ESPatch

"The Shining"


Texas is Hot, Hot, Hot…and not a hint of precipitation in sight, perspiration though is a plenty.


It is like trying to garden on Arrakis, only the worms are just a tad
smaller here in the ESP unfortunately…ahh, imagine the soil aeration!


The very bricks themselves are starting to crack under the intense heat,
or could that be from yet another giant timber culm pushing
upward toward the “day star”?
The emerging culm pictured above is the largest I have ever grown,
a real monster (diameter dimensions on a later nerdy post), and that
is a soaker hose providing the moisture, naturally.
I plan to tie something on this culm before it hoists itself 25 feet
above my house, the question is what to sail out there?

The ESP coat of arms perhaps?
(Which incidentally creatively incorporates the face of the Botox Lady,
abstractly, into it’s design).


Some boxer shorts perhaps?

Maybe I should just tie some sneakers to it, just to have
people drive by and wonder how someone managed to
throw them so high, so accurately.
OK, I think the heat may finally be getting to me,
and what record-breaking heat we are enduring here in Central
Texas at the moment, and it is only the end of, oh dear, June!


(Insert insane screaming here)

There have already been some heat-strokes…

Blow-Torched Delosperma
‘sesotho pink’

or ‘Trailing Ice Plant’, hanging on to an inch of it’s life.
This plant was the picture of health, until the temperatures
entered and have consistently sustained triple digits.
I hate to think how people with all their Saint Augustine expanses
are faring. Texas has a habit of naturally sorting out what
survives in a garden pretty rapidly, wielding a swift and deadly
blade of fire or ice, (depending on the season).
This year is already particularly harsh, compounded by the
continuing drought from last year, and the year before that.
It is not remotely pleasant to stand outside to water right now, even if
adorning a wet turban to curb the heat.

(def: “wet turban” here): http://east-side-patch.livejournal.com/8678.html

I am now watering my natives, succulents, ornamental
grasses and cactus / agave plantings,
just to keep them alive, crazy heat!


Master Gardener Yoda:
“Death is a natural part of life.
Rejoice for those around you who transform into the Force.
Mourn them do not. Miss them do not.
Attachment leads to jealously.
The shadow of greed, that is.”

Try telling that to the “Cactus Man”!


This is the happy face I was going for.
Picture courtesy NOAA.

The Cactus Man is not the picture of health he once was.
His demise came from the ill-conceived scalpel antics of
his torturer and general executioner…ME.
I had a premonition the other night that something really
bad was happening to him. I got up, put on my iced turban
to brave the 88 degree heat! (it was around midnight).
I swung through the timber bamboo as the ground
was too hot to walk on, and came to the clearing where
the cactus man had laid down his now decaying roots (ahem).
It is also where I fear he will shortly
pop his spiny little clogs.

It was a harrowing experience.


What have I done?


Doctors notes:
“The subject  resembles more of a ghoulish shrunken head at this point,
rather than a prickly pear cactus. The top of his cranium is now pitching
violently backward in obvious distress, putting more tension in and around his
mouth area, apparently this is creating the curling up of his left lip”.

I have a Billy Idol impersonating, decaying cactus head, with Spock’s voice!

While I was rummaging around in here:

I found this:

Brrrrrrr, (nervous glances to the floor, left and right, knee twitch, jaw lock…you know the drill).
It looks like a real insect.


But. oh no!
It seems even the dragonfly larvae are depositing their own ecto-skeletons in
an attempt to escape the brutal Texas heat. I can sympathize with them.
So what did we do to cool us all down in the patch this week?


Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh ssssssssssssssssssssssss.
Yes, you guessed it, another red-neck pool, only this one requires
no blowing up, a definite plus after last years near-death experience.
Same link again! http://east-side-patch.livejournal.com/8678.html
This one has no duct-tape on it…yet, but the decomposed gravel
always wins eventually!
(Note the attempt at stopping this with a patch
of blanket), we do things right in the patch you know.

Doing okay:

Ornamental Sweet Potato Vine Ipomoea batatas ‘Blackie’
shrugs off the high temperatures as long as it receives a bucket of the wet
stuff every few days. One of my most dependable container combinations.
The Chartreuse patch in the middle is Ipomoea batatas ‘ Margarita’
Wrought Iron work from a vine caught my eye.

Doing not so okay:

Loquats are now looking like I feel. And how do I feel?


My wife took this picture of me as I took a brief cat-nap this afternoon.
The brief excursion outside to check on my satsuma tree proved
a little more dehydrating than I initially anticipated.


Here is the tree in question, it is turning yellow!
I think this may be due to overhead watering burning the leaves?
But any suggestions would be most welcome.
I would hate to lose all this fruit to stress.

Even the flies are moving slower than usually it seems.

A fine specimen.

Crimson Minimalism:

Considering how depressing things are in the wilting garden right now,
I thought I would finish with a quick and basic scheme I developed a couple
of months back for an Austin downtown commercial property.

.


Before                                                                       After

The main challenge here was to create a more natural passageway
(from both sides) of the property up to the front door.
There is a parking lot to the left of the property so foot traffic was cutting
diagonally across the grass. The proposal breaks up the linear lines
with large sweeping pathways which converge to naturally create two side beds,
and a front island bed. Extremely low cost, with a focus on hardscape,
drought tolerance and minimal future maintenance. The original scheme incorporated
a bottle tree with crimson bottles in place of the central Agave.

Pssst!
And if you want a killer haircut and/or color, call Leah at Crimson
(512) 632 9627


All material © 2009 for east_side_patch. Unauthorized  intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and punishable by  late 14th century Earth techniques.

Inspirational Images of the Week:

More madness from Diarmuid Gavin.

"Smiling Dragons"


Lots of dragons were zipping around
the ESP this week.


Predating the dinosaur and Jeff Goldblum, this fascinating
insect of the order Odonata (meaning “toothed”)
has long been the subject of myths and legends,
around the globe. The dragonfly’s syringe-like
appearance has earned it a variety of
bizarre names in global folklore
including “Devil’s Darner,”
“Water Witch” and “Snake Doctor.”

In European and early-American myths, The dragonfly
was given the name of “Devil’s Darning Needle” because
of a particularly horrific superstition involving the dragonfly
sewing the mouths shut of sleeping children.


“mmm
,ddammmned dddrrraggonm m m m-flies”!
Children were told that if they misbehaved,
a dragonfly would sew shut their eyes,
ears and mouth as they slept,
(must remember
this for a future idle threat inside the patch).

I surmise this is where the word  ‘darner’ as in
“Green Darner” originated?

This ‘skimmer’ Dragon is a Common Whitetail Plathemis lydia.
This one is a female, the males have a very different wing pattern.
This is the first Whitetail I have ever seen in my garden, and it did
not stay long. I only managed to get these two shots in, then she was gone.
Please click on, then click again, and then zoom in once more on these dragons
for a really detailed look at their structure, it is worth it!


Excuse the offensive finger!
Another myth warned that dragonflies were in cahoots with
snakes and were able to wake them from the dead or warn
them of impending danger.


In the Appalachians it was considered
bad luck to kill a dragonfly. They were
thought to be the protectors of snakes
and if you killed one, its snake would
come after you.


“Delta four-winger you have been cleared for take-off”.

These two blue dasher dragons looked like they were
waiting for clearance to take off on this agave leaf.
Look at this one’s cartoon eyes!

And finally in Swedish folklore
It was believed that dragonflies
were used by the Devil to “weigh
people’s souls”, and that if a
dragonfly swarmed around
someone’s head weighing his
or her soul, that person could
expect great injury.


I am watching all gardeners,
especially those with
water features.


Blue Dasher  Pachydiplax longipennis
Amazing body coloration.


“Yeah, baby yeah”!


And here is where the dragons love to perch in the ESP, on the tips of these cattails, (or bulrushes
if you are in the UK). Nesting birds have been demolishing these flower spikes over the
last few months, as you can see, some of them have been totally stripped.


On a culinary note:


In Bali,  people call                           “Sky Prawns?”
dragonflies ‘sky prawns,’
they are traditionally fried with
coconut oil and vegetables and spices.
Dragonflies, grilled, apparently
have a carbonized crispy quality
to them with a subtle, fatty flavor.
Now before you go ewwwww…
Most of us readily consume
shrimp and lobster (which, like
insects, are arthropods.)

How to catch them?
One effective capturing method
in this region utilizes sap from
the jackfruit tree…


The Jackfruit tree Artocarpus heterophyllus
(The largest tree borne fruit in the world).

The sticky, latex plant juice from this tree is applied
to the end of a slender stick. This stick is tied to
a longer, sturdier stick which is then lowered to
a resting dragonfly, with a quick tap, the dragon
is stuck to the tree sap. The device is called a
onang, and the hunting was done by children.

The catching of dragonflies for consumption
purposes is a very rare practice now in the region
due to the decreasing number of rice fields and
the scarcity of jackfruit trees in urban areas.


“And thats all I have to say about
dragonflies”.

Moving On…

Mexican feather grass continues to burn and dance it’s way into
the scorched winds of summer. Any time now the seed heads
will start sticking to each other for that really ugly “matted” look.
Then it will time for haircuts all round.


Another feather I have to post one last picture of!


Fragile coral vine blooms,  Antigonon leptopus.This plant always disturbs me as I like the way it looks but it always insists on creeping
up to high branches where it eventually dies, turns brown, and becomes an eyesore.
I only allow select patches to survive in the patch, and I never permit it to climb too high!


Also soaring up high was this damaged Swallowtail, catching
some of the thermals above my satsuma tree.


The swallowtails are busy laying their eggs on the citrus trees
in my middle bed right now. I started planting this cacti and
succulent bed earlier this year. I mostly used divisions from
plants I already had, and a few more from my in-laws containers.
I already had the Texas holey rocks, the large barrel cacti, and
the old cedar carcasses, I just needed to pull it all together.


Middle bed: Jan10, 2009


Middle bed today, it is amazing what only six months can do, and the barrels are still healthy!
(fingers are crossed).


Some other patch-filled events this week…



This pair was really healthy for a while………………..and then…
medic!


Large culms are popping up everywhere
on the giants. My oldest giant timber bamboo
that did not produce a single culm last year, is
making up for it this year – eight at the last count!


“Oo, oo, you cannot be serious with this connection ESP”.
One very strange looking unidentified moth!


Anybody? Almost bat-like!

And the latest craze in the patch…

‘Balloon Jousting’.

“On-Guard little brother!”


“Am I not Maximus the merciful big sis?”


And finally…

“Here’s Johnny!”
More horror from “cactus man” next time.


All material © 2 2009 for east_side_patch. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.

Inspirational Image of the Week:


Garden Art by Bruno Torf.

1 2 130 131 132 133 134 170 171