Spring Garden
Spring is the perfect season for creativity and creation.
Whether you have a spacious plot, a small balcony, or just a few window boxes, you can use them as an empty blueprint to start creating.
I like planting crabapple trees in my garden. When they bloom, it marks the most important sign of a new year arriving, because they burst forth with all their might, as if no flower could blossom more brilliantly. Between the moss-covered rough trunk and gray-green branches, clusters of soft, wool-like petals fill the space with magnificent radiance, like cotton fluff—beautiful and irresistibly inviting.
It brings me joy. It’s also especially important for all insects that feed on nectar.
That’s how life works—everything complements each other.
Summer Garden
If you want your garden to help supply ingredients, summer is when you’ll need to get busy.
First, prepare the vegetable and fruit seedlings. Some garden work can be postponed, but seedling cultivation and planting cannot be delayed. The summer heat limits your choice of seeds, as not all seedlings can adapt to summer conditions.
After selecting seeds, considering it’s a garden after all, aesthetics can’t be ignored, so you’ll need a planting layout plan. The height, canopy spread, soil requirements of the seedlings—all these factors will affect their “neighborly relations.”
Taking care of seedlings requires constant attention.
Autumn Garden
In autumn, the most eye-catching flowers in my garden are the Autumn Lilies lining both sides of the path.
Autumn Lilies are a fairly beginner-friendly breed, but you can’t just toss them on the ground and forget about them.
They don’t tolerate waterlogging, so if you choose potted planting, you’ll need plenty of drainage holes at the bottom. Similarly, the soil needs good breathability and sufficient nutrients, plus enough height and space for the lily bulbs to grow.
Once the sprouts break through the soil and the lilies bloom successfully, they’ll decorate your garden while bringing you a unique sense of achievement.
Winter Garden
I’ve planted some fruit trees in my garden. These trees need serious winter pruning to stay healthy and productive. Of course, there’s another important reason for pruning—keeping the trees looking beautiful. Shaping a fruit tree into something visually pleasing is incredibly satisfying.
Besides that, as winter approaches, I need to move several Golden Privet plants that were planted in spring from under the shade of the Apple trees to a more forward position in the flower border. They need sufficient light and warmth to survive beautifully through both summer and winter.
Still, it’s hard to avoid a barren garden in winter... unless you only plant flowers that bloom year-round.
Of course, many gardeners choose to forget about their gardens during certain months of the year, but wouldn’t that be a shame?
The Winter Garden has great potential too.
Legend has it…
In a certain ancient land, you can grow the Starwish Flower that grants others’ wishes. Once you grow the Starwish Flower, the Astralis will appear and fulfill your wish.
This is a family legend that cannot be verified.
Legend has it my ancestors hailed from a lost island, once teeming with life and blossoms. Over time, it gradually fell barren, leaving them no choice but to leave.
After moving away, they never found the way back...
Who could be so lucky? I just hope tomorrow brings perfect weather.
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