I love volunteers; my garden is full of them!Rudbeckia – it volunteered!
My garden often has volunteers of chamomile, chard, Yukon potatoes, snow peas and a few wild plants like chickweed and dock.I love volunteers; my garden is full of them!
I love the little violets!More volunteers (for @Dahlia and @Blueberry Acres and maybe @Pulsegleaner can share some thoughts on the final picture).
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Perhaps, this is a good environment for some of the violets and this location doesn't surprise me for a volunteer since pots with pansies are close by most years.
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Yes, there is a pot beside these but never have we had pansies close to this area. Usually, this is a potted herb area. The only thing I can think of is that pansy seed came here in the compost used in the herb potting soil. BTW, there is a tomato plant in that big pot this year in 100% compost.
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These little violets come back year after year. They may have been here all of the 29 years we been their neighbors. They spread around a little but not much. Other than being so successful at claiming this little corner of our yard, are they anything special? Wild? Invasive? A type of Johnny Jump-up?
Steve
Probably. Could also be horned Pansy, Viola cornuta. To be honest, between the fact they cross pretty readily and have both be bred so much, telling when one is a cornuta or a tricolor is a little hard for me. That's certainly a very common color mix for Johnny Jump Ups.View attachment 66981
These little violets come back year after year. They may have been here all of the 29 years we been their neighbors. They spread around a little but not much. Other than being so successful at claiming this little corner of our yard, are they anything special? Wild? Invasive? A type of Johnny Jump-up?
Steve
I have learned something! This is what I think of as a Johnny Jump Up:they cross pretty readily ... That's certainly a very common color mix for Johnny Jump Ups