
One day this week we had 4 or 5 inches of rain, this wheelbarrow full of water is from that storm. The crushed shell residue is from my work on the cleaning and touching up the pathways in my garden.
Below you can see the cleaner part at the bottom of the photo is the new shell, well water irrigation has been staining the shell rust, and I have redone the irrigation so it doesn’t spray on the walkways – the rain helped by compacting the shell.

The rain also made this fungus open and let loose their spores. We called these puffrooms when I was a child. And stomped on them.

I had to tie the Snow Peas up.

The rain also gave me some flowers: Pineapple Sage (Salvia elegans)

And a new flush on the Porterweed (Stachytarpeta jamacaensis)

A little rain can be a good thing, it has been fairly dry here lately. I just looked at the weather radar, more storms on the way!
That’s the six from my garden this Saturday.
To see more Six on Saturday posts, go to http://www.thepropagatorblog.wordpress.com
Happy Gardening. Stay dry.

It’s an oddly dreary day in South Florida, making it feel more like the holidays to me. I decided to do a mini forest basket for this second week of Advent. The forest idea sprang to mind when I saw the Christmas Palm seedhead from last week lost all its berries and looked like a birch tree in winter. I usually call these Adonidia Palm, this is one of those plants with several common names. The common name can be Christmas Palm or Manila Palm, and my neighbors call them Triple Palms as many have three trunks. The botanical name is Veitchii merrilli. Below is a Christmas Palm with red fruit.























The red and white shrimp-like flowers are Red Shrimp Plants (Justicia brandegeana), a nearly indestructible perennial. White flowers with yellow centers are Sweet Begonia (Begonia odorata), another great indestructible. Yellow and red daisies are native Gallardias (Gallardia pulchella) they change their colors with the pollinator – or maybe via the pollinator.















