Winter Colour
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Begging for Blue
What word best describes the winter colour in the Moosey garden? Wonderful? Subtle? Or just plain drab? Over the past winter weeks I've swung wildly - one minute I'm seeing rich warmth and colour everywhere, then I'm sulking - the only colours anywhere are in the stripes of my thermal long-johns and on my shiny seed packets.
Small Colour Delights
As I creep around the garden I see many small colour delights - the velvet blues of the pansies, the strong blood-reds of a flax, and the warm pink-red bracts of a Leucadendron. My confidence grows - I'm certain that the Moosey garden is a feast of colour. Then I'll see a late spring photo and shrivel up in disbelief - the garden colour has absolutely no depth - my photographs look like a cold blue-green veil is covering all the borders.
The problem is that definite colour can form a small part of a plant or shrub (the Bowles Mauve wallflowers, the purple pansies, the Daphne, the Lavenders all defy my camera because of this). A speck of mauve or magenta in a sea of green doesn't quite have enough pictorial impact. Has any gardener taken a successful winter photograph of those beautiful lime-white hellebores in flower?
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Yearning for Yellow
The Wattle trees start flowering in the middle of winter - what a beautiful sight their bright yellow flowers make against the clear blue sky. Well, at least they look bright yellow to the naked winter eye. I proudly take a winter photograph - disappointment comes later as the pictorial record looks pale and pathetic.
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Phormiums
Subtle colours abound - old-rose red Hellebores, old-wine coloured Euphorbias, and of course the amazing multi-toned stripes on the coloured flax hybrids. Even the giant Phormium Tenax Species flaxes have a subtle sheen and glow on their olive drab leaves.
A Feast of Green Winter Foliage
There's a feast of basic bright green - foliage and buds on the Rhododendrons, grass lawns, PIttosporum and Olearia leaves, Camellia bushes shining in the low winter sun - well, they look bright to me, until I check up on the photographs. The New Zealand native Pseudopanax shrubs are the cleanest greens in my garden, but they are very camera-shy.
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Winter Greenery - Hebe, Pseudopanax, Phormium
I know things could be worse. I know that many Canadian winter gardens are covered in blue-white snow. I know English winter gardeners who would dearly love blue sky, green grass, and pinky-red flaxes. Some New Zealand gardeners just don't know when they're well off!
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Revelling in Red
There is no truth to the rumour that the above pictures have been artificially coloured by the Head Gardener using Photoshop...