
I remember this plant from 1991. It used to seed around and still does. Buddleia is a problem plant in some places due to this tendency to spread by seed. It sure does pull the butterflies in!
One in Adelphi, Maryland, one in Wildwood, Florida, one at the US National Arboretum with a grandfatherly interest in many more around the DC area (unless noted, pictures are taken the day of post)

I remember this plant from 1991. It used to seed around and still does. Buddleia is a problem plant in some places due to this tendency to spread by seed. It sure does pull the butterflies in!
By which I mean again, not me, but the ASRT's. The massive contracted Bridge/Trail work that took place over the past couple of years addressed particular sections of the trails that were determined to need work. FV staff decided that this section needed attention.
They don't all have 10 petals but they all have somewhere around 10. This particular plant has been growing in my garden for two years; I grew it from seed that I collected from the plants that grow along Hickey Run where it crosses Valley Road at Beech Spring Pond. I liked those plants, but really only grew it so I could identify it at my leisure. It was clearly a Helianthus and I remember being fairly comfortable with my identification. I think it had to do with the "eared" leaves. Or something. Oftentimes I can work and work at an identification and still not be certain. It feels when you get one.
Driving past the Crape Myrtle nursery, I noticed David intently concentrating on a Crape Myrtle hung with a lot of bags (containing controlled crosses). David is a shrub researcher at the Arboretum. Apparently because of the recent (pre-today) hot weather, the flowers are popping at an unprecedented rate. David told me he could spend all day emasculating. Well, we can't have unwanted pollen contaminating our controlled crosses. Still....
Fortunately Amanda and I spent part of the morning grooming and blowing the trails.
It's a cool irid native to Brazil in, to quote the Pacific Bulb Society,"...areas periodically inundated." Telos Rare Bulbs, also of California, observes that it requires moisture to perform well but flowers for a long period in the summer when it is happy. The flowers are beautiful and remind me of various South African irids which prefer dry conditions. This looks like a fun plant that would grow sitting in a saucer of water on deck or terrace.

The Mulberry weed in the bottom picture is the largest that I've ever seen. Once in a while in Fern Valley we would come upon a neglected patch with the occasional two to three foot plant. We didn't get these to the checking station for an official reckoning, but if they aren't five feet tall, they don't miss by more than an inch or so.
I don't know why, but these dark swallowtails seem to be especially attracted to the Leadwort. Moreover, they move more quickly on this plant than they do on the others: harder to photograph, hence the graininess here. Still they look good together!





I don't have anyone to blame but myself; all I had to do was drive to Luray. Khimaira Farm is the product of my nephew Josh's wife's family, especially his mother-in-law. I've heard about it from it's inception; every time I saw Corina, she updated us on how the garden was coming along, what plants they had, what strategies for overwintering tender bulbs, corns, tubers, etc. I knew it had to be good because this past winter Josh and Corina got the word that there were only two dates left this year for their own wedding and that they had better choose one! Well, they were married yesterday, I feel good about it, and I have a good history of predicting success!