Wednesday, July 6, 2011
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Bambusa bambini
With the recent onset of summer weather (and temperatures hovering around the century mark), some of our clumping bamboos in the Bambusa family have kicked their shoot production into high gear.
Bambusa bamboos are native to the tropical and subtropical areas of Asia. The generation of new shoots—a process so aptly called “shooting”—is usually triggered by the onset of the summer monsoons. Since the bamboos in our garden are irrigated on a regular basis, it is the summer heat that triggers shooting rather than the sudden availability of abundant moisture.
The entrance to our front yard is dominated by two Bambusa: Bambusa chungii ‘Barbellata’ (or Baby Blue Bamboo) and Bambusa multiplex ‘Alphonse Karr’. Both are putting out shoots that are much larger in diameter than last year. It will be exciting to see how tall they will grow!
| Bambusa chungii ‘Barbellata’ (left) and Bambusa multiplex ‘Alphonse Karr’ (right, behind the gate) |
| On Saturday I did some pruning on the ‘Alphonse Karr’. I removed some lower branches to expose the culms (a technique called “legging up”) and cut out some older, smaller culms that were leaning excessively. I think it made quite a difference (“before” on the left, “after” on the right). |
| Some of the new shoots on this ‘Alphonse Karr’. There are about 10 new shoots in total. |
| New shoots on Bambusa chungii ‘Barbellata’. These are approaching 3/4” in diameter. |
The Alphonse Karr in our backyard is shooting, too, but the large Oldham’s Bamboo (Bambusa oldhamii) outside the front yard fence is still playing coy. I expect it to start shooting very soon, and I’m hoping for culms that are noticeably above 1” in diameter.
Another Bambusa I planted last year is busy as well: Asian Lemon Bamboo (Bambusa eutuldoides ‘Viridivittata’). It’s planted in the front yard inside the fence, right next to our now-aging tower of jewels. In fact, you can see the bright yellow culms of this bamboo in many photos included in my original tower of jewels post. The new culms are a pale lemon color (see the culm on the left in the photo below), while the older culms have aged to a rich yellow reminiscent of Painted Bamboo (Bambusa vulgaris ‘Vittata’), a tropical species we can’t grow here.
| Asian Lemon Bamboo (Bambusa eutuldoides ‘Viridivittata’) |
Since we had a much cooler and longer spring than usual this year, plants aren’t following their customary schedule (tomatoes, for instance, are woefully behind). But with nothing but summer weather in the forecast, the stragglers should soon catch up, including the Bambusas who seem to be taking their time getting going.
Monday, July 4, 2011
Red, white, and blue
Happy birthday, U.S.A.!
- This land is your land, this land is my land
- From California to the New York Island
- From the Redwood Forest to the Gulf Stream waters
- This land was made for you and me.
- From California to the New York Island
- As I went walking that ribbon of highway
- I saw above me that endless skyway
- I saw below me that golden valley
- This land was made for you and me.
- I saw above me that endless skyway
- I roamed and I rambled and I followed my footsteps
- To the sparkling sands of her diamond deserts
- While all around me a voice was sounding
- This land was made for you and me.
- To the sparkling sands of her diamond deserts
- When the sun came shining, and I was strolling
- And the wheat fields waving and the dust clouds rolling
- A voice was chanting, as the fog was lifting,
- This land was made for you and me.
- And the wheat fields waving and the dust clouds rolling
Woodie Guthrie
| Echinacea ‘Tomato Soup’ |
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| Echinacea ‘Fragrant Angel’ |
| Chaste tree (Vitex agnus-castus) |
Sunday, July 3, 2011
Mojito, anyone?
How do you survive a heat wave like the one we’re having? Stay cool, do as little as possible, and relax with a refreshing drink. Next to the margarita, my favorite summer drink is the mojito. It’s quick and easy to throw together. There are many variations on the theme (this one claims to be the “real” mojito), but here’s how I make mine:
1 sprig of mint (about 6 leaves)
1 tablespoon baker’s sugar (aka caster sugar)
Juice of two limes
2.5 oz rum
4-5 ice cubes
club soda
Put the mint leaves in a highball glass and add the sugar. Use a muddler (the handle of a wooden spoon works well, too) to gently mash the mint leaves and sugar together; the idea is to release the essential oils in the mint, not to shred the mint to pieces. Add the lime juice, ice, and club soda. Stir briefly and decorate with more mint. This makes a fairly sour mojito, so add more sugar if you like.
Reading this post, you’re probably wondering if I’ve had a mojito too many. After all, this is supposed to be a gardening blog, not a Happy Hour guide.
Actually, there is a method to my madness. The mojito inspiration came from a trip to Green Acres nursery in Sacramento yesterday. My mom is visiting, and I wanted to show here what is arguably the largest nursery in the Sacramento area. At Green Acres, I found a plant I’d only read about: a new elephant ear (Colocasia esculenta) cultivar called—you guessed it!—’Mojito’. The leaves are absolutely stunning with their contrasting green and black flecks. The stems are mottled, too! Needless to say I ended up buying one.
| Colocasia esculenta ‘Mojito’ |
| I’ve never seen such beautiful leaves |
| The intricate variations are amazing |
| Can you tell how much I like the leaves? |
| The stem is mottled, too |
I ended up putting my ‘Mojito’ in a large clay pot and placed it next to my variegata aralia (Fatsia japonica 'Variegata') and 'Shiroshima' bamboo (Hibanobambusa tranquilans 'Shiroshima').
| Potted ‘Mojito’ in our backyard |
Saturday, July 2, 2011
Golden lotus banana is blooming!
While the golden lotus banana (Musella lasiocarpa) doesn’t produce edible fruit, it is very cold-hardy and produces what I think are among the most beautiful leaves on any large-leaf tropical.
In an earlier post I showed photos of the winter damage to our specimen and how it was starting to come back. In the three months since that post, it has positively exploded. The pups (offsets) surrounding the mother plant have been sending up leaf after leaf so the clump now takes up twice as much room as it did last year, making for a lush focal point in that corner of our front yard.
But the most exciting development is that the mother plant has started to flower. Check this blog post for a detailed description of the process. Unlike the plant in that post, ours looks much more lush because the central trunk is surrounded by a good two dozen pups in full leaf.
Here are some photos showing the development of the mother plant in the last month:
| June 9, 2011 The two largest leaves on the central trunk are beginning to lower into a horizontal position. That was the first indication that something was up. |
| June 9, 2011 Instead of regular leaves (typically new leaves are larger than the ones before), the central trunk is producing short stubby leaves as the top of the trunk is beginning to swell. |
| June 11, 2011 More swelling in the center. |
| June 22, 2011 The flower structure is beginning to take shape. |
| June 25, 2011 First hint of color on the bracts. |
| June 28, 2011 Now you can clearly see the flowers amidst the bracts. |
| July 1, 2011 More bracts are peeling off the “artichoke” in the center. |
| July 1, 2011 Flowers |
According to Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, the lotus-like inflorescence lasts up to 250 days. At some point after flowering the mother plant will die, leaving the pups to carry on. I don’t really know if the trunk will simply rot away—that’s another one of those exciting discoveries gardeners like us get to make on a regular basis—but I’ll be sure to keep you posted.
| June 28, 2011 Entire clump with flowering “artichoke” |
| June 28, 2011 Looking at this photo, it’s easy to see why Musella lasiocarpa is revered as a sacred plant by Buddhist monks in Southern China. |
Thursday, June 30, 2011
Roadkill cactus
Yes, that is its actual name. Whoever named it certainly had a sense of humor. It’s called roadkill cactus because the pads are so flat that it looks like they’ve been run over by a car.
I had never seen a roadkill cactus before, but when I spotted this one at Lowe’s a couple of weeks ago, I had to have it. There are actually two plants in the pot, and they do look a bit like cardboard cutouts of a cactus drawn by a child.
The current Latin name of this cactus is Consolea rubescens. From its former name, Opuntia rubescens, you can tell that it is related to the prickly pears of the American Southwest. Roadkill cactus is native to Florida and the Caribbean and can take more water than its desert-dwelling cousins. The downside is that it’s much less cold hardy (zone 9b) than the prickly pears but I think that mine will be fine in its spot on the front porch.
I just love my roadkill cactus!
| The marks on the pads resemble tire tracks left by a car |
| In this photo… |
| …and in this one you can see how flat the pads are |
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Sacramento Valley from the air
On Monday I had the opportunity to go flying with our friend B. who is visiting from Australia. I had flown with him several times before, and I was only too happy to do it again. The world is so different from the air—what looks familiar on the ground sometimes isn’t all that easy to identify from above.
We flew from University Airport here in Davis up to Willows, about 60 miles north, had breakfast at the airport diner (yes, there is such a thing even in Willows, population 6,000), and then flew back. It wasn’t a long flight, but I was mentally exhausted—in a good way—when we landed because I had done so much looking and photographing.
The Sacramento Valley is a major rice-growing region. The rice fields still have lots of water in them so the reflections of the sun were phenomenal. Just as impressive was seeing the geometry of fields and orchards, and the juxtaposition between irrigated areas—green and lush—and non-irrigated land—brown and parched.
Just before landing in Davis, we made two passes over our neighborhood so I could take pictures of our house. Coincidentally, my wife and daughters were in the front yard as we flew over, and they actually heard and saw our plane. In one of my photos, the three of them are visible when you magnify it enough!
While this post has absolutely nothing to do with gardening, I hope you’ll still come along on this visual journey. It’ll give you a better idea of the part of California that I call home.
| Our Cessna 172 |
| Interstate 80, looking west towards the Bay Area |
| Rice fields off Interstate 5 north of Woodland |
| Check out the patterns of the levees |
| More rice fields |
| Intriguing looking bodies of water—no idea what they are! |
| Rice fields (top) and Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge (bottom) |
| Man-made landscape vs. natural |
| In some photos, the rice fields looked like they had received a dusting of snow |
| Interesting patterns |
| Yuba City |
| Sutter Buttes, the world’s smallest mountain range |
| Orchard and tilled field |
| Giant orchard and fields |
| I love this photo—wonder what is at the end of this road? |
| Edge of a circular field—check out the saw-blade edge! |
| Row of oleander bushes separating the north- and southbound lanes of Interstate 5 in Willows |
| Road intersecting with an irrigation canal |
| Orchard and rice fields |
| Crazy pattern quilt |
| Amazing contrast between irrigated parcel and the parched landscape around it (Dunnigan Hills) |
| Our neck of the woods (our house marked in yellow) |
| Another view of our house |
| Close-up of our house. You can see how small our lot actually is. |
| Landing at University Airport |
