Showing posts with label central Florida. Show all posts
Showing posts with label central Florida. Show all posts

Thursday, March 26, 2026

It's Spring in Central Florida With Trumpet Trees & Azaleas in Bloom

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Tabebuia, commonly known as trumpet trees, are spectacular tropical flowering trees known for their explosive, often leafless, spring blooms in shades of pink, yellow, or white. Primarily native to Central/South America, these trees reach 20–50 feet tall and thrive in full sun and well-drained soil.



 It's spring in central Florida with pink and yellow tabebuia or trumpet trees in blooms.  For a brief time, the blossoms appear like magic. I can never get enough of blossoming trees. I just want to drive and hunt for them.  

 

 


 

 Here at the condo, the garden in the center of our wrapped condo building has azaleas in bloom. 

 


 

 

 


 

 I hope you are enjoying spring in all its new life wherever you are.

 

  








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Thursday, March 19, 2026

End of the Camellias Season

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Camellias are popular, long-lived, evergreen shrubs (or small trees) renowned for their glossy foliage and stunning, rose-like blooms that appear from fall to spring. As staples of Southern gardens, they bloom in white, pink, and red, thriving in acidic, well-draining soil and partial shade in zones 6-10. Here at the condo, the bush in the center garden finished blooming last week. The bush by the walkway from parking to the condo building has been blooming steadily. It is slowing down, and I believe the end of the camellia season is almost here.

 

 


 





 

 


 


 


 

 

 

 

 

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Thursday, February 26, 2026

February’s Full Moon, The Snow Moon

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February’s full moon, known as the Snow Moon, reflects the month’s typically heavy snowfall. Capt. Jonathan Carver’s early writings describe Native American traditions linking this moon to winter’s harshest storms. Other names for it include the Bald Eagle Moon, Hungry Moon, and Groundhog Moon.

Fox 13’s weatherman, Paul Dellegado, shared photos on Facebook of February's full moon from around central Florida. They are so beautiful that I am sharing them with you. 

  

          The nearly full “Snow Moon” rising in the east . 📷 Bebe Barcus in Venice.

 

The beautiful “Snow Moon” rising in the eastern sky over Thonotosassa.

 ðŸ“· Becca Ham

 

 

 “Snow Moon” looks spectacular tonight 📷 Jackie Atchison Bradley in Englewood

 

 

    “Snow Moon” rising over Sarasota  by Dylan Jon Wade Cox Photography

 

 

 I hope you enjoyed the photos.


 


 


 

 


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Thursday, February 12, 2026

Camellias In Bloom In Our Central Florida Garden

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 Camellias are popular, long-lived, evergreen shrubs (or small trees) renowned for their glossy foliage and stunning, rose-like blooms that appear from fall to spring. As staples of Southern gardens, they bloom in white, pink, and red, thriving in acidic, well-draining soil and partial shade in zones 6-10. 

 

If you visited me before on my old blog, you probably know how much I love flowers.  I've updated my header with a floral graphic similar to part of my old blog's header. What do you think?

Here in central Florida, we are in zone 9B which is semi-tropical.  Our two camellia bushes get buds in December and bloom late January, February, and into March. I look forward to the short time of flowers in winter. The freezes we had two weeks ago, made the buds brown and the flowers too.  Now we are back to beautiful white flowers.

 

 


 

 


 

 




 

It irritated me when I lost a week of flowers, but all is well now. Hopefully, we don't get more freezes coming south.

 

 


 

 


 

 


 

 

 


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Thursday, January 29, 2026

January Morning Sky

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For the last month, as snow storms hit other areas of the country, Florida has gotten multiple cold fronts coming in from the north. You wake up to gray skies, thin gray clouds, and little sun. It looks like snow clouds to me but we’re too far south. Often the cold fronts bring us cold to the bone rain. (I know it’s not cold to northerners, but it’s cold to Floridians.) So I am always happy when the gray is blown away and blue skies return with thin wispy white clouds.

 


 


 

 The photos are from a morning when the rain stopped, and the sun came out.

 

 


 

 





Just for fun, I’m sharing a funny meme I saw on Facebook.

 


 

 


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