expectations

I did a lit­tle nurs­ery hop­ping with John in North County yes­ter­day. Inland North County is still in large part avo­cado coun­try, and in fact they call that stretch of I-15 the “Avo­cado High­way.” And mixed in with the avo­ca­dos are var­i­ous plant nurs­eries, some whole­sale, some open to the public.

The first of two stops was Las Pil­i­tas Nurs­ery, a large cleared lot sur­rounded by sycamores, the south­ern out­post in Escon­dido of a larger con­cern up in San Luis Obispo. Most gar­den cen­ters you go to seem to be packed with easy-to-grow stuff in bloom, plants that whore them­selves at you with seduc­tive blooms and intox­i­cat­ing scents. If you head to Las Pil­i­tas expect­ing that kind of expe­ri­ence, you’ll be seri­ously let down, par­tic­u­larly in off-season.

A lot of the plants this trip were on the smaller side since it was still later win­ter and their stock was liv­ing out­doors, not in a green­house. And the place isn’t not afraid to have big blocks of dor­mant things mixed in with the other stock. Some of the dor­mant things are leaf­less pots of scrappy look­ing twigs. Other dor­mant pots just look like pots of dirt where the twigs have died back entirely. Okay.….so you do have to take it a bit on faith that you’re really buy­ing a plant and not some nice pot­ting mix. But stick the root mass in the ground and you’ll hope­fully have a plant before you know it. Think of it like you’re plant­ing bulbs.

And the plants in their inven­tory them­selves live up to dif­fer­ent expec­ta­tions. Most natives aren’t the high-strung prima donna gar­den plants at the gar­den cen­ters. Some take their cues from the dry sum­mers and go dor­mant in when it’s hot. Other are winter-deciduous. These are plants you take with all their char­ac­ter­is­tics, and you’d prob­a­bly not want to put them where you’d expect to have lush foliage and flow­ers all year round. But there are lots of things that look respectable year-round, along with a few that really are pretty extrav­a­gant all the time. I ended up with a pot of dor­mant twigs–Spi­raea dou­glasii (west­ern spiraea)–three Heucera max­ima (island alum root), and one Car­pen­te­ria cal­i­for­nica (bush anenome).

All that said, the owner, Valerie, is knowl­edge­able, com­mit­ted and pas­sion­ate about her plants. Below are pic­tures of these three plants from the web­site. Bear in mind that the plants I bought were lit­tle 1 gal­lon­ers, though 1 gal­lon­ers that I fully expect to start look­ing more like their pic­tures before too long…




The other stop on the trip was Buena Creek Gar­dens, in San Mar­cos, a totally dif­fer­ent sort of expe­ri­ence. Located on sev­eral acres that have been planted like a small botan­i­cal gar­den, the feel of the place is calm and play­ful, lush and relaxed, where Las Pil­i­tas was more seri­ous and matter-of-fact.

buenairis.jpgThis is one of their demon­stra­tion gar­dens, with some bloom­ing iris and alstrome­ria, with a cordy­line in the background.

buenabamboo.jpgCon­nect­ing a cou­ple of their demon­stra­tion gar­dens is this path through a bam­boo thicket.


buenaprunus.jpg
…and in bloom over one of their sales area was this Prunus species, a Tai­wanese flow­er­ing cherry, I think she called it. The orig­i­nal plant was a shrub, not a tree. So the cool flow­er­ing cherry plant was grafted onto a tree to give this great effect. Unfor­tu­nately the pic­ture doesn’t do the plant jus­tice.

Some of the cool plants in the ground were avail­able for sale, but, darn!, many were not. Still we came home with six or so more plants. Some­times it’s pretty hard to resist some splashy plants, even if you’re try­ing to go with a greater pro­por­tion of natives.

Okay, plants. You’ve been in the ground for at least six hours. Isn’t that enough time for the yard to look just like the demon­stra­tion gardens?

February 16 2008 05:33 pm | Categories: gardeningplacesrambles |

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