Every day this month I am looking back on the 10 years since I started this blog in June, 2008. Part 21 is this one — Tiny Tots — from October 2014, which features some gorgeous artwork by my talented partner in gardening and life, Pammy.
All sorts of spring flowers in our garden are coming out right on schedule, and the tiny ones Pammy and I have been looking closely to spot have finally made their appearance. They're so small that if you stand back a few feet you can't see them. You have to get up close … very close.
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Spanish moss, or Tillandsia usneoides. |
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This enormous log photobombing my Spanish moss pic is the tip of a toothpick. It illustrates nicely how small these Spanish moss flowers are. |
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The flowers form at foliage junctions. |
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Though small, they're perfectly formed, complete with a little yellow centre of pollen. Haven't exactly seen the bees making a beeline for the Spanish Moss yet, though. |
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Just in case you're not familiar with Spanish moss, it's that bromeliad which is also known as old man's beard, for an obvious reason. It's an 'air plant' that is not a parasite on its host plant. Instead, it gets all its nutrients from the air and rain. Here's it's thriving, hanging off the branches of our Grevillea 'Peaches & Cream'. |
Pammy loves this plant, and has done several paintings of both the plant and the flower. And so, to finish off our little celebration of this little cutie, here are two of Pammy's Spanish moss flower paintings, one a lovely little portrait of the flower itself, and the second (one of my favourites) an imagined microscope-eye's view of the foliage, where yet again Pam has created something which seems abstract at first glance yet is also realistic – it's one of the themes in her painting which I enjoy the most.
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'The Reality', © Pamela Horsnell 2013 |
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'Living and Breathing', © Pamela Horsnell 2013
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