Saturday, August 2, 2025
Hot Lips, Nicole and Ginger
Here's our Salvia "Hot Lips," which blooms almost all year in our garden. I don't often take pictures of it but it's a stalwart, providing these omnipresent airborne clusters of little red and white (and sometimes solid red or white) flowers. They hover in the background off the patio like moths.
Let's check in with a few other garden plants, shall we?
Nicole the Nicotiana has bounced back dramatically since her bout with bad drainage and overwatering earlier this year. I thought she was dead but some little sprouts appeared at her base, and soon enough we had two new bushy stalks. It looks like we may get flowers again before autumn.
I discovered why she got waterlogged -- in addition to her pot's drainage holes becoming gradually blocked over time, the Russians' automatic plant-watering system (which keeps their terrace plants hydrated) leaks and sprayed a jet of water right down onto Nicole every evening.
"Those people drive me crazy even after they've moved out," I told Dave.
I swapped Nicole's position on the patio with our tomato (at left), which can always stand a little more water. Hopefully now she's in a drier location, in addition to having better drainage.
Incidentally, we have several green tomatoes on the tomato plant but still no ripe ones. This is always our struggle growing tomatoes here in the UK. It's not hot enough for long enough. But we're hopeful we'll get some before autumn encroaches.
Here's the ginger I grew from a sprouting root. It is not a thing of beauty and joy forever. It has a few new sprouts but they're all doing that weird rolled-leaf thing. I'm just letting it sit out there for now but its future is not guaranteed if it doesn't start looking better.
Our avocado tree, on the other hand, is looking lush and healthy. It loves summers on the patio.
And finally, here's the "magenta spreen lambsquart" I transplanted from crack in the sidewalk in front of the house. It's not very big -- certainly not the promised five feet tall -- but it's growing and I love that little blush of purple in the middle. That yellow leaf belongs to the honesty plant at right, which hopefully will be big enough to bloom next year. This pot has a lot of weird stuff in it -- there are also the brook thistles, which have died back to the ground entirely, and several tulip bulbs. And some weeds, because I am not a perfectionist.
We got a beautiful card from former blogger Vivian Swift, who painted Olga's portrait several years ago. She expressed condolences for Olga's death and said "your internet community feels your loss," which I thought was very touching. "The impact she had on people she didn't even know is a kind of magic," Vivian wrote. "Closer to home, I am sure that your girl knew how much she was loved as the heart of your household, just as she knew that her sweet soul will always be cherished."
I think she really did know that.
I still miss Olga, but the pain of her absence has softened to something much more manageable. I'm not outwardly weeping or feeling that physical gut-punch, that almost-panicked gasping, like I was at the beginning. It still seems unbelievable that she is gone forever -- I half expect her to walk in from the garden or to hear the shake of her collar at the front door as she returns with the dog-walker. But I am coming around to the fact that she is truly gone in the physical sense, if not from our hearts.
I mentioned yesterday that I organized a quick trip for early next week, since Dave will be away and I don't really want to hang around the house by myself. Well, wouldn't you know, I am going to be traveling during a named storm -- Storm Floris, which is supposed to bring wind and heavy rain to most of the northern British isles on Monday. This doesn't thrill me, as I'm headed in that direction. Oh well. This should be interesting!
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One of my daughters has that same Hot lips Salvia, several of them all in one bed.
ReplyDeleteWell, if it's any consolation Storm Floris is not predicted to be as bad as first feared here, and we are expected to be right in its path.
ReplyDeleteWe have a couple of Salvia Hot Lips, all flowering profusely and adding colour and scent to the garden. I love them.
Steve, regarding your question about our entrance gate, yes it is for our entire neighborhood, not just our house. We are a small community, just 23 homes. And yes it is large & heavy. Each of those panels weighs between 800 & 900 pounds. Safe travels on your trip into Floris. Cheers!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the plant tour!
ReplyDeleteWhat you describe with Olga, almost expecting her to walk in from the garden etc., is very similar to what it felt like for months after Steve died. I expected to hear his key in the door when he would return from teaching evening class, or his coughing (he was a smoker) when he got up in the morning. Sometimes when I‘m out walking and I spot a man of similar stature from afar, with a similar gait, it still gives me a jolt.
I really enjoyed the trip around your garden with the lovely pictures. Felt so sorry for poor Nicole getting assaulted every evening.
ReplyDeleteWendy (Wales)
So typical of the Russians to be a big nuisance even after they're gone! Maybe you can set a container to catch that overflow to use around your own plants where it's needed.
ReplyDeleteOoh, a stormy adventure. May you be safe and happy. I love all the plants and their stories. The avocado has gotten enormous. Will it have to be lopped to get it in the house for winter or will you wrap it up outside? The hot lips are stunning.
ReplyDeleteHot lips is such a generous plant.
ReplyDeleteI hope Floris won't be too alarming, and you enjoy your trip.
Have a safe, windblown, rainswept, trip though I'm sure it will be a nice getaway!
ReplyDeleteYou're from the South. Fry up some fried green tomatoes. :-)
ReplyDeleteYou made me think of phrase I've heard but I don't know why or what it is about, "Hot lips Houlihan". I suppose I could Guggle it, but what fun is that when everyone in the world will know, except for me.
ReplyDeleteMay the weather forecasters get it wrong. They often do.
MASH!! My favourite TV programme from the US.
DeleteThe salvia is very pretty. I may look for one, although my garden seems full at the moment. When I was visiting my friend yesterday, she gave me a piece of a fern leaf peony which I had moved to her garden when I sold the house I lived in with my ex husband. The peony had come from my mum, so now mum has come back home with me. She also gave me some Lewisia.
ReplyDeleteI have a watercolour of my beagle from Vivian Swift. She's a lovely painter. You will always have that painting, and all your photos, to remember Olga. She had a good life with you two and that's what matters.
As for the storm, maybe you'll get some amazing photos:)
That little weed with the round leaves in the pot with the lambsquart looks like ponyfoot. My ginger from the grocery store has four stalks but the tallest one is not even two feet. Yours looks like it has some sort of fungus or bug with the leaf curling. And what is blooming blue on the left in the picture of the avocado tree?
ReplyDeleteOh god. Storm season. Glen's got three trips to Canada planned this fall and early winter and all I can think of is, "I hope we don't have a hurricane while he's gone."
ReplyDeleteMay you be safe in your dealings with Flora. Who knew that you'd be dealing with named storms in GB?
Your garden is absolutely a thing of beauty. And yes, damn those Russians! And hearing that your grief has softened into something different is heartening. It will never entirely be gone, of course, but it does change.
How very kind of Vivian Swift.
We have a couple Salvia plants, not the hot lips variety, but I love them for being so resilient!
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely thing for Vivien to do. It is true. People loved Olga, even if we only got to know her through your blog.
A couple of years ago they had one of those 'hot lips' plants at the Desert Botanical Garden. I remember seeing it and with a name like that it's hard to forget.
ReplyDeleteI hope the storm changes course enough to keep your adventure a pleasant one.
Glad to hear that Vivian is alive and well! Her portrait of Olga is special. She really captured her "look".
ReplyDeleteHope the storm misses you and you enjoy your little getaway.
ReplyDeleteYour garden is looking very fine, and the avocado tree is truly thriving on the patio.
ReplyDeleteIt was lovely to hear from Vivian Swift and like many she has fond memories of Olga. Does Vivian have a new blog? I used to follow her and loved her stories.
Hopefully the storm will not impede your upcoming holiday. Storms often shift or peter out; here's hoping.
I once grew an avocado from seed which ended up about 5 or 6 feet tall. I set it out every summer on our deck and it flourished. One winter inside I started seeing little bits of "sawdust" on some of its branches. There were tiny holes drilled into the wood. It turned out to be peach borers eating out the tender inside of the branches. Needless to say, the tree did not survive. So be on the lookout for those invasive little critters. I have never been able to grow another tree from a pit again.
ReplyDeleteI once seeded wildflowers as a surprise and grew nothing.
ReplyDeleteIn the first paragraph thought you'll describe each plant with their personality.
Thank you for your comment, BTW.
Reading the title I thought you were going to announce the death of Loretta Swit or Sally Kellerman, but then remembered neither is still alive. The "hot lips" blooms are stunning, especially the way you photographed them!
ReplyDeleteBet your brother loved this post. 😉
I envy you your avocado tree. I wish I could grow one here in the PNW since we eat a lot of them! Do you ever get any avocados?
ReplyDeleteWe had a medium sized pot on our patio that refused to drain at all recently. A couple of new plans Judy had put in it soon died. She said she thought she drowned them. So this morning I hauled it over to an unused part of our back yard and dumped it upside down. The drain hole was plugged so I don't know what the problem was. Gardening, like your scheduled trip, is an adventure!
ReplyDeleteI thought you were going to write about MASH, lol. I have had the same problem with tomatoes, not a long enough growing season or I pick the wrong varieties. I gave up. I have missed your posts and photos of Olga; perhaps you could do a few about the past like where/when you first got her and Olga stories of her younger years. I would like that.
ReplyDeleteA garden always keeps one busy and on one's toes!!
ReplyDeleteI'm sure that the spirit of a loved one stays where they were happy...be it with a place or person.
It looks like the Weather is going to kick off at about 7am on Monday morning here in the West...I assume that you are heading for the bright lights and slightly warmer climes of the East of Scotland?!