One thing I like about biking to and from work is the the things I notice as the seasons change. Today is the first day this year I have seen a flower, one person’s yard was full of Blue-eye grass. There was slight precipitation today and the flowers were covered in little beads of water. Short four inch tall blueish purple flowers on a stem extending from a base of several thick grass like leaves.
Beautiful day out. I really wish I had a digital camera to share it all with you.
I have to agree…hyacinths are some of my favorite flowers. They smell heavenly. We had a bunch of them that would pop up in the spring when we still were in Ohio…I have no idea what is planted here, and since we’re just getting in to the whole spring thing here in the North Country, there isn’t too much even popping up let alone blooming. I can’t wait to see
thank you I.D.10-t.
I love lawns with a flush of color running across the surface from whatever spring wildflowers have found a home there. We often see the little purple violets, and I’m one of those rare suburbanites who likes dandelions.
I hate chemical lawn services. I hate their little “we just poisoned your children and pets” signs.
I like chickweed, violets, dandelions, clover, and buttercups.
I’ve already had the crocus, now I’ve got daffodils and tulips.
What I really always love are the trillium later this month. There’s a wooded hillside by the river where they grow in abundance. (actually where I found the dead man back in Nov. that’s one of the first things I thought of , “he’s where the trillium bloom”)..anyway, I’m watching them daily for the first sign of bloom. If I can remember to take my camera I’ll get some shots when they make their apperance. They are my favorite sign of spring.
I.D.10-t, I wish you could find a picture from Google of exactly what you saw. I just got sort of curious.
We’ve just started getting some daffodils blooming in town. The forsythia shrubs are big, formless conglomerations of brilliant yellow canes. A lot of people consider them weeds practically, but I like them. They look pretty bad most of the year but right now they are the main color around. We are supposed to have temperatures as low as 24 degrees the next two nights. I hope that doesn’t injure the early blooming flower buds that are forming—that would be a tragedy. Many plants aren’t up yet, so they should be okay but I’d hate to have the plants that already have flower buds forming ruined.
There was a time in my life when I could have said this. That’s why I moved south. The cherry trees are in full bloom (the deciduous magnolias, too!), I’ve been picking daffodils for a week or so, and crocuses for probably three weeks, stars of Bethlehem for a week or two. I was amazed flying into Albany yesterday that the lakes are still frozen. I hate winter if it lasts more than a few weeks, and frozen lakes in April count.
Blue-eyed Grass you say.
Well, there are plants called Blue-eyed grasses. It in the genus Sisyrinchium. Its not a true grass. Its in the Iris family.
Its a popular plant for people who try to replant their lawns with prairie plants but I don’t know enough about them to know if they’d be blossoming this time of year.
I.D.10-t and I live in the same metro area. It may be that he is indeed referring to a different plant, but the traditionally reliable harbinger of early spring hereabouts is the Siberian Squill which often lives in patches close to houses but makes tentative forays into lawns:
Dollars to doughnuts that’s what he’s talking about. It’s too chilly yet for most hyacinths, here.
I haven’t yet seen a yard full of squill (if squill are what I.D.10-t saw), but I imagine anything’s possible if the yard sees only occasional traffic.
Another pleasing eye soother up there is the Purple Vetch that is commonly found growing along the side of highways… really adds a nice color to an otherwise boring road.
We have had hycinths blooming in our yard for a week or so. They are extremely fragrant, but if I get too close to them I start sneezing. A cold front is moving through today, and for the next two nights we are going to have nighttime temperatures below freezing. That won’t be good for the tulips that are blooming. I also worry about the fruit trees that are in bloom. Our outside plants that are in pots will be spending a couple nights in the house. Just a few days ago it was 80 degrees F, and I brought a lot of plants up from the basement where they had been spending the winter under the plant lights.
I have grape hyacinths taking over my yard. They come up twice, once in autumn and again in spring to flower. Then they die back, but by that time they’ve killed most of the lawn. Time to get the Roundup going again.
Thanks you guys! I looked up various things and was wondering if maybe what you are showing could be it because it is such an early bloomer. It seemed a bit early here for hyacinths and the info I found on Blue-eyed grass made it seem too early for that as well although I don’t know much about it. Curiosity satisfied!! We have something in our yard that we’ve let spread that is of a similar size but has tiny bright white stars for a flower. It isn’t blooming yet but I’m going to try to identify it this year—the leaves are almost as fine as grass and they just dry up and go away quite quickly. One plant alone would not be noticed, but now they’ve spread a bit and they at least add a bit of brightness to our in-shambles yard.
That’s a nice website. The leaves actually do look quite similar, the flowers seem quite a bit larger than ours and the stamens seem too significant, but I must say they do look quite similar in some ways. Hmm. I’ll just have to wait until they bloom and then I can key them out. I’ll let you know what they turn out to be. Thanks for the suggestion, I really had not even considered crocus as a possibility.
Can you not just have grape hyacinths for your lawn? Do they look that bad once they are done blooming? Any worse than the lawn?