Leucospermum 'Red Sunset'
Despite a hot, rainless March, we received a greater-than-historic-average amount of rain this past Fall and Winter. It shows: plants looking really happy.
I don't have much to say. Let flowers and foliage do the talking.
Leucospermum 'Mardi Gras Ribbons'. 'Ribbons' pollen presenters have fuzzy tips:
With Aeonium 'Zwarzkop':
An "Amaryllis" (Hippeastrum 'Christmas Star'(?)) with 'Mardi Gras Ribbons' as fuzzy background:
The 'Fuerte' Avocado tree looks great. Last year at this time I pruned it as hard as I could. Thanks to the good rainfall it has sprouted much healthy new growth and flowers:
I thought the holly might work, size-wise, to hide very unattractive piping by the front door (great place for it, builders!), but fierce reflected heat from the stucco may toast the holly. A 'Sticks on Fire' Euphorbia had that location for several years, and even a plant as tough as that scorched and bleached.
Away from the walls, rose 'Easy Spirit' does well:
It even looks hot here, doesn't it? The sweet peas failed this year--my own fault for wallowing in glumness and not planting them promptly. The Euphorbia's great virtue was as a support for sweet peas.
The Euphorbia I green-wasted last week. A hard wad of its roots is stuck in the pot. Time will have to work magic, and this is why not to buy pots that taper inward at the top:
In the meantime, I stop and revel in the roses.
Many beautiful flowers from 'Darcey Bussell'. I only wish she could hold on to her foliage:
'The Poet's Wife' has a strong grip on her leaves. An excellent Austin yellow--in SoCal, many of them are:There are about a dozen Foxgloves in the garden, seedlings of ones planted in the winter of 24-25 that flowered in '25 and dropped seeds. The seeds became plants growing in '25 and are blooming size now. I hope they do bloom.'The Hemerocallis always seem to start flowering just as the first flush of roses begins to wane.The Hems are a little early--still plenty of roses.
'Queen of Elegance':
Fine, yellow, not a rose--Calylophus 'Southern Belle'. long lived, tough as nails, once-a-year maintenance, it sports constant lavish bloom from early April through October. Even better with a recharge from good winter rain.
With Agave 'Blue Glow' and Centauria ragusina:
Beauty, fragrance...grace:
'Pink Gruss an Aachen' with Alstroemeria 'Indian Summer':
''Silas Marner''The Endeavour' is another rose that drops its foliage all too easily. However I'm pleased with how I managed to arrange its canes along the wall, and it repeats well, leaf-deprived or not. A couple of Clematis--would that help hide its flaw?
Okay, enough of roses. I should mention tomatoes--purchased/planted three, each in a fifteen gallon pot. The ones in five's last year didn't do great. I'll put more effort in, this year.
Ah! I managed a post! Whew!
Pelargonium peltatum:
I wish you a spring filled with the peace and beauty and hope of nature's wonders, if nothing else. If only our own species paid more attention to that, instead of to hate and greed and blowing things up. If only...

































Just gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Phillip. Happy Spring!
DeleteI never encountered a Leucospermum bloom I didn't like. I'm partial to orange, so 'Mardi Gras Ribbons' and 'Red Ribbons' are making me gush. And as orange goes, 'Brass Band' rose is stunning.
ReplyDeleteI'm not bothered by the rose 'canes along the wall': I think it looks great, no hiding necessary.
Agave 'Blue Glow' and company: perfection!
Did you consider a metal privacy screen for the piping?
Chavli
The Protea family is a wonderful group of plants.
DeleteI did think about a screen to hide that...but don't have the design talent to pull off something that works. A dense background-type shrub would probably be least likely to attract attention to the area. Just need a tough one that can take heat. Maybe a Myrtus communis 'compacta'--I've got one and am wondering if it would survive being moved.
You've got a LOT going on, especially given the intensity of the March heatwave we had. I've just started planting dahlia bulbs with some help from my spouse. I ordered way too many (before the "incident").
ReplyDeleteLots of beautiful in your spring garden Hoov, thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThanks! Somehow dreading a-too-soon-to-arrive summer, I overlook spring...a little, anyway.
DeleteHad a bit of a chuckle re: the placement of your utility stuff. When our house was built they put the septic head right in direct sight of the front door. It took ages to hide it but it occasionally wafts lovely smells that too easily are smelled while we sit on the front porch. However, the rest of your garden is looking fantastic. Those leucospermums are the coolest of flowers and I always love your roses. If only gardeners could lead the world. It would be a much more beautiful place.
ReplyDeleteSeptic head. 8^( Oh, dear. After reading your comment, I realized I've got nothing to complain about. Nothing!
DeleteAll the Leucospermums are beautiful. I didn't know that some had fuzzy tips - that's cool. I just bought my first rose in a long time with the not-so-great name of Top Gun. I've been looking for a fragrant, single-ish deep red rose for years and have never found one. Top Gun is touted as moderately fragrant and disease resistant, so we will see if it lives up to the hype. I'm a little concerned it won't be fragrant at all.
ReplyDeleteI think I grew 'Top Gun' at one point--can't remember anything about it. Singles were never my favorites. Re fragrance in roses, it varies by the nose as well as the rose and the climate, temperature, time of day, the age of the flower--some detect fragrance where others don't, humidity matters, some roses open very fragrant but the fragrance vanishes, etc etc. The ones that are described as "very" fragrant are usually the most consistent. The "old" non-repeaters (flowering only once a year, in spring) are often the best for fragrance.
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