![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgtpIhpQrpk7g9SMI7zsdGXGR3gwLxreYoaOfy7NzTGI5shCaeydaRSStl4ZlrSvsqFr_9d98jlXFfyhPv0RULne8Ozpbaol1lqzp7geAdq30UTM4QyeGyUr4AkiYwZMWxzJ9Fb1wF_BtU/s640/100411_3814-Sedum-Nussbaumeranum-Autumn-Glow.jpg)
And the name of this one (Echeveria Powder Blue) makes me thing of "the powder room."
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgPis4orEBwHZxO1azsqiAUQW8EC0Q_-ZcZHCexVOamiGNRTEcXhdWr8RQQrTxXTHOVoUx7Vp22BOEnVpbJt5QWhOg5YJLGYr3KVLrNA-LBlU1JIEg1x1CdQTD6fQyiFASOV5djY5afVgU/s640/100411_3808-Echeveria-Powder-Blue.jpg)
And since I'm still posting plant photos, I thought this would be a good time to give all of you words of advice:
1. Keep a close watch on scilla in your garden.
and 2. ALWAYS listen to Pat's advice! She warned me a year or so ago that scilla could be invasive, and I thought "nah! Not in North Dakota! What's 2 or 3 or 6 little plants?" But now it's everywhere! I foresee many an hour of digging the pretty little plants, and their pod like root structures, from my garden in the weeks ahead :(.
5 comments:
O.K. I guess I won't be planting scylla . . . As much as I love flowers, I don't like high-maintenance gardens. Summer is just too short to spend it constantly weeding and taming perennials. Too bad, it's such a pretty color!
You sure found yourself some beauties. I remember spending lots of time trying to get rid of some succulents that were taking over my garden one year. What a pain!
I have a total black thumb, so I'll live vicariously through you! Beautiful!
nope won't be planting those lol, grest dof and color :)
They are really pretty. I wonder how they would do in TX.
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