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Find below, please my BEST photos from my Wild-Garden in 2016 and will get updated as soon as there is NEW stuff 😉
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Stay tuned for next photos 😉
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Find below, please my BEST photos from my Wild-Garden in 2016 and will get updated as soon as there is NEW stuff 😉
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Concerning the displayed photos, you will need the following (BUT you could change the sort of cheese and bread…):
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The ONLY thing to prepare is to put an egg yolk in a cup, add some liquid creme and mix it with a fork, see photo below please. You need as well to cut the ham in small pieces as well as the cheese (Chaumes).
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Check the different step by step actions in the slideshow below please.
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Preheat the oven on 180°C (356°F). It will take +/- 20 minutes, so stay close to the oven to observe and make sure that on the upper side the cheese is well melt, check photos below please 😉
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DOESN’T that look tasty!? It’s delicious, surprise YOUR invites with it; ONLY +/- 30 minutes time involved, while 10 min. work ONLY!
Stay tuned for next blog post(s) 😉
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THE most IMPORTANT to have early quality flowers is the composition of the soil, check more below, please:
Learn more:
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Last photos from 21-04-2015
Stay tuned for next blog posts, I try to create at least one for each month with the flowers for that particular month 😉
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First flowers started to appear on 07-02-2015, it were as usual every year the “Snowdrops“, followed by the “Crocus” on 28-02-2015 in Luxembourg (Europe).
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Learn more:
Stay tuned for next blog posts, I try to create at least one for each month with the flowers for that particular month 😉
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Text from Wikipedia: Sempervivum /sɛmpəˈvaɪvəm/,[1] is a genus of about 40 species of flowering plants in the Crassulaceae family, known as houseleeks. Other common names include liveforever and hen and chicks. They are succulent perennials forming mats composed of tufted leaves in rosettes. In favourable conditions they spread rapidly via offsets, and several species are valued in cultivation as groundcover for dry, sunny spots.[2]
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Related links:
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Click the above image where YOU will get direct to “ThingLink“. YOU will see an interactive image, move YOUR mouse pointer over the image and YOU will see some spots. These spots are showing which flowers are on what place and by clicking on those spots YOU can access more info about the flowers.
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Related links:
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Text from Wikipedia: Rudbeckia hirta, commonly called black-eyed Susan, is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae, native to the Eastern and Central United States. It is one of a number of plants with the common name black-eyed Susan. Other common names for this plant include: brown-eyed Susan, brown Betty, gloriosa daisy, golden Jerusalem,[1][2] Poorland daisy, yellow daisy, and yellow ox-eye daisy.
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Text from Wikipedia: Lunaria annua, called honesty or annual honesty in English, is a species of flowering plant native to the Balkans and south west Asia, and naturalized throughout the temperate world.
It is an annual or biennial growing to 90 cm (35 in) tall by 30 cm (12 in) broad, with large, coarse, pointed oval leaves with marked serrations. In spring and summer it bears terminal racemes of white or violet flowers, followed by showy, light brown, translucent, disc-shaped seedpods (silicles) the skin of which falls off to release the seeds, revealing a central membrane which is white with a silvery sheen, 3–8 cm (1–3 in) in diameter; they persist on the plant through winter.[1] These pods are much used in floral arrangements.
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Well, Wikipedia says ===> 90 cm <===! In my Wild-Garden I got one that on 15.07.2014 is already about 1.32 m high!!!
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[Start text from Wikipedia] Iris versicolor, also commonly known as the Blue flag, Harlequin Blueflag, Larger Blue Flag,Northern Blue Flag, and other variations of those names, is a species of Iris native to North America where it is common in sedge meadows, marshes, and along streambanks and shores. The flower get its name Versicolor from the Greek word Rainbow, in allusion to the prismatic colors of the species. [End text from Wikipedia]
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Noteworthy Characteristics: This cultivar has an diurnal extended blooming habit; its blooms remain open from the early morning until the evening, for at least 16 hours. Each flower lasts for only one day. It blooms at the peak of the daylily bloom in your own garden. This ranges from May in the South to July in the North.
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Stay tuned for next blog posts 😉
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