
Pasiano hard at work with hose and broom, trying to maintain order in the garden.
For Cee’s Flower of the Day prompt.

Pasiano hard at work with hose and broom, trying to maintain order in the garden.
For Cee’s Flower of the Day prompt.


I snapped this agave just in time. The next day I came out and Pasiano had machete’d it to the ground and sent all these little potential plants to the organic dump! Obviously, many of the flowers were completely past their prime, but some at the bottom were just getting ready to pop. A new plant will undoubtedly spring up from one of the hundreds that fell onto the ground both before and as he was cutting it down. It’s happened every year for 17 years now. Like its relative the century plant, it dies back after sending up that colossal shaft that is covered with first flowers and then mini plants. Unlike the century plant that flowers and dies once every ten to twenty years, this one flowers and dies back once a year.
For Cee’s Flower of the Day prompt.
This tiny flower is easy to overlook. Lacking my good camera since its demise, the focus isn’t quite so defined as I would wish. (Excuses, excuses.)
My lot slants so much that when I’m in the pool I’m pretty much looking at the top of the plumeria tree, where most of the blooms are. Steady rains for the past three nights have certainly washed them free of any dust and brought out their colors.

At first I thought this was a different butterfly from yesterday’s, but upon close inspection, I think that the bottom side of the wings are just completely different from the top side. I do believe it is a different flower, though.
For Cee’s Flower of the Day prompt.

Same bouquet, different angle! Fresh, fresh.
For Cee’s Flower of the Day. See her spring lilacs HERE.