8/29/2007

How about a garden post for a change?

As much as I enjoy growing really small tomatoes, the vegetable garden (a tomato monoculture) has been keeping me up at night.

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I have two half-barrels of tomato plants. The harvest started in mid-June, and I expect the season to run through October. But the plants are looking shabby (as in shabby, not shabby-chic). I'm glad I have two barrels, because the time has come for one of them to go.

I expected the roots to be more extensive than this.

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I actually have a minor redesign in mind. I removed the Fremontodendron from the big blue container it hated, and I moved the container into the vegetable garden where I'll use it for vegetables--effectively a raised-bed without the trouble of bed-raising.

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Also in that container was tough, small, native perennial mallow Sidalcea malviflora, common name Checkerbloom.

It spreads by long, deep runners like this.

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Like all mallows, it's very difficult to dig up--much tougher than the shrubby Fremontodendron! But I have a whole bucket full of healthy checkerbloom divisions to distribute around the garden.

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I'm also moving the garden path from here...

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To here:

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This will accomplish two things. First, making a circuit through the garden will now require a walk through the vegetable garden instead of around it. Second, it gives a manzanita you really can't see in this picture more room to grow. More on that later.

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(The garden is still mostly soil! Next year...always next year...)
Removing one of the tomato barrels also revealed a previously obscured Echium wildprettii (the one on the left).

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The Ficus carica 'Brown Turkey' is new to the garden. I bought that a couple weeks ago during a spontaneous, mid-week run up to California Flora after work. They had 1-gallon figs on clearance. My favorite way to shop.

This blue spires is new too. I've already forgotten what it is, but I'm sure you can tell me.

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(The other day, I did something I've never done before. I checked out the back area of nursery I shop at most often to see what plants they were holding for local professionals. I liked three plants I saw back there that I never would have bought myself. The nursery more of them for sale, and I bought all three. Blue spires was one of those three--see the other two later.)

Another thing I did was remove my one remainging Datura wrightii. I think we've enjoyed this flower enough for 2007.

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It's getting so big, I can't deal with it anymore. The coveted thorny seedball will have to wait until next year when I'll grow this plant in a container instead of in the ground. I'm changing it out for the Silver Bush Lupine I brought down from the roof garden.

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I dressed up to extirpate the possibly quite poisonous (but probably not through simple skin contact) Jimson Weed.

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And I had to smash the pot with a hammer to get my hands on the lupine. So glad I put the lupine in a terracotta pot and not a nice glazed pot!

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The lupine bookends the Meyer lemon with the silver/gray so common in California garden color schemes; the other bookend is native buckwheat Eriogonum arborescens.

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The yellow flower behind it all is my new, naturally two-dimensional Fremontodendron 'San Gabriel' to replace the one I had to remove from the big blue container. I've waited to institute this plan for several months. So glad it's done!

Come back later for a little tour of the garden--right now, dinner's on!

7 comments:

  1. Anonymous9:54 PM

    I like seeing the second-story view of your garden. A literal overview. What are those spiky, blue, round plants scattered through your garden? Some sort of aloe? I love their shape and color.

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  2. That's the Echium wildprettii, a biennial from the Boraginaceae. I'm going to talk about it more in my next post.

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  3. I think your Blue Spires in between the Echiums might be a Speedwell, a Veronica sp.

    It is raining raining today. Not a good time to go buy more bags of concrete and bring them home in my truck.

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  4. Veronica, yes. Thank you, Christopher.

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  5. "Spike" Speedwell is a favorite in my garden, Chuck. Even when it's past its prime, there's enough of a blue haze that I don't cut it back till it's really ratty.

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  6. Anonymous7:53 PM

    I hate to say this, but your lupine is going to get about 3-6 feet tall and wide, and can even get bigger.

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