Lilacs With Matching Hose
by Kym Backland
Title
Lilacs With Matching Hose
Artist
Kym Backland
Medium
Photograph
Description
These wonderful Lilacs were brought over from France over 80 years or more ago. They have flourished and grown bigger and more fragrant over the years. After cutting some bouquets, I realized my house matched the Lilacs perfectly. What a wonderful color and fragrance these flowers have. Each year we cut them and bring them to nursing homes in the area for May Day and Mother's Day.
There is no flowering shrub more beautiful and aromatic than the lilac. Drive through any countryside and you will undoubtedly see long-lived lilacs growing next to farmhouses or by the roadside. Lilacs (genus Syringa) date back to the 1750s in the United States. George Washington and Thomas Jefferson planted them in their gardens and many of the first botanical gardens featured lilacs. Lilacs are not particularly fussy plants and once established, they will thrive for many years with very little care. To get them off to a good start, plant your lilacs in well-drained soil and full sun. The more sun your lilac receives, the more flowers it will return to you. Lilacs prefer a soil pH of 7.0 to 7.5, which is much more alkaline than occurs naturally in the northwest. Therefore, an application of lime every fall will benefit the lilac. In early spring, apply a fertilizer high in phosphorus, such as 15-30-15.
The best time to prune a lilac is immediately after flowering. Cut off the spent blossoms each year. More drastic renewal pruning will be necessary when the lilac gets leggy -- remove about one-third of the oldest stems at ground level each year for three years. This will encourage growth of new vigorous stems from the base. Remember that newer canes give the best growth and the most flowers. Lilacs are not susceptible to many diseases or pests, but there are a few. Bacterial blight is a fungal disease that starts out as brown spots on leaves and twigs and progresses to blackened and withered stems. Cut out infected stems as soon as possible, being careful not to spread the disease with your pruning shears. The best remedy is to purchase resistant varieties, but a copper sulfate fungicide can also be used to control bacterial blight. Powdery mildew is another common fungal problem with lilacs. This normally occurs in the fall and does not cause any damage to the plant. The potential for powdery mildew is reduced if the lilac is planted in full sun and is pruned for good air circulation. Some grow very large, some stay small, some have variegated leaves, some have leaves that turn purple, yellow, or red in the fall, some have single flowers, some have double flowers, some flower early, some flower late, some are more fragrant than others, and then they come in many colors: lavender, pink, magenta, white, yellow, blue, purple with white edges, etc. etc. So do your research before you buy, or better yet, plan on putting in several!
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May 12th, 2014
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Comments (28)
John Malone
Congratulation on your Special Highlight Featured!! L/F Outstanding floral photography Kym.
Lynn Bauer
Awww, Kym...this is very beautiful!! And, to image...a hose to match every flowers!! :-) Congratulations on your Wisconsin Flowers And Scenery SPECIAL HIGHLIGHTED ARTIST feature!
Nava Thompson
Kym----congratulations on your very special HIGHLIGHTED feature--- (Very interesting story---Lilacs take me right back to my short time in Idaho as a kid---but I have one bush that just blooms once a year---so pretty when it does) lvf
Nava Thompson
Kym----congratulations on your very special HIGHLIGHTED feature--- (Very interesting story---Lilacs take me right back to my short time in Idaho as a kid---but I have one bush that just blooms once a year---so pretty when it does) lvf
Carolyn Rosenberger
Congrats on your Special Highlight Feature! Love the combination of purples and lavenders. L&F
Nikolyn McDonald
I can smell the aroma of these lilac blooms. Such profusion. Congratulations on your feature as a Special Highlighted Artist at WFS this week.
Hanne Lore Koehler
Fabulous lilac and purple hose still life capture, Kym! Congratulations on your Wisconsin Flowers And Scenery SPECIAL HIGHLIGHTED ARTIST feature! L/F
Lingfai Leung
Kym, wonderful lilac capture. Congratulations on your Special Highlighted Feature in WFS!
Donna Kennedy
Lovely and colorful image Kym, Congratulations on your Special Highlighted Feature in WFS!...L
Mother Nature
F/L Congratulations on your feature in Wisconsin Flowers and Scenery! This is a wonderful work:>)
Sharon Duguay
Congrats on your Special Highlight feature in WFS Kym ,I can hardly wait for spring I love lilacs L/F/Twt
Debra and Dave Vanderlaan
Pretty bouquet Kym! Congrats on your Special Feature this week! We added our Like to your artwork. Celebrate life, Debra and Dave
Randy Rosenberger
Congratulations for being one of our present SPECIAL HIGHLIGHTED ARTISTS, as you are very deserving of this special honor. Check it out on top of the Homepage of our site. It surely is a true honor to FEATURE THIS BEAUTY ON OUR HOMEPAGE! Your talents and love for art are surely dominant in this beautiful piece of outstanding art work! Thanks so very much for sharing, so we may enjoy and adore the beauty within! LIKED AND FAVED Randy B. Rosenberger (admin of WFS group) http://fineartamerica.com/groups/wisconsin-flowers-and-scenery.html