white hellebore flower ('Cinnamon Snow')

A Welcome Sight

NB: A note for WordPress Reader users – you need to click on the title of the post again to see the full photograph. (Otherwise you see just a tiny section!)

February has brought the opening of hellebore flowers in my garden. Along with a scattering of snowdrops, they’re the first of the year’s flowers. (Although there are still pink flowers on the viburnum ‘Dawn’ and yellow ones on the winter-flowering jasmine. But they’ve been around for quite a while now.)

It’s a cheering sight to see something pretty at last, after a rather wet and muddy winter. And now I have something that makes me want to be outside in the garden with my camera…or else indoors in my little studio, as with the flower below. I reckon that I can promise that there will be more hellebore photographs here very soon!

hellebore flower - white with pink spots

14 thoughts on “A Welcome Sight”

    1. We do have some winter-flowering shrubs and plants that are tough enough to cope with winter weather. Hellebores are pretty tough too and there’s one – Helleborus niger, the ‘Christmas Rose’ – that flowers very early, even in January. The white background/indoor photography is a comfortable choice when the ground is wet and muddy around the plants! 🙂

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  1. A welcome sight indeed. The first hellebore of the season. I must check to see if mine is in flower. I have been dashing through my garden to get inside for weeks. Looking forward to seeing your next lot of flowers.

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    1. It feels as if the worst of winter could be over when you start seeing some new flowers around. (But hoping that I’m not tempting fate to send us another ‘Beast from the East’ by saying that!) We’ve had a short spell of good gardening weather here but the rain will be back tomorrow…bleh!

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  2. So many hellebore photos I see show the flowers with their heads down. It’s nice to see these ‘faces’! Have you ever tried putting a one or two pixel ‘frame’ around the photos to help set them off? One that picks up a color from the flower might be especially nice. On the other hand, they do look attractive in your page’s broad expanse of white.

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