bright, shining, sparkling, dazzling, brilliant, glistening
Here’s some interesting etymology on bleeding heart:
The scientific name, Lamprocapnos spectabilis, can be broken up and translated: The Greek term “Lampro-” translates to words such as “bright”, “shining”, “sparkling”, “dazzling”, “brilliant”, or “glistening”, while the Greek term “-capnos” translates to “smoke”. The Greek term “spectabilis” translates to words such as “spectacular”, “showy”, “remarkable”, or “worth seeing”. The literal translation means “Spectacular sparkling smoke”.
Clearly the Greek namers were smitten with bleeding heart.
bleeding heart (Lamprocapnos spectabilis)
in praise of variants
After a week of seeing only lilac-colored lilacs, these dark purple panicles almost made me veer off the road. Don’t worry, I did not steal them from someones yard, I stole them from my grocery store parking lot..but not in front of the store––these were not intentional landscaping––but back behind the store where the delivery trucks unload. It’s hard to believe these dark beauties were stuck in such an unbecoming location. I guess we can’t choose when or where we are born. But we can make the most of it.
dark purple lilacs (Syringa vulgaris)
blue-green tassels
Here’s a closer look at those spruce tips from yesterday. Beautiful blue-green tassels celebrating another growing season–hooray for seasonality!
Blue spruce new-growth tips
stopped me in my tracks
These blue spruce tips made me gasp today when I came upon them. The irony was that my son and I were out looking for spruce tips to gather for cooking. We were looking for black spruce in particular. But all we kept finding was white spruce and blue spruce. We had checked about thirty spruces by the time I came upon this one. And even though I had seen a dozen blue spruces with new growth tips, this one made me stop in my tracks. Not all blue spruces retain the waxy coating on the needles that makes them appear blue (although it is more common in spring and then fades all summer long). So, when I walked around this tree to the shaded lee-ward side, these blue-green tips jumped out at me as if they were holiday lights. The needles and tips on sunny wind-ward side of the tree were already faded to a dull green. What a fun find!
Blue spruce tips (Picea pungens)
my house smells divine
I have had three trips in the past two weeks. Home for just a day or two between each trip. I’m done traveling now for a while. Whew. What was easy when I was 31, even 41, is suddenly much harder at 61. I same home to peak lilac season. I can’t think of a better welcome. Everything smells heavenly.
lilac blossoms
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So beautiful and, indeed, lilacs do have the most divine fragrance. Glad you’re able to be STILL for a while now and catch your breath. Enjoy the remainders of spring!!
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Pure delight!