Saturday, August 1, 2009

Sunflowers red and great experiment

The first year we planted sunflowers at the school, they were in the vegetable garden. I don't even know if we had taken charge of the flower bed, which most now know as the space we have deemed our place away from the veggie garden (and deer). The second year we planted, I decided to fill a 20 foot bed in the veggie garden. I had this image that anyone driving into the lower parking lot would be met with a billion suns. We planted on a Friday and by the time I drove down that drive way, all had been eaten by a mammal of some sort. I wonder if that is when I tried to get a deer fence, which never happened???

The next attempt was in our flower bed. The home has been behind the day lilies. So as they fade out, as they are now, something towering and beautiful would catch the eye, instead of the dying lilies. This year we planted some on the other side of the garden, and there is one with a red tint to its leaves and much red to its flowers, and you are looking at the only opened sunflower bud as of 7/31/09. Moulin Rouge is its name and it is the first red sunflower I have grown. My wife is already imaging a mosaic in its honor.



But why two beds you ask? What motivated me was our involvement in The Great Sunflower Project which I wrote about back in March. And those sunflowers are growing and prospering behind the day lilies. Any day we will be watching for bees and sending data to the scientist running this experiment. we just need to be patient and let the flowers emerge...



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8 comments:

Chandramouli S said...

Bravo Bravo! That's fantastic. Can you post a shot of that bed? Would love to see it.
BTW, the sunflower you posted looks vibrant. Never seen such color here.

Wayne Stratz said...

Chandramouli---- Thanks. I will try to get some photos of the bed. The sunflower from a distance appears much darker.

susan morrison said...

I love that dark red color. Your post was perfect timing for me; I seem to have sunflowers on the brain lately.

Picked up a three stems at the farmers market yesterday and put them in my stand up Japanese vase (not sure what it's called, but the shallow vase that you impale the flowers on you posted on a while ago.) Makes them look homey and elegant at the same time.

Wayne Stratz said...

Susan--- really don't need you coming around and reminding me of Japanese pottery thingee, which I have not yet used, now I guess I'll have to get my act together ;')

Dana said...

how gorgeous is that red color, it would certainly look wonderful as a mosaic...our neighbor grows the traditional yellow sunflowers ....and they have gone past seven feet as of this writing.

Wayne Stratz said...

Dana--- the ones for the experiment are yellow and tall, but there is a yellow one next to the red one which is towering above my head... 10ft????

Lynn said...

Beautiful! I planted so many sunflowers, including your beautiful Moulin Rouge, and have none. Something ATE the red ones, and I don't know what happened to the rest. Maybe our wet summer did them in or chipmunks found them. It's a bit depressing not to succeed at one of the easiest things to grow! And every summer past we've had volunteers.

Wayne Stratz said...

Lynn, so sorry to hear about the sunflowers. It was quite sad when I had the twenty foot bed devoured