ESPatch


Here is the poor wizened chap – the 20ft flower stalk is still upright but has finished blooming (you can see the debris from the flowers building up). The Agave is dying from the leaf tips inward. I am going to follow and post pictures of the gradual decay of this plant.



Here is the bean stalk – all the flowers have died now. A detail of the trunk reveals hundreds of baby plants.

. . . .and now for some running Bamboo in Stock Tanks :


stock-tank-planter
Here is my latest stock tank addition (4ftx2ft), this one contains a black bamboo (Phyllostachy Nigra) – the black culms against the neighboring fuchsia Oleander will provide good color contrast. The broad-leaf loquat will act as a backdrop for the fine leaves of the bamboo to complete the trio. All these plants are young,  I will revisit next year to see if the scene develops like I hope it will. I am also planning to plant in front of the tank to soften its base, perhaps Cast Iron plant?

This plant has been in numerous containers over the last few years, all too small, and as such the plant has struggled. Even though the bamboo is 4 years old it is quite stunted and the culms are very small. I am hoping that this “pot” will be large enough to finally give it a kick-start. I have had success with this container planting method with a Golden Bamboo (Phyllostachys aurea) in the front of my house so I thought I would repeat it.


Here is a Golden Bamboo 3 weeks after transplanting and lots of new culms.


stock-tank

As a side note, although this container is on the large side (especially in the cooler states) I believe it’s size to be the “sweet-spot” for a Texas bamboo container if you have the space. Small containers in Texas are as much use as the toilet they installed on the international space station.

Other extroverts in the garden right now:


Amaranthus, collectively known as amaranth or pig-weed running amok in my front yard – will put on a
good show in the fall. The word comes from the
Greek amarantos “one that does not wither,” or the never-fading (flower).



The national flower of Barbados is the Pride of Barbados
(Dwarf Poinciana or Flower Fence). Great tropical leaves!



Sticking on the Barbados theme – Barbados cherry is native to the Lesser Antilles from St. Croix to Trinidad, also Curacao and Margarita and neighboring northern South America as far south as Brazil. Mine is one of the smaller varieties and it is packed with cherries right now. When it was flowering it was hard to even walk past this plant for the large numbers of bees that would swarm. I think my neighbors must have thought it strange that I repeatedly had a flailing spasm exactly in the same place down my pathway, every-time I would walk past it.

Stay Tuned for:

“The Bermuda Triangle”


All material © 2009 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

 

The circular bed next to my back deck has had many incarnations, it is a focal point that anchors the back patio area and through its circular form, has dictated the design of the pathways to the rest of the yard.

Here are a few of its schizophrenic personalities over the last few years:


Sedums and a lone bagpiper                              and a rather ugly combination of everything!

A tropical look and even a fire pit?

As you can see I widened the path on the right hand side to create a better flow around the bed. This picture was taken this last Winter, you can see the “bare bones” structure of the hardscaping.  Note the absence of the nasty tunnel on the left,
and how much more open the view looks!


This spring I thought I would try something a little more cohesive:  “A Microcosmic Garden”, I thought to myself – a miniature of my cactus and succulent bed, with a backdrop of grasses to reference the rest of the yard.

I planted the Mexican feather Grasses first, directly into the granite path. If anyone can make it in the granite, the heat, and the lack of nutrients, it is them.

I scraped away the mulch and amended the soil with granite and bagfuls of sharp cactus soil (almost to the top of the brickwork). I then went out to a number of nurseries and bought two of everything relevant.

I was a micro – Noah, although my Ark was less of an arc and more of a circle.


Here is the bed newly planted, I brought in the Lava rocks from around my fish pond – you couldn’t really see them there due to the heavy foliage. They were much better suited to my miniature moonscape. I planted quite densely as I wanted the bed to resemble a miniature Jurassic Park when matured. I top dressed the bed with pea-gravel and areas of decomposed granite to tie in with the pathway.

These small plants hate clay soil and wood mulches; the crowns would rot, especially in winter. To succeed you must create something of a moonscape for them. The beauty of these otherworldly gardens is the tiny scale of them, they are a lot of fun when you “get in there” with the macro lens at full blast.

“Honey I shrunk the kids!”


“I like the view from here George, what do you think?”               “This is no time to rest, we must keep moving”

“My legs are hurting George”.

“George someone is coming!”

“Mildred, just stay low and still, the mighty gloved                         “This is it George, home sweet home”
hand will pass right over us, I promise.”                                                       “lets have a rock warming”

circular_bed
Here is the bed today – starting to fill in.
The more you observe this rocky world the more obscure and captivating is the flora. The scene resembles a coral reef as much as a rock garden.  I am planning a much larger scale of this bed in my front yard – I may even include some dwarf conifers and the rocks are going to be large boulders.


Other show-offs right now:

Cone flowers with Rosemary and Sage.

tropical_water_lily
A newly planted Canna, the container picks up on                          Tropical Lilly
the color of the foliage. A good layer of bark chips
(also in the same hue) helps to regulate
temperature and moisture.



Figs!

Stay Tuned for:

“My Agave is knocking on Deaths Door”

 

All material © 2009 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

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