Monday, January 23, 2012

Oxalis - Macro Monday

     Another dreary January day, so I look to my neglected houseplants for a little color.  Hey, that's interesting, this is a green oxalis, not a purple one...  This plant shows up in the garden store every year around St. Patrick's day and I always fall in love with it's adorable green shamrocks and delicate white flowers, and its charming habit of closing up its leaves every night at bedtime.  There's a burgundy-leaved version but it's the fresh green that appeals to me.  They can live outside here (I think) but I don't really have anyplace suitable to put it in the ground and I usually don't bother keeping it.  However,  this one stayed in its impossibly tiny pot all summer in a tray with cuttings so it got more watering and attention than most of my plants usually do.  In such a tiny pot, I thought it had a slim chance of also getting through the winter, so I brought it inside.  After a very brief winter's nap (too brief?), it's now putting on new growth.
     The purple on the new leaves' undersides caught me by surprise more than once, not just because the tops of the leaves are green, but because the purple is more or less intense as the viewing angle and light angle change.  It's like an outlandish hat worn by the outlandish wife of Mr. Elton in the movie Emma (in the scene where she tells Emma that she plans to throw a party for Jane Fairfax).  Mrs. Elton is wearing a green dress and a green hat, but as she swirls around Emma to conspiratorially take her arm as they walk, the hat changes color remarkably from green to red and back again as the satiny sheen catches the light from different angles.  Or, it's like the colors on some bird's feathers, grackles and starlings most accessibly -- take a good look next time they settle in your yard and gobble up all the seed in your feeders.  Or the spot on a mourning dove's neck as libido awakes in the early spring.  (Really! Make a note to look if you haven't seen it.)
     I just watched Emma again for the upteenth time.  The dialog in this movie always makes me laugh (like Miss Bates's line "it left us speechless!  Speechless, I tell you, and we have not stopped talking about it since.")  More than that, it's a great garden movie.  Once you have watched it as many times as I have, you won't need to pay so much attention to the plot anymore, and you may find yourself absorbed by the gorgeous flowery places, indoors and out, images from a gardener's fantasy.  I just wish I could stop the movie and jump in.  Click here for a trailer, including glimpses of some of the beautiful garden scenes (the colors in the movie are lush and vibrant, despite the trailer looking washed out) and even the outlandish hat very briefly at about 0:34.
     For today's post, I'm joining Lisa's Chaos for Macro Monday for the first time.  To see what other people are looking closely at, visit Lisa's blog.

10 comments:

  1. This is a very interesting n pretty little plant! A bright spot on a dreary day!

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    1. Thanks, it cheered me up too. I'm ready for spring again already! Thanks for visiting.

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  2. Wonderful presentation and details in this photo.

    Happy MM

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  3. I always look for the gardens in movies, too! Half the time I don't know what's going on, but I know what plants were there! Love the look of this little plant, but I don't have one. I'll be sure to look for one at the garden center around St. Patrick's day.

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  4. Very pretty!
    I have oxalis outdoors here in North Mississippi Zone 7, but it is in a semi-protected place under the porch. It is blooming now, but it is not as dainty looking as yours. Leaves are dark green with some purplish underneath. Blooms are white. You can see it on my GBBD post on January 15.
    Love your photo, color, texture, lighting!
    Lea

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  5. Znam tą tego kwiatuszka i mam go w ogródku. Jest naprawdę uroczy. Pozdrawiam. *** I know that the Flower and I have it in the garden. It's really cute. Yours.

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  6. Thanks for all the comments. Kala, I took a peek at your blog and I love the dreamy lighting effect, especially the one of the crocus. And Spare Parts and Pics, your shots of the TV made me laugh. Lea, I'm in Zone 7 too, so maybe I should put this little guy outside, but I guess I'm more worried about whether it will get enough moisture. The photo on your blog is really luscious. Also that mystery spirea, if that's what it is. I think I'm going to have to make some room for another shrub... Giga, I've never gotten a message in Polish before and I'm glad you also gave the translation. Dzięki za odwiedziny. Holley, have you ever seen Rosemary and Thyme? Two landscapers turn into amateur sleuths as one after another unlikely murder happens in their vicinity. The plots are watchable if not brilliant, but the gardens are top-rate! You can get it on Netflix.

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  7. Beautifully photographed. You found a point of interest and beauty and caught it well.

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    1. Thanks for the compliment. I jumped over to your blog and I really like all your photos too, especially the butterflies.

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