Thinking? Me?

 

The above hedge of Callistemon (Meleleuca) viminalis 'Slim' is what I've been thinking about.  I spent days chopping it shorter, a little at a time, and had to think about something during all the chopping and maneuvering.     Planted to screen out the house behind ours, the hedge of 'Slim's has done so.  I realized while working on it,  it may no longer be needed.   
 
The owners of the house behind ours eventually planted--something--Olives? Acacias? which now largely screen their house from my garden.  

In addition to my hedge, I also planted another 'Slim' behind the hedge, visible in the first photo of this post (the light green foliage above the black line).  Here it is from another angle:
The problem with the hedge is the narrowness of the space--'Slim', though slim, somewhat blocks the path to the back gate.  I did shear it back again so the pass is usable:
I thought and thought:  remove the 'Slim' hedge because it's no longer necessary as screening?  Another idea:  limb up the 'Slim's as a pleached hedge:  a "hedge on stilts".  The narrow area below it could host small succulents like Echeverias, Sedums, and petite Aloes like A, brevifolia.  This has been a good scheme for the narrow strip in another part of the garden, along the tomato fortress:
It's been fairly easy to maintain.  When a rosette develops a long bare stem, I pull the rosette out by the roots, snap off the stem and old roots, and push the rosette with its now stubby stem back into the soil, where it re-roots.  These small plants have proven far healthier and prettier in the ground than they ever were in patio pots.
 So I'm thinking I will limb up those 'Slim's when they start blocking the path again.  
 
Speaking of the tomato fortress, it currently hosts a rampant table grape vine, a fig tree sprouting a lot of new growth, and three tomato plants thriving in ten gallon containers.  These are the healthiest tomato plants I've bought in many years.  They were four-inchers marked down to a get-them-out-of-here-quick price at Home Cheapo.  You never know what plant is going to be a winner.  Well, sometimes you do.  

More thinking:  recently I bought three native milkweed plants, Asclepias fascicularis, to support any Monarchs that might wander by, but where to plant them? 

Two of three: 


 

 Thought required.  I see Monarchs most frequently along the front of the property, where it is hot, sunny and very dry.  Perhaps in one of the empty spots between Agaves and Aloes?

#3 went near Aloe vera, temporarily caged while it roots in:  

 The native local Salvia, S. apiana, has proven a successful example of this idea.  The plant itself, a few feet across, sprouts flower stalks 10-12' long, loaded with hundreds of flowers.  Besides the non-native honeybees, it is feeding many different small native pollinators:

Plant behind Aloe ferox trunk, flower stems reaching out everywhere: 



When summer heat arrives, sending the Salvia into dormancy, I am able to reach and cut it back hard with a pole pruner, leaving the Salvia to rest until it wakes up in mid- to late fall.  That works.  

The same idea has worked with Salvia 'Marine Blue', a tough plant of obscure origins.  It was a disappointment last year (its first) but our excellent '25-'26 rainy season made it "leap".  Tiny pollinators love this one, too.  

Just wish the flowers were bigger:

 They're a gorgeous blue, but tiny:

 So the plan is to do the same with the milkweed: the front bank.    

But that's enough thinking.  Time for some mindless enjoyment of spring flowers.






I felt lazy just walking around staring at the garden for weeks, but thought seems to pay off.  Sometimes.  



 

Comments

  1. Ruminating on what goes where, what to take out, or limb up...those are some of the best parts of gardening. Plus it makes the neighbors wonder what in the heck you're doing.

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  2. I like all your plans! Especially the succulent border and the Milweed placement. Oh, and of course the mindless enjoyment of spring flowers!

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  3. Sometimes taking the time to think things through saves time and effort later on. I'm not one for moving plants so more thinking and less impulsive action would make my garden better. Love your idea for 'Slim' especially as it looks like a very difficult task to remove him.

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  4. I love Salvia apiana but have never grown it due to your description of its growth habit. Excellent solution. May the Monarchs find your milkweed!

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  5. That's a good plan for 'Slim'! And your bloomers look great. I'm struggling just to keep my garden semi-tidy and I've recently sacrificed numerous potted plants but then maybe they were ready to go. I pulled off a passable Bloom Day post this month; however, I can't say what it'll look like next month.

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  6. I was reading your ruminative thoughts while waiting the other day. It sounds wonderful to be able to spend some time in the quiet of the garden, contemplating what will go where, what to do next, without having deadlines. I sniffed a rose today out in my garden and thought of your Piece of Eden. The way that alstroemeria caught the light is brilliant.

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  7. Two hedges are better than one, and that's not (just) because I love Callistemon, blooms and seedpods... so cool. Yes, limb up the 'Slim'. No more sheering for you, so less labour. It may take some getting used to the new look. If it does't grow on you then the poor thing got to go.
    That single, creamy rose... wow, perfection!
    Chavli

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  8. I think limbing up 'Slim' is a great idea. It's such a good plant.

    I've planted and removed two 'Marine Blue' because they got too big for their space. I wish I could dedicate 4x4 ft to it, it's a beautiful salvia.

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