Hellebore, my friend,
Tilting up your Winter smile.
Stay with me, till Spring?
Use your imagination, said Jude. I really didn’t need to. They were just waiting for me to notice them, so I could enter the Winter Garden challenge this week. My Lazy Poet friend Gilly found some too. We now have a chorus of hellebore!


These are lovely photos. I was given a hellebore in a pot as an indoor plant just before Christmas and it seemed to be doing well at first, but now it is looking a little sad, so I have put it outside to take its chance and if it survives it will be going into the ground to flower, hopefully, next Christmas.
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I’ve never come across them as an indoor plant, I must admit. Ours keep coming back year on year. They were uprooted and split only a couple of months ago because we had some garden shenanigans with new fences. They don’t seem to have objected at all 🙂
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I am hoping my plant is going to be as robust as yours!
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How lovely Jo..
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Pretty little faces, Sue. If I’d waited a little longer I might have caught them with a dusting of snow. Brrrh! 🙂
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You know what they say about great minds, Jo. 😉 Beautiful images and haiku. I hope those Hellebore listen to your plea.
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They got a dusting of snow this morning, Ad 🙂 Freshened us all up!!!
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I’m sure you’re quite fresh enough, without snow. 🙂
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These are gorgeous, Jo.
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I’m hoping harbingers of Spring but it was f-f-f-freezing this morning 🙂
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Here in Hawaii this morning it is already 24 degrees C and it is going to be another glorious day! I love holidays.
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Beautiful Jo, both haiku and photos… 🙂
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Thanks, sweetheart! Happy Thursday to you 🙂
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Thanks Jo…Happy weekend to you, I’ll be over asap 🙂 Big hugs xx
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So beautiful, Jo! Love the soft colors and the details of the flowers. 🙂
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Such pretty faces, Amy! I love them 🙂
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So beautiful – love the little freckles. At first, I was surprised I’d never run into these, then the mention of snow … no doubt they would never survive a hot, dry climate. Ahh, the benefits of rain and cold.
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Benefits!!!! 🙂 🙂 I needed two top coats this morning 🙂
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Lovely!
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Thank you! 🙂
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So beautiful, amazing… 🙂
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Delightfully dusted with snow this morning 🙂
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Gorgeous photos, and a lovely nudge to walk out to the garden this morning and look at the progress of my hellebores.
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Mine quite took me by surprise, Charlie. Lots of snowdrops too! 🙂
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I so love hellabores, Jo, and especially the freckly ones. Not too far away from us is Ashwoods nursery that holds the national collection. To visit when all are blooming is to induce feelings of almost insuperable greed. I am only reined in by the lack of suitable garden around my house. I do have one or two or three though 🙂
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Or five? Do show, Tish! Jude’s are a failure this year 🙂 Ours had to be moved and split up when we had garden fences replaced this Summer and they’re still happy.
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Will see what I can do, Jo – hunting the hellabores. We’ve had some snow now. Not enough to be scenic though – just cold after all this hot winter. Brrr.
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Lovely! Mine aren’t quite this far along but I’m watching and waiting. 😊
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I was totally surprised by mine! 🙂 And the dusting of snow this morning!
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beautiful, I have a few in my garden, too
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They’re lovely! We have snowdrops too 🙂
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yes, we, too, also filled ones 🙂
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I ended up on your old blog yesterday! Expect I’ll find my way back 🙂
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well, I hope so, I don’t want that somebody will find you famished in front of the computer, hehe
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Such calming photographs, Jo. Beautiful!
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So pretty, Jill! Anything but calm here this morning when I battled through wind and snow to meet a friend for her birthday lunch. Ended well though- we got free choc fudge cake! 🙂
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That was worth the battle! 🙂
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Now that’s a pleasant surprise, I was expecting crimson coloured cyclamen (there has to be a haiku in that somehow), but I shall happily accept your hellebore, since mine shows absolutely no sign of flowering this year 😦
(and I see you have been playing again, very pretty frosty window 😀 )
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The cyclamen photos didn’t turn out so well and I knew you had a dearth of hellebore. Couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw Gilly’s post this morning. I shouted Snap! loud enough to wake the street 🙂 I was going for a snowy effect. If I’d waited a little longer I could have had the real thing! Chaos on the roads up here this morning but it’s gone again now.
If you read this in time to watch The One Show I believe they’re featuring the sea glass project this evening. I imagine in conjunction with Lumiere showing in London this weekend.
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Beautiful – the photos and the poem! Made me feel all dreamy and romantic 🙂
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Until the snow arrived this morning! It was flipping freezing here 🙂 Gone again now, though!
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Here in Italy they are called “bucaneve”( which means that they make a hole in the snow!) and it’s so pleasant to see them here and there during a snowfall ….
Your photos are particularly poetic and delicate, but I see no snow all around!
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We call them Winter or Lenten roses but I’d forgotten. 🙂 The snow is just around the corner! I’m heading for Newcastle today and I’m told it’s snowing there 😦
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Splendid, gentle, unbelievably beautiful!
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Thank you! Have you seen Gilly’s? Her haiku is so much better 🙂
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You have brightened up the day for the hellebore and all of us with the lovely photos and the poem, Jo! 🙂 I’m partial to this flower, but not so to your artistic work. 🙂
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It’s such a pretty thing, isn’t it, Dina? 🙂 I often use the flower heads to float in a glass bowl, but I still have flowers from my Christmas visitors. Thanks a lot 🙂 Hope you’re having a happy week!
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I love the hellebore flowers. They are real winter flowers that’s why they are called “winter rose” . Beautiful photos!
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I should have thought of that to use in the haiku, Ineke! Ah, well… another time 🙂 Thank you!
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