Thursday, August 24, 2006

Begonia pot

Since you so kindly sent me the begonia links, shall we share some begonias?

Here's one I bought somewhere, sometime up there, survived the move and seems to be content in current pot along with a hydrangea, ivy, and an angel:I have three more (two angel-wing style and one rex) that have been inside the house since we moved, and therefore not thriving, no doubt due to dry air and not a heck of a lot of light. I've been dithering back and forth between keeping them inside another month until it cools down or just taking them outside now, like I've done the vast majority of my other house-plants, keeping them in the shade and hosing periodically, and today I decided on the latter--we'll see if they perk up and get photographable...

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Spoils and Views of the Weekend Nursery Hunt!

First place we went to was It's a Jungle. This is a wonderful place specializing in orchids and roses, oh and a few tropicals like citrus and bromeliads. It was also a great place to try out the new camera, although I'm still figuring out the focus on really close-up shots (a lot of my pics of orchids were too fuzzy, alas). Check out the LIST of roses they carry! It goes ON AND ON! Below is a shot of Himself wandering the rose aisles. I held off on roses this time--not a good time of year to plant.

I did come away with some orchids though! My lord--he had all kinds of orchids and so many of everything! Phals, Paphs, Cattleyas, Oncidiums, fabulous shapes, fantastic colors! I bought two out-of-bloom Paphs. that I am hoping from the names will be green/white (Rogers-Fujikawa X 'Green Ghost) and very dark (Black Stallion X Onyx). $15 apiece!!!! I was thrilled! Our Lowes consistently carries Phalenopses, but I had despaired of ever seeing Paphs again (and a couple of the ones I'd brought down here had dried up). My other purchase was a really nice Vriesea Splendens bromeliad:


The second place was Pots and Plants (the only web-site for which seems to be the live flamingo cam one). Here's where I got my cool pot, which you see below proudly carrying the weeping barbados cherry.

Friday, August 11, 2006

Dreaming of the Autumn Garden...

(NB--I have fixed the links on the sidebar of this page--they should work now, so enjoy!)

This was NOT a good time to get the full Wayside Gardens catalog in the mail! Because now I want lots of stuff! There seems to be more in the catalog than on-line, but maybe not--the pictures are prettier in any case. And then ON TOP OF THAT, they sent me two emails in the last two weeks morning. The most recent touting sales on late summer-autumn bloomers, and there is a salvia there that I am coveting--at least I know I can't go wrong with salvia around here! This one is a bicolored 'Mohave Sage' salvia: "such blooms -- the petals are azure-blue, the bracts are rich rose, and they combine to create an effect that looks like rich plum-purple from far away! Sweetly fragrant, the blooms arise on tall stems held above the aromatic silvery-green foliage, which keeps this evergreen handsome (and fragrant) in all seasons." Yes, please!

Earlier there was one showing off Wayside's some new heuchara "varieties that draw upon native Southeastern parentage to display rich colors that stand up to sweltering sun without fading." Ahhhhhh!
From top clockwise: Citronelle, Mocha, Brownies, and Caramel (I even love the names!)

Then, just browsing the on-line catalog I found Clematis 'Fascination', which "reaches 4 to 5 feet long and sets hundreds of small, bell-shaped 1 1/2-inch blooms over a long summer season. Each flower is rich violet edged in silver, breathtakingly beautiful and ready for cutting or garden enjoyment." They recommend pot culture as well, and I think it would look awfully sweet on the front porch twining around our nondescript metal pillasters...

I am mourning over the fact that I cannot grow peonies here since it's too hot here in the summer and not cold enough in the winter, but it's probably a darn good thing or these might have to come home with me! The top one is 'Pink Hawaiian Coral' and the bottom one is 'Green Halo'. Waah! As you know, I am a complete sucker for peonies and need to move somewhere cooler if only to grow them again! I did transport some tree peonies down here and one herbacious one that I bought up North, but had not seen bloom yet, "Prince of Darkness" (it is supposedly a dark maroon, but I haven't even been able to find a picture on the web) They are in pots in the theory that that will allow them to be cooler faster and longer than if they were in the ground. I lost one due to, I think, a lack of watering in the winter, but still have one purple and one yellow tree peony, and the herbaceous one. They all leafed out this spring, but did not bloom--still recovering poor dears...

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Dog Days of Summer!

Well, as far as depressing gardening times, this stack right up there with winter in the frozen North! It's incredibly hot and dry here. It's incredibly hot lots of places right now, but the lack of rain makes it particularly bad in these parts. Water, water, water! Every day a little bit somewhere in the yard. I've planted a lot of things that don't require a lot of water on purpose--like sages, but seeing as so many things are not well established--with recent garden add-ons, tranplants, new trees etc., even heat and drought tolerant plants need to be watered pretty conscientiously to help them get going and keep going.

As I talked about on the other blog, when I went out of town recently for 10 days, Himself was charged with all the watering duties. This was not an easy task, because, unlike jobless me who can water a little in the morning and a little at night, he could really only do it at night. The yard beds looked pretty darn good when I got back so he was diligent in running around with the hose and sprinklers, god bless 'em. But the potted plants on and around the back patio--not so good! He obviously didn't water them EVERY DAY, which one must, especially since a large number of them are bonsais or pre-bonsais, and there was a bit of a holocaust there upon my return. After a couple weeks of avid watering a few look to be recuperating, some have been replaced, but others, that I have still been holding out for look to be stone dead. A couple of the micro-mini roses are included in that, but I can order them again from Uncommon Rose in September. What I'm more upset about is the weeping Barbados Cherry I lovingly brought in the RV from Up North--no sign of leaves returning at all. Now--I can find BC's around here in abundance--they are grown as shrubs here, but I don't know that I've seen a weeping one offered for sale. Will have to check the Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center's Fall sale in a couple months and/or some nurseries in the Big City, as I'm pretty sure I'm oughta luck here. Another really sad one is a fabulous black cherry tree sapling I was making a bonsai of. I found it at a local nursery, growing at a definite sideways angle, like a fan, in its nursery pot. The proprietor, a natury-hippy type, had found it growing like that somewhere out in the county, dug it up and brought it to his nursery---seemed like a perfect match for me since I don't suppose too many people would want to buy a tree already growing sideways.... Alas--il est mort, je pense...

Now, the other issue is a problem with some insect eating the leaves off my herb-rose garden plants. I had a verifiable problem with snails earlier in the year, and when I started noticing the lavender and herbs getting denuded again in the week before I left, I put out snail bait, but wasn't really catching too many snail. Hmm, I thought and then went out of town. Got back and it looked like a bomb had gone off in that bed! ALL the herbs were nibbled to their stalks and they, whatever they were, had started on the roses, and the fig tree and showed no signs of stopping. I was pretty stymied as I did not see any signs of pests over several mornings---snails, caterpillars etc., but as it was obviously some kind of leaf-cutter/chewer I asked at a local nursery and was given Permethrin to spray on the garden, in a bottle you attach to the hose so that the poison mixes with the water and sprays out. Well, I performed like a Keystone Cop--attached to a wildly spraying hose-bottle I proceeded in spraying the garden bed, and myself quite thoroughly--ick. But ironically, as I was spraying, I noticed a gigantic yellow and black grasshopper-locust thing on the fence just outside the rose-herb bed, in the vicinity of the fig tree, and, figuring I had found one of the culprits, doused him too. (Then I went inside and took a shower).

Don't know if this has solved my problem. I haven't seen any more 'hoppers (do they eat in the dead of night?), and it's hard to tell, after almost complete devastation, whether the eating of leaves has stopped. There were very few left you see, and while I haven't noticed complete and final denuding of my roses, it's hard to know if some of the gnawed leaf edges are from before the spraying or after. Plus, it's so hot and the plants are so stressed, that one has to be very careful spraying things on them--along with the Permethrin it looks like I can use the Neem oil based spray I already had around to discourage munching, but you have to do it all early in the morning and hope that the leaves, what few are left, don't burn too much. The roses are taking an especially long time to leaf back out, which I chalk up to stress--but it makes me very nervous. A few of the lavender plants look to be quite dead and unlikely to leaf again. Oh--and after all the poisons--I can't harvest any of my culinary herbs anyway, even if they should come back! So I guess the plan is to just keep watering and spraying for the sake of the roses, and just leave the rest to do what it will until the weather breaks in September or October, then pull them up and re-plant the herb garden entirely. I have a feeling that that is what a lot of people around here end up doing anyway when the summer is particularly bad heat/drought/bug-wise.

Sigh.

UPDATE:
Well, the weeping barbados cherry came back---oddly enough I only noticed it AFTER I found a new one at a local nursery. Seriously, those leaves appeared within a 24 hour or maybe 12 hour period.... Anyway, this guy didn't seem to know what he had. When I brought it up to him he was like--Yeah, isn't that neat how it's growing! Which is to say, he knew it was a Barbados Cherry, which just grow around here as shrubs, but I've only seen upright ones--I don't think he knew there was an actual weeping variety and thought that this one was just a fluke. Anyway itwas in a 3 gallon nursery pot, has a nice thick trunk, and long, long branches and after I described how I wanted to bonsai it he let me have if for $8. Now I've just been looking for the appropriate pot. A couple of my potted quinces have come back, but the couple mini roses, the Black cherry tree bonsai and one other are well and truly dead.

The grasshoppers continue to be a problem--I've seen a few varieties although not in large numbers, but they're hungry it seems. Right now I'm hoping to keep them warded off with "Safer" brand Neem oil spray, but if I have to I'll spray with Permethrin again... As for the heat and drought.........sigh.