I’m joining Cathy at Words and Herbs for her annual ‘A Week of Flowers‘ meme, taking place this year November 30 – December 6. Though I’m a day late in joining her this year, I appreciate the opportunity to bring a bit of colorful beauty to our chilly December days. It’s December 1st–the sun was out today making it feel a bit warmer than the 19°F registering on my thermometer. Let’s travel back a few months and look at a few garden photos from Spring of 2024.

Magnolia ‘Elizabeth’ put on a very brief show this spring. A late frost turned her beautiful yellow, tulip-shaped cups brown before they had a chance to fully open. However, I caught a glimpse of what beauty this tree will hold in future springs. ‘Elizabeth’ put on a few inches of growth in her first year in our garden, but is still much smaller than her anticipated mature height of greater than 20 feet.


I have forgotten the names of most of my daffodils, but truly love each one of them. The little white one on the left has a lovely waft of fragrance that truly ought to be bottled. The lovely daffodil on the right is a charmer with peachy ruffled cups.

This lovely tulip stood all by herself for quite a few days before she was joined by a few neighboring tulips. I smiled each time I spied her stalwartly standing her ground in my flowerbed.

If I had to pick a favorite type of tulip, it would most definitely be the Angelique tulips. This magnificent red one looks like a peony. She extends the tulip season by opening a little later in spring and her tight double petals can hold their own when brisk winds fly through on nippy days. When fall arrives, I can’t resist planting a few more Angelique tulip bulbs in anticipation of the next year’s daffodil and tulip performance.
“It was one of those March days when the sun shines hot and the wind blows cold, when it is summer in the light, and winter in the shade.”
― Charles Dickens, Great Expectations
Hi Cindie! How lovely that you are joining in again this year! Thank you! Your spring flowers are very cheerful and make me wish they would flower in winter too! 😉 I have never seen a red Angelique tulip before, only a pale pink one – gorgeous!
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Cindie, I love the red Angelique tulip…she is gorgeous! Merry December!
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Most of my Angeliques are pink, white or yellow. I only have a few red ones–they are absolutely stunning. Christmas blessings to you and yours too, dear Pam.
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How lovely to see such beautiful blooms at this time of year!
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Yes, it’s been fun to reminisce.
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Oh, so beautiful. I love daffodils, but it’s mostly too hot for them here. Your magnolia will be brilliant!
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Thank you for stopping in to comment. I hope that I’ll have lots of photos of yellow magnolia flowers to share in the years to come.
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Love the colour of your magnolia, unfortunately I always had a problem with frost like yourself. My Angelique was a very pale pink, but the vivid red is very striking.
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