Verbena 'de la Mina' against a background of orange Gazanias
Finally, cooler weather! Hooray!
Mailbox planter bed replanted with late Spring purchases that survived summer on the shaded patio:
Reading about Teucrium aroanium on the San Marcos site--which said T. aroanium was really T. cossonii. So my aroanium is a cossonii? Good! T. cossonii is a great plant.
Here's a plant, purchased as T. cossonii, thriving across the driveway from the mailbox bed:
And still flowering:
Looks about the same, for sure.
Also added to the mailbox bed, an impulse-buy Tulbaghia 'Flamingo' (arrowed):
Tulbaghia, native to South Africa, common name "Society Garlic" is a fairly commonly grown plant in Southern California. It is fairly tough. This area of the garden bakes in all day sun and dries out quickly. Tough plants are needed there. Rabbits are also an issue, and they don't eat Tulbaghia because of its garlic-y scent.
Removed from the mailbox bed, a lot of Crassula pubescens that found the area just too hot and dry to be happy:
Unsure what to do with them.
One of the Aloe striata trio in the bed had no roots--too dry for the Crassula was too moist for the Aloe.
It should re-root in a few months and be re-plant-able:
I like!
Pentas plants, rooted from cuttings of a neighbor's seedling last year, are developing into actual plants this year. I like, too. So far, rabbits seem to ignore those, too:
I swore this piece of Aloe vanbalenii wrenched a year or more ago from the large clump on the front bank ,was in January, dead. It was dried up and brown.
Look what spring and summer did to it:
Nice to be wrong.
I thought one of the gorgeous Leucadendron 'Ebony' was dying and that September's heat would be the death blow.
Sad to be right.
Several weeks of heat followed by sudden mild overcast weather means suddenly not-bleached-out, beautiful flowers:
Lovely to be back out there.
And now, Harry:
Harry joined our pack a few weeks ago. He's half Samoyed and half Golden Retriever, with one or two percents of American Akita, American Spitz, and Great Pyrenees mixed in, if the doggie DNA test is correct. He's from a Samoyed Rescue organization, and certainly looks Samoyed/Retriever. He's one year old. Natasha thinks he's a silly kid, but very amusing. He's helped us ease through the crushing loss of Boris, though he isn't a replacement for Boris. He's 100% Harry.
He walks very well on leash, but being still a puppy, is even better at ripping things apart: a box of Kleenex, a roll of paper towels, one of my favorite gardening books, my new eyeglasses, three boxes of graham crackers, (ate all the crackers, though only half the boxes they came in), a box of low-sodium crackers (ate the whole box of crackers, including the box), all the kitchen towels (twice!), and we're watching to see what happens next. No, he's not allowed in the garden. Yet.
B&N were puppies once, too.
Former favorite garden book, sacrificed on the altar of puppyhood:
Impressed as I am by how you dug into your garden as soon as the temperatures fell, I'm completely in love with Harry notwithstanding his puppy path of destruction. I'm glad that Natasha is accepting his arrival in stride. My Meeko is 19 months old (adopted a full 13 months ago) and the edge is just beginning to come off.
ReplyDeleteI suspect I've got some of the same misidentified Teucrium.
Happy to hear Meeko is....smoothing out a bit.
DeleteThat Teucrium is a great plant no matter what the name is. Several excellent species in that Genus.
Those great big brown puppy dog eyes! The long silvery flowing hair. Just like Dr. Emmett Brown.
As I was looking up the new plants in the mailbox bed - knowing you are color conscience, I thought a pink-violet theme was emerging but then Dicliptera squarrosa has orange blooms. Maybe harmonizing with the Aloe bloom...
ReplyDelete"Finally Cooler! And Harry", oh Boy! Of course he is silly, he is still a puppy. Like you, I bet Natasha is glad for the distraction (if not the destruction) and happy for the young exuberant presence lifting everyone's spirits.
Chavli
There's a whole lot of orange in that area, so the Dicliptera fits, and the lavender in lavender flowers, the Alyogyne, Aloe capitata quartzicola foliage and the Tulbahgia. I've rationalized the Teucrium is a very "cool" pink with some lavender, but more importantly, it needed to be planted asap, and should hold up to the heat and dry soil.
DeleteYes, silly puppy. So much joy (and some chaos).
Awww, Harry is fun. Congratulations and enjoy! And, wow, the Verbena and Gazania combination is stunning! Your mailbox planter bed is full of fun and fascinating plants. I'm glad your temps are more comfortable. :)
ReplyDeleteHarry! That face... that destruction! Good thing he's cute. So sad about the Leucadendron 'Ebony'.
ReplyDeleteHarry! What a happy little face! I forgot all about the plants for a minute. I hope it doesn't take too long for him to figure out the crackers taste better than the box. ;) Your garden looks fantastic, glad that vanbalenii came back. I love the way it grows, with big curving swoops. Leucadendron, I feel like I just get a dud plant now and again. Better than blaming myself!
ReplyDeleteHARRY!!! What a happy boy! Looking forward to meeting him in person some day.
ReplyDeleteTeucrium aroanium etc.: I've been running into the same nomenclatural issue. No matter, they're great plants, even here in our unrelenting Sacramento Valley heat.
I was sold that exact same Teucrium as T. aroanium. Just read the blog post about the difference between T. cossonii and T. aroanium at Prairiebreak (https://prairiebreak.blogspot.com/2018/02/a-tale-of-two-teucrium.html) and now see that mine was mislabeled. Time to get it changed in my spreadsheets. Such a lovely plant, but a little temperamental in my climate. Yay to cooler weather (and some rain for us). Hello Harry!
ReplyDelete