easily.

Golden Pea (Lathryrus aureus)
Let me close with this Geranium maderense which I’m hoping will yield flowers this year to match the spectacular foliage. It takes two years to get the point of flowering and I’m considering putting it into the ground now that it’s made it over the winter in the greenhouse.

Geranium maderense
And So We Begin (April 2025)

Adonis amurensis ‘Pleniflora’
“The world is changed. I feel it in the water. I feel it in the earth. I smell it in the air. ” — The Lord of the Rings
The world is full of flowers right now and I am compelled to share what I see. The Adonis shown above is very tiny and it is one of many exquisite little flowers worthy of our attention right now.
I used to grow the Chilean Blue Crocus many years ago and have been trying regrow it for sometime. Finally it has returned to Ball Rd. courtesy of Telos Rare Bulbs.

Tecophilaea cyanocrocus var. leichtlinii
Nearby we have another unusual visitor, this time from Illahe Rare Plants. I have been trying to grow a yellow Fritillaria for years.

Fritillaria pudica
Nearby are the Jeffersonia which are expanding their clumps every year.

Jeffersonia dubia
Bloodroots are also coming into bloom right now and they are happy in the yard and woods.

Sanguinaria canadensis ‘Tennessee Form’
Nearby is a very rare Podophyllum just starting up.

Podophyllum x inexpectatum
Also in the yard we have an exceptionally nice Erythronium which reminds me of hiking in the Cascades.

Erythronium grandiflorum
Of course for us the really plentiful flowers at the beginning of April are the Erythronium americanum.

Erythronium americanum
They are so thick in the raised bed around our back porch that I couldn’t resist putting them in the woods as well. That was probably 20 years ago and while they have prospered in the woods, spreading like mad, they didn’t flower like they do in the raised bed. One thesis I’ve read about this said that they are happy to spread by runners if there are no constraints so they don’t bother with this flowering nonsense. Nonetheless we did get a flower two years ago and this year we are actually up to 6 flowers in the woods so there may be many more in the future.

Erythronium americanum in the woods
Also in the woods we have a great many Corydalis in flower at the moment, mostly ‘Beth Evans’ and ‘Purple Rain’.

Corydalis ‘Purple Rain’
We also have a large number of Ranunculus ficaria spreading in the woods.

Ranunculus ficaria ‘Randall’s White’
Of course the woods are full of Virginia Bluebells right now.

Mertensia virginica
And yesterday I saw the first Spring Beauty at the bottom of the woods.

Spring Beauty (Claytonia Virginica)
We would be remiss if I didn’t note that Daffodils are everywhere. This is their time of the year.

Daffodils on the hillside

Daffodils on the pasture trail

Narcissus ‘Chromacolor’ (this is one of my favorites)

Narcissus ‘Bridal Crown’
I should mention that the first of the Rhododendrons is now in bloom.

Rhododendron carolinianum
And just to prepare for the future we have the first leaves of a spectacular red-leaved maple coming out…

Acer palmatum ‘Shin Deshojo’