Foliage and the last flowers
Today ’s photos are from Carla Zambelli Mudry in Malvern , Pennsylvania .
It was a beautiful lateOctoberday after several gloomy days . I ’ve been busy in the garden , and I even stretch a bed because I ask a home for shrubs that I was n’t quite trusted would fit anyplace else ! The last trees and shrub went in today , but I still have plenty ofbulbsleft to plant .
I have been planting a lot of bulb and enjoying lateroses .

Black - eyed Susans(Rudbeckiafulgida , Zones 3–9 ) and Nippon daisies(Nipponanthemum nipponicum , Zones 5–9 ) are still bloom too .
The first of the enchantress hazels(Hamamelisvirginiana , Zones 3–8 ) is blooming .
My seven - boy tree(Heptacodiummiconioides , Zones 5–9 ) is finally mature enough to bloom , and the feathery reddish flowers are really unique .

A tea camellia(Camelliasinensis , Zones 6–9 ) is also bloom . It ’s name is “ Sochi . ”
Marty Long continues with the tree cutting , and a woodpecker has just issue from the wood . The owl is almost concluded , and the fox is being joined slow by some of her kits . Two squirrels are trail each other around the automobile trunk , and a racoon is there as well ! Every day he carve , it get more beautiful .
I mean we are in acme vividness here , and the bright redness of a coupleJapanese maples(Acer palmatum , Zones 5–9 ) combined with coruscate yellowness joins the beech(Fagusgrandifolia , Zones 3–9 ) and hickory(Caryasp . ) trees .

The brilliant yellow-bellied dusk color from a Nipponese maple looks beautiful framing a Buddha statue against a Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree proboscis .
But you ca n’t forget the mythical arras of ruby-red hues that is my franklinia(Frankliniaalatamaha , Zones 5–8 ) tree diagram mightily now .
And a path made from cutting log sections invites you to explore the beauties of thefall garden .

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