The sun was clear and hot. The wind was just enough to keep it comfortable, 
and the roses are starting to pop! This is the kind of day and the condition 
of roses which makes me know the Southern California desert is the greatest 
place to grow them! Most are completely clean. The only exceptions? Those 
which are in less than great spots and are too crowded. The lilacs have 
exploded! Blue Skies is the best of the bunch. Every branch tip is a huge 
pyramid of bloom. All are on the top of the great bush, and look wonderful 
against the Persian turquoise sky. The temperature and humidity were perfect 
to carry their fragrance twenty feet across the garden. What a thrill!

The author's garden later that summer.
Taboo proudly carried huge, black velvet opening blooms with blood red 
centers, against its plum/green foliage. The combination would have made 
Countess Dracula's heart race! LOL! Barcelona, Only Love, Kardinal (1930s), 
Night and Nigrette were also nearly black. Double Delight, the paisley leafed 
Liggett clone, bore nearly sixty opening and full blown flowers! It's badly 
virused, grows like a danged weed, and blooms more heavily than any other 
I've ever seen.  Mrs. R. G. Sharman-Crawford (Barbara Worl) has nearly 
doubled her size! There are crimson buds popping all over the bush. The light 
is bright, but the air is cool, so the outer petals are the expected 
mauve-pink, while the inner ones glow with a darker pink. Secret offered 
thirty plus buds and blooms against its dark, dense, totally clean foliage. 
Basye's Legacy has burst forth with fresh, shiny, bright green foliage and 
should begin throwing buds very soon. Montecito is a mountain of white! All 
those single blooms fluttering in the breeze like a swarm of huge, white 
butterflies. Twilight Mist has popped new bronzy foliage all over the large 
plant. There were nearly a hundred open blooms fluttering in the wind!  What 
a sight! Those colors are impossible to describe, with peach chiffon, cafe au 
lait silk, ivory and lavender pink all appearing in the same clusters.
Autumn was still harder to share. Old gold, crimson veins, buff, purple, 
orange and all the colors of a sunset all in one, intensely fragrant bloom. 
Nellie Mosler clematis is eating the fence! There were easily two dozen huge, 
lavender blooms studded all along its canes. Fedtschenkoana is pushing new 
growth in all directions. The afternoon sun illuminated the new canes and 
prickles like ruby slivers with gray/green and lavender jade cabochons. Its 
smoky Noble fir scented foliage was detectable from many feet away. Flamingo 
is visible from all over the West end of the garden. It's thrown itself into 
the Mexican Elderberry and is popping its huge, brilliant pink, single blooms 
with their maroon stamen and clove fragrance all through the tree.
Nigel Hawthorne boasted nineteen open blooms, while Tigris only held three. 
Neither were easily studied, as Nessie waved her double, pink, incredibly 
fragrant wands through the air like she was swimming against the current. I 
wanted to cut some blooms, but it seemed a sin to mar the yards long canes 
with their large clusters of flowers. Which ones would I have wasted? Too 
difficult to decide, so they remain on the monster plant to perfume the air 
another day. Why is my camera never where the flowers are?
Nearly every plant on the hill is loaded with buds. When these pop, they'll 
hear them for miles! LOL! What a crime to have to work when there is so much 
to expect and so much excitement coming so close, in the garden!
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