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Showing posts from December, 2014

Two Tucson nurseries that rock—and rain!

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I’m happy to report that the two Tucson nurseries I visited today more than made up for the largely disappointing experience I had in Phoenix yesterday. That means I’m ending 2014 on a high note as far as plants go! Picacho Peak 45 miles north of Tucson right off I-10 Stop #1 was at Bach’s Cactus Nursery (8602 North Thornydale Rd., Tucson, AZ 85742; 520-744-3333). I’d first visited it on my December 2013 trip on what had been a warm and sunny day. Today the weather was quite different. It had been raining early in the morning when I’d left Phoenix, and while the storm hadn’t quite made it to Tucson yet (about 120 miles to the south), the sky was looking quite menacing. Everywhere I went on the nursery grounds I saw scenes like these:

Phoenix nursery (s)hopping, with mixed results

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Today I had reserved time to do some nursery (s)hopping in Phoenix. I’d compiled a list of four nurseries based on information I found online and some general recommendations in gardening forums. While none of them specializes in succulents per se, it was my assumption that they would have a much better selection than what I’m able to find at home in the Sacramento area—and at better prices to boot. Well, you know what they say about the word “assume:” It makes an “ass” out of “u” and “me.” The first nursery on my list was Baker Nursery . My visit took exactly zero seconds because, as it turned out, Baker Nursery had gone out of business. I should have checked their website first! Stop #2 was Moon Valley Nurseries . They have nine locations in the Phoenix area. I went to the Scottsdale one because it was closest to my hotel. If I had picked a different location, my experience probably would have been different and, most likely, vastly better. It started off well enough. My eyes imm

Return to the Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, AZ

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Last year I packed three visits to the Desert Botanical Garden into my stay in Phoenix. This year my schedule only allowed time for one visit so I made it count: I stayed for almost 6 hours! I was exhausted when I got back to the car, not only because of the walking but also because of visual overload. The Desert Botanical Garden truly is one of the most special places I’ve ever visited—bucket list material for those of you who’ve never been there! Here are just a few photos from today. There’ll be plenty more when I’ve had time to sort through the 500 pictures I took. Dale Chihuly glass sculptures at the garden entrance New Jan and Tom Lewis Desert Portal completed earlier this year

Two Palm Springs must-sees for succulent lovers

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Palm Springs, California has been a popular resort for over 100 years, especially in the winter when the days are reliably sunny and warm (but not blistering like in the summer). The climate is ideal for growing succulents, and there is one well-known botanical garden nearby: the Living Desert Zoo and Gardens in the neighboring town of Palm Desert. (I visited it in February 2011; click here for my post.) I would have loved to go back to the Living Desert, but I only had half a day in Palm Springs so I focused on two places I hadn’t visited before: Moorten Botanical Garden and Sunnylands Center & Garden. I’ll have in-depth posts on both destinations at a later date so I’m limiting myself to just a few photos from each. Moorten Botanical Garden is located in south Palm Springs. In fact, it turned out to be right next door to the motel I was staying at—a mere 3-minute walk! The 1-acre garden was established in 1938 by Patricia and Chester Moorten and is now owned and run by the

Huntington Desert Garden, finally

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The Desert Garden at the Huntington in Pasadena, CA is one of the oldest and most revered succulent gardens in the world. It’s been at the very top of my must-see list for many years, and today I finally got a chance to visit it. This post is just a teaser. I took over 400 photos and will have several detailed posts in the weeks to come. Many aloes were in full bloom, others are just starting, so there’ll be a lot of aloe action over the next couple of months. I wish I could come back in late January to see the many Aloe marlothii in full bloom since it’s my favorite aloe species. Well, one of them in any case. Tomorrow I’m heading on to Phoenix, Arizona and then to Tucson. I’ll try to post as much as I can from the road, but rest assured I’ll have extensive coverage of what I saw in January and February. Agave attenuata ‘Boutin Blue’ in bloom Aloe splendor

December 2014 Desert Trip index

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This index lists all the posts from my December 2014 Desert Trip to Southern California and Arizona. Posts from the road: Huntington Desert Garden, finally (Pasadena, CA; 12/27/14) Two Palm Springs must-sees for succulent lovers (Palm Springs, CA; 12/28/14) Return to the Desert Botanical Garden (Phoenix, AZ; 12/29/14) Phoenix nursery (s)hopping, with mixed results (Phoenix, AZ; 12/30/14) Two Tucson nurseries that rock—and rain! (Tucson, AZ; 12/31/14) Snow in Tucson (Tucson, AZ; 1/1/15) Desert Visions (Tucson to Palm Springs; 1/2/15) One last succulent feast before heading home (Desert Hot Springs, CA; 1/3/14) Detailed posts: Huntington Desert Garden: aloes and other Old Word succulents (Pasadena, CA; 12/27/14) Huntington Desert Garden: agaves, cacti and other New World succulents (Pasadena, CA; 12/27/14) Huntington Desert Garden Conservatory (Pasadena, CA; 12/27/14) Moorten Botanical Garden (Palm Springs, CA; 12/28/14) Sunnylands Center and Gardens (Palm

Blooming business school agaves

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We took advantage of the beautiful weather on Christmas Day to take a walk in the UC Davis Arboretum . On our way to where we parked the car we drove by the Graduate School of Management (GSM) . I hadn’t been in the part of the campus in quite a while and almost slammed on the brakes when I saw this: Fortunately campus was deserted and I was able to pull into a parking space nearby, hop out, and take some photos.

Toppled aloe and other sightings at UC Davis

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A month ago I photographed this Aloe littoralis in front of the UC Davis Botanical Conservatory :   Aloe littoralis photographed on November 23, 2014 Aloe littoralis is a non-branching aloe that can get to 10 ft. in height, with a rosette up to 4 ft. across. This specimen at UC Davis was a good 6 ft. tall, the emerging flower stalk adding another 3 ft. I happened to be on campus a few days ago and was shocked to find this: The Aloe littoralis had fallen over.

Happy holidays!

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  Happy holidays, everybody! Spend time with the people you love. Or your favorite plants if people drive you crazy.

Foggy morning just before Christmas

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While I wouldn’t want to live in a climate where it’s foggy all the time, I do love the occasional fog in the winter—thick like pea soup, only vague shapes visible, sounds muffled so much you can hear dewdrops hit the ground. That’s what I woke up to today. An early Christmas present from Mother Nature! Hardy tapioca ( Manihot grahamii ), going to sleep for the winter Aeonium doing the opposite: it’s getting ready to bloom

#GBFling14: JJ De Sousa Garden

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We saw a lot of different gardens during the 2014 Garden Bloggers Fling ( #GBFling14 ) in Portland, Oregon. Some were serious, some were playful, but none quite matched the over-the-top exuberance of JJ De Sousa’s Garden. You want plants? Check! You want art? Check! You want style? Check! JJ De Sousa’s garden is an unbridled feast for the senses, and it had me from the moment I saw that bright orange metal gate with its three carrots. Orange is JJ’s signature color. You see it repeated in countless places in her 9,500 sq. ft. urban garden in southeast Portland. I’m not usually attracted to bright colors and if I tried to introduce one as blazing hot as orange in my own garden, I’m sure I would fail miserably. But JJ knows that you cannot be timid when working with a color like orange. You have to embrace it whole-heartedly—go for broke. And she certainly does. Her garden positively sizzles.

#GBFling14: John Kuzma Garden

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Five months have gone by since the 2014 Garden Bloggers Fling ( #GBFling14 ) in Portland, Oregon. I haven’t even covered half of the gardens we visited yet, so it’s high time for another installment. Today I’ll show you the garden of John Kuzma. His half-acre slice of heaven is full of the kinds of the things I love: yuccas, agaves, southern hemisphere plants, and shrubs with intriguing textures. This vignette in the front yard was the first thing that caught my eye: The Yucca rostrata immediately reminded me of Cistus Nursery . This is no coincidence: It turns out that Sean Hogan, the owner of Cistus, was instrumental in designing this garden.

Four books on agaves

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It’s no secret that I love agaves. I’ve written more posts about agaves than any other group of succulents. It’s no surprise that I sometimes get asked if there are any books on agaves that I would recommend. Yes, there are. In fact, I know of four agave-centric books currently in print (sorted by year of publication): Pilbeam, J. (2013). A Gallery of Agaves (including variegates) . Hornchurch, Essex, UK: The British Cactus & Succulent Society. Starr, G. (2012). Agaves: Living Sculptures for Landscapes and Containers . Portland, OR: Timber Press. Irish, M., & Irish, G. (2000). Agaves, Yuccas, and Related Plants: A Gardener's Guide . Portland, OR: Timber Press. Gentry, H. (1982). Agaves of Continental North America . Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press. Let’s take a look at each one. I’ll tell you what I think its merits are so you can decide for yourself if it’s the right book for you.

Mushrooms in my succulent bed

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Here’s a topic I haven’t talked about much on this blog: mushrooms. But then, the past few winters have been very dry so mushrooms haven’t been a common sight. This year, I have a feeling, will be very different. With another 1 inch of rain in the last 24 hours, we’re now up to a full 8 inches for the month of December alone— that’s more in a month than we received in all of 2013 (less than 6 inches). Here’s what I just spotted in the succulent bed between our driveway and our neighbor’s: I haven’t got the faintest idea what kind of fungus it is, but it’s quite pretty up close:

From Aloe to Aloiampelos, Aloidendron, Aristaloe, Gonialoe, Kumara

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Taxonomists—scientists describing, naming and classifying organisms—love change. They are constantly assigning and reassigning plants (and animals) based on the latest research findings. The decisions they make often annoy gardeners: After all, why is it necessary to move a plant that has always been one thing into another bucket, causing its botanical name to change? Sometimes these things seem haphazard, but I’m sure they’re always scientifically motivated. Or at least I hope so. Most of the time the work taxonomists do attracts little attention among the gardening crowd, myself included. However, when an entire group of plants I’m fond of is affected, my ears do perk up. Case in point: the recent reclassification of the genus Aloe . Molecular studies suggest that not all aloe species have the same evolutionary origin and hence are less closely related than previously thought. Based on those findings, some species have been separated from the genus Aloe and moved into their genus.

20 hours of nonstop rain

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The much touted storm forecast for Thursday, December 11, 2014 did arrive and it did bring quite bit of rain to Northern California, but it wasn’t as cataclysmic as the media had made it out to be. At least not here in Davis. We didn’t have the high winds other areas experienced, and we didn’t have any flooding. But it did rain for 20 hours straight, from about 9 am on Thursday until 5 am this morning, which translated into 3.73 inches. Not the 7 inches Lake Shasta recorded, mind you, but nothing to sneeze at either, especially considering that in December 2013 we had 0.39 inches for the entire month ! This year, the December total is already a bit over 7 inches. Bradford pear and Asian lemon bamboo ( Bambusa eutuldoides ‘Viridividatta’)  as seen from upstairs

Of leaves and lights

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Just recently I wrote about the pesky leaves that keep bothering my poor succulents. Since then we’ve had three inches of rain, which has brought us above normal for the season. That’s exactly what drought-ridden California needed. And we’re not done. More rain is in the forecast for Wednesday through Sunday. The last rain storm came with fairly strong winds, which knocked most of the remaining leaves off the trees. The bad news: leaves everywhere. The good news: very few leaves left on the trees, so not much more to fall.

Ruth Bancroft Garden in December

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After selecting my plants at the recent Black Friday sale at the Ruth Bancroft Garden in Walnut Creek, CA, I took a stroll through the garden itself. Fortunately, the rain had stopped by then, and at times the sun was making a valiant effort to break through the clouds. The weather was definitely a deterrent that day: I only saw two other people while I was walking around. I practically had the place to myself! Shade structure housing tender succulents covered for the winter Agave salmiana

Fall color at my house—and real rain, finally!

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While some areas of Davis have quite a bit of fall color—especially the older neighborhoods downtown with their majestic trees—there isn’t much at our house. But I did find a few pops of color over the weekend. It’s a good thing I took these photos then, because the series of storms that began on Sunday has blown a lot of these leaves away. Bradford pear ( Pyrus calleryana ‘Bradford’) across the street