Showing posts with label Memorial Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memorial Day. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Memorial Day at Schreiner's Iris Gardens - I keep going back to take a look at these beautifully presented flowers. Today, all sorts of purples, lavenders and blues.

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I took this photo while seated on a sturdy white bench. It's great to get this perspective without worrying about wobbling due to 66-year-old legs/knees and my general lack of being balanced.

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This one is called Blue Hour.

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This one is called Countess Cathleen.

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These flower beds are in the area farthest from the parking lot, well worth the walk which is either on grass or a hard-packed dirt path. Lots of shade, too.

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These are called Astro Blue.

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Creamy columbine blossoms among the purples and the blues.

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The iris Berry Fulfilling and a whole lot of two-colored columbines.

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A rhododendron and lots of hostas on that dirt path. Such a pretty place to walk.





Tuesday, 3 June 2014

Friendly chicken dinner lady at Schreiner's Iris Gardens, Memorial Day, 2014

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The lady to her right pointed me out and she smiled and waved and couldn't believe that I'd actually taken her photo until I showed it to her. Yep, she's a friendly chicken dinner lady--I've noticed her each of the three years I've gone to Schreiner's on Memorial Day, the day that you not only get to see the flowers, you get to eat some really cook cooking by the Gervais Knights of Columbus.

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There she is in action, right before the lady to her right noticed I stood nearby, my camera pointed their way.

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The menu, complete with descriptions and prices, posted on a sawhorse.

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Here's a photo of the booth with just a few of the people in line who showed up to buy themselves a chicken dinner that was more what I'd call grilled than B-Q which I assume is barbecue. The woman in line in front of me came with a large, foil-lined cardboard box lid. She bought seven halves, nothing else. Last year I bought myself a half right before I got in my Zipcar to drive home.

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And here's my chicken dinner, from 2013. When I went a week ago Monday, I was too hungry to even thinking about a photo.

Monday, 2 June 2014

Schreiner's Iris Gardens, Memorial Day 2014, No. 1

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A couple of photographers seen at Schreiner's Iris Gardens in Salem, Oregon. I drove a Zipcar south out of Portland, to enjoy the flowers and the chicken dinner prepared each year by the Gervais (Oregon) Knights of Columbus.

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Lots of folks come out for the same reasons as I do, to enjoy the flowers.

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Lots of folks come out for the same reasons as I do, to enjoy the chicken dinner.

Monday, 26 May 2014

Our flag flies every day at Bright

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The best image I have for Memorial Day, this photo I took recently through the garage door at Bright Auto Upholstery while out and about during my lunch hour.

Wednesday, 3 July 2013

Allium, Memorial Day, Schreiner's Iris Gardens

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One of the many things I enjoy about Schreiner's Iris Gardens is the mix of flowering plants on display. Every which way you turn, you see colors, shapes, textures. All that to say, this will not the only photo of allium that I will share with you.

It had been raining most of Sunday night and into Monday morning. I decided, what the hey, I'll get in my Zipcar McMinnville, the Mazda 3, and head on down to spend some quality time among the gardens and to enjoy the superb chicken lunch, cooked by the Gervais Knights of Columbus.

Here's some info about allium that I found on the Internet:

Allium is a monocot genus of flowering plants, informally referred to as the onion genus. The generic name Allium is the Latin word for garlic. The genus, including the various edible onions, garlics, chives, and leeks, has played a pivotal role in cooking worldwide, as the various parts of the plants, either raw or cooked in many ways, produce a large variety of flavors and textures. The genus contains hundreds of distinct species; many have been harvested through human history, but only about a dozen are still economically important today as crops or garden vegetables. Many others are cultivated as ornamental plants.

Onions, shallots and gardlic are members of the allium family that belong in the vegetable garden. But there are many ornamental alliums that deserve a hearty welcome in your perennial gardens. Alliums are plants of exquisite beauty in both flower and leaf, with tough constitutions. These easy-to-grow bulbs come in a broad palette of colors, heights, bloom times and flower forms. They make excellent cut flowers for fresh or dried bouquets. Even crowded gardens can accommodate a few alliums because they don't take up much space. What's more, alliums are relatively resistant to deer, voles, chipmunks, and rabbits.