Bloom day is destroying my life. I always force bulbs during the winter, so I had a pot of dwarf irises which just finished flowering a couple weeks ago, and I have a pot a hyacinths which are just about to bloom, as you can see in this picture:
Normally I would be perfectly happy with this: Flowering bulbs for most of the winter is a good thing, and a week or two between one finishing and another starting is perfect.
But NOW, thanks to Carol and bloom day, I'm just frustrated that neither of them decided to bloom for the 15th!
Luckily, this little african violet in my office comes to my rescue:
Which is hardly surprising -- it pretty much is ALWAYS flowering. It seems all they really need is warmth -- when I had it in my house, which I like to keep cold in the winter, it pouted all the time. Brought it into my overheated office at school/work, and it is as happy as can be -- even if I don't water it for weeks at a time (persisting lack of water does stop the flowering, but it picks up again as soon as I stop neglecting it.)
And with that: I've survived the last of the truely difficult bloom days -- next month, I should have crocuses, aconite, witch hazel, and snowdrops, and I'll be good until November -- and next winter, I'll be prepared. I'm going to force SO many bulbs next winter I won't have room in the fridge for anything else.
Hooray for the houseplants, the African violets, kalanchoes and orchids, for they keep us sane in February! Happy GBBD!
ReplyDeleteLove the violet. Forced bulbs have to be moved in and out from cool to warm to speed them up and slow them down, but I liked the pic of the hyacinths in bud. Promise of bloom is good.
ReplyDeleteNellJean, good point -- I could have moved them into a warmer part of house to speed them up, but I like growing cool, as it seems to keep them more compact and less likely to flop all over the place!
ReplyDeleteAt least your African Violet was blooming and it is such a pretty color.
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