I Love Wildflowers

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πŸ₯œ Peanuts and tiny carrots πŸ₯•

I’m pulling up peanuts and these tiny carrots today while I’m waiting to see tonight’s harvest moon. 🌝 πŸ₯œ πŸ₯•

The squirrels plant the peanuts for me every year so I’ll save some for them. 🐿️ 🀎


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πŸ‚ Acorns 🀎🐿️

The squirrels are shaking the acorns out of the oak trees like crazy!! So I figured I’d collect a few tonight.. of course I left a ton for those crazy squirrels that steal seed from my birds.. that I secretly love.. let’s see if I can grow some oak trees! πŸΏοΈπŸ‚πŸ€Ž PS.. 5 of the kitties helped me.. I can’t do this all on my own πŸ±πŸˆπŸˆβ€β¬›πŸ˜»


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πŸ’œπŸ€ Wildflower Sunday πŸ€πŸ’œ

πŸ’œ Slender False Foxglove and Hairy Aster 🀍

When I bought this property in Oct 2021.. I scattered SOOOO many wildflower seeds.. all I wanted was a huge space for pollinators .. I quickly realized they already had lots of native plants growing wild here.. the more the merrier.. I have no idea if these grew from seed I tossed or if they were here already but either way.. I just love wildflowers.

My only problem was sunlight.. the whole 5.84 acres was wooded. We hate cutting native trees .. that’s where the birds and butterflies live!!.. so we cut just enough to grow a veggie garden and a few flowers.

Recently we’ve had to cut trees for the electric company and septic .. it makes me want to die!!! My goal is to replant everything we have to cut down and more. πŸ’œπŸ’œπŸ’œπŸ’œ


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πŸ’™ Good morning, morning glories! πŸ’œ

Some people call them invasive weeds.. but I call morning glories beautiful garden flowers. I get to see them bloom for just part of a day but I love them. This is what the Bible tells us about morning glories:

God tells Moses and Aaron “in the morning, you shall see the glory of the LORD” (Exodus 16:7). What does the glory of the LORD look like? “Like a fine, flake-like thing, fine as frost on the ground” (Exodus 16:14).


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πŸ–€ Woolly bear πŸ§‘

This little dude is just out here predicting the weather πŸ–€πŸ§‘πŸ–€

The amount of black on the woolly caterpillar in the fall is supposedly linked to the severity of the upcoming winter. The black varies in each season, and in different areas, too.

According to legend, the longer the woolly bear’s black bands are, the more severe the upcoming winter will be… and the wider the middle brown band, the milder the winter will be.

Also, the position of the longest dark band is said to indicate which part of winter will be coldest. If the head end is dark, the beginning of winter will be worse. If the other end is dark, the end of winter will be colder.

According to the folklore, the 13 segments of the woolly bear’s body correspond to the 13 weeks of winter… the “woolier” the coat, the colder the winter.


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πŸ’› Partridge Pea πŸ’›

I have these blooming down by the road! πŸ’› Partridge Pea is an annual and a legume so it fixes soil nitrogen and forms attractive maroon seed pods in the fall.
πŸ’› This wildflower attracts bees and butterflies and the seed pods are eaten by gamebirds and songbirds. The plant provides excellent cover for gamebirds and browse for deer. Leaves collapse when touched, earning it the common name Sensitive-plant.