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Laura O’Brien from Bridging The Gap in Kansas City! Congratulations, she wins a raspberry pixie daylily! She correctly answered Arum italicum, a plant native to the U.K. It’s in the Araceae family which threw a few contestants off. They thought it was the native Jack-in-the-pulpit—a very good answer, by the way. I love the common names for it which are Cuckoo Pint and Italian Lord-and-Ladies. If you’re in the U.K. stop in at the Cuckoo Pint Pub in Fareham to have a toast to its namesake plant.

I first noticed this plant with its summer berries a couple blocks from my house and I had to know what it was. I finally found one at a local nursery and it has been a success in the shade under my cherry tree. This fall it will send up new leaves that will last all winter to the end of spring.

This photos was taken in spring but the leaves look the same. Notice how much they look like the houseplant, Arrowhead vine, Syngonium. In the spring, a strange looking bloom will appear.

Thank you Wikipedia commons for this photo.

After the sheath goes away, the center thingy becomes the berries. If anyone can fill me in on what you call that vertical appendage, I would appreciate it.

So here we are in July with lovely orange-red berries. Even though my wikipedia source says this plant can be invasive in warm climates, I have never noticed that happening here in Kansas City. It also recommends planting with hostas so the new fall foliage will cover the spent leaves of hosta in the fall and remind you where you planted your hostas. I think the orange berry stalk would look smashing in between hosta leaves as well.

Here’s what Missouri Botanical has to say about it. Mobot to the rescue! That vertical thingy is called a spadix.

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The Garden Center Association Open Garden Tour of my garden was a success considering the temperature was 90+. I had a great time. What gardener doesn’t love showing off her/his personal plot. We had twice as many visitors than the GCA usually has for these events. I’ll have another post about that. But, for now, I want to show some photos of the garden and some things that people found most interesting.

People loved the bike wheel fence and the bicycle gate (not shown). This photo includes from bottom left Kaleidoscope lemon coleus, purple basil and a meyer improved lemon tree with green lemons. To the right of the fence is parsley, chives, pepper and oregano.

I love growing plants up a tuteur. Barely visible this one is covered with pole beans and burgundy sunflowers inside. Surrounding it are broccoli, peppers and eggplants. Behind is a montmorency cherry tree.

Doesn’t every dog need a patio for sunning themselves? Actually this area has become a slope so the mulch would never stay put. I dug it out a bit and put the limestone, filling the cracks with mexican black rocks. The irregular edge makes a nice transition from the concrete to the free shapes of the garden.

Speaking of mulch, people really enjoyed the ingredients of wine corks, peach pits and wooden nickels. Who would have thought it so fascinating?

Nothing edible here but soul-satisfying none the less. From the back, Nikko blue hydrangea, hardy geranium, amaryllis and sedum mixed with hens and chicks.

This dramatic plant is lemongrass, the same plant used in southeast asian cooking. I think you could make some fabulous faux lemonade with it but have yet to try. Anyone have a recipe? Right a miniature rose, front China doll polyanthus rose and more sedum.

Here’s the “garden magazine” shot. I just can’t resist mixing purple plants with green. Lime green really makes a striking accent to the garden. Purple opal basil with Kaleidoscope lemon coleus share a pot with New Zealand phormium.

An eggplant still attached to the mother plant. Leaves always get chewed by flea beetles. French tarragon peeks out from behind the eggplant.

Squash blossom with visitors. A bee does its job pollinating the lower flower. These are winter squash. Cross your fingers to see if they live because I’ve had to do stem surgery to remove vine borers and then there are always the evil squash  bugs that many time frustrate efforts to grow yummy fruits. But, we can enjoy the flowers. Aren’t they wonderful?

The tomatoes are in! These luscious beauties are Country Taste, a hybrid that is supposed to have the old-timey taste of heirloom tomatoes with disease resistance. Looks like a little of ever-present leaf blight got them too.

And last but not least, many people were intrigued by this plant. Do you know what it is? Let me know your answer and if you guess correctly you can be a winner of a raspberry pixie daylily as a prize. Here’s my favorite site for looking up plants: The Missouri Botanical Garden. Sorry, only local delivery.

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Here’s an article that hit home with me. Right now I’m trying to work with a mechanical-minded, heating and cooling client who is trying to work with me, a graphic designer. We send each other e-mails from our respective points of view hoping that the other person understands what we are trying to say. We have meetings. We talk on the phone. During these exchanges I find that I am trying to understand the trials and successes of home energy marketing and he tries to understand focused marketing plans, effective messages and design. Whew! It can be an exhausting learning process.

Many times we have clients that we clash with. We consider them ignorant, elusive or just plain dense. I expect they could think that we are difficult and don’t have their interests at heart. I do care about my clients. After all their success can be my success—a win-win to use that cliche.

So in the interest of peace and good relationships between clients and creatives, here is a post that I thought presented the issue from both points of view. Because no one wants to end up with a result like this cake.

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Hi all, my name is Laurie Chipman and I’m an artist, specifically a graphic designer and illustrator, more specifically a specialist in print media but I hope to broaden my scope to web design, blogging and e-news. So bear with me while I learn to do this.

In a business where you work alone like I do, many times you feel like the only one who is overwhelmed by learning all the stuff you need to keep current. Well, I can tell you that you and I are not alone! There are so many of us out there who are trying to be noticed, to make a living, to figure out social media and e-marketing that it’s just a matter of degree of who knows more and who doesn’t. When I go to networking events like the Freelance Exchange of KC or just talking with people we are all feeling a bit overwhelmed. So I guess we, as communicators or just business people, are in another transition stage. The transitions just seem to come more frequently now.

I have heard, too, that we are in a time of opportunity. Deep down I hope it’s true and really, I believe it is. Set free from the old patterns we can reinvent ourselves which is both scary and exciting. It’s hard not to get paralyzed with the many choices available and how much there is to learn.

So here’s my blog pledge: I promise to be honest, interesting, regular, curious

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It's official. We're open for business.

and I hope sometimes even funny.

And, I want to hear from you! Really. I can talk to myself anytime. Let me know what you think. Send me something funny, something interesting, something thoughtful or challenging. Let’s talk soon.

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