My contribution to this week’s AAA challenge.
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Again ventured into the garden to find some A’s
Our Apple tree is coming along nicely with fruit…
in various stages of development.
However, my favourite is our Agapanthus.
With warmer weather approaching they should all bloom in the near future.
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by frizztext
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Pingback: A-Z Photo Challenge: “A” | unexpectedincommonhours
Wow! Your apples trees, I’m green with envy.
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those look to be very fine apples, Woolly, and the agapanthus – yes it used to grow in my garden in Nairobi where it had THREE seasons which was most confusing to this particular gardener.
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We have had some seasonal irregularities but never three seasons during each year. The apples are on a miniature tree, about 4-6 feet tall. The downside of miniature trees is that our Labrador is quite happy to help herself to the lower fruit.
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My Labradors used to that too. Such opportunists.
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So true
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First lemons now apples. Together, the ROCK!
Yummy post.
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*they
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This is the first message I read…at 0700. I thought you were referring to me missing a word in my post. Looked through the post, still confused came back to messages and noticed your first message. 🙂
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I’m so sorry I wasted your time! I need to stop being so anal about typos – or PROOFREAD my own typing!
Again, my apologies.
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No need to apologise. MGW usually picks up on some of my errors and at 0700 that was the first thing I thought of AND you were helping correcting my stuff up (technical terminology). So relieved to see it was yours not mind
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😉
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They do rock. Our fruit trees are just beginning to bear fruit. We have planted mostly miniature trees. Hopefully they will remain small miniature.
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Your agapanthus looks like wild onions, at least the ones I have seen and eaten. 🙂
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They certainly have a bulbous root system which is onion like, but I have never heard of anyone trying to eat them.
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You can eat at least the flowers and bulb of the wild onion. You can tell if they’re wild onion or not because they have an onion-y smell to then. I think you can eat the stems too. It’s a good thing to know if you come across them in the wilds and you’re hungry. I don’t know if they’re the same as your agapanthus or not, but the flowers, at least, look the same. Take a nip of one of the flowerlets next time you see one and let me know. 🙂
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Don’t think they are onion as they have no smell.
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Then, definitely not wild onion. I had to look it up, though. Got my curiosity up. Your flower is also known as the Lily of the Nile, or African lily in the UK. So, there you have it. 🙂
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Yes, it is a native of Africa.
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