two saturdays

A cou­ple hours of com­mu­nity ser­vice: Sounds a lit­tle like a sen­tence handed down by a judge, but it was actu­ally how I spent some of last Sat­ur­day. I’ve posted ear­lier about the native plant gar­den at Old Town State His­toric Park. That trip I was walk­ing the paths and enjoy­ing garden.

palm-seedlings

But this time I was a vol­un­teer help­ing main­tain this inter­est­ing young gar­den. Much of the time I was squat­ted down in the dirt pulling up lit­tle palm trees. If you live in another part of the world you might think that pulling up palm trees is a bizarre thing to do. But palm seedlings are a very real weed around here, espe­cially when there are still actively fruit­ing palms nearby, and when there’s still an active seed­bank left from one of the palms that was removed to make way for the garden.

palm-date

palm-mexican-fan

mallow-flower

In just one month since my last visit, the num­ber of flow­ers had dimin­ished as we head into our long brown sea­son when many plants approach dor­mancy. There were some splashy clarkia flow­ers remain­ing, as well as this mal­low from the Chan­nel Islands.

There were other weeds to pull at, and the day ended with a quick prun­ing demon­stra­tion and a demon­stra­tion on one way to main­tain deer grass (Muh­len­ber­gia rigens). With this big, dra­matic grass you can let the stems go brown–which is an easy-maintenance approach to this plant. Or you can reach down on each of the old flow­er­ing stems, feel for a joint a cou­ple inches above the base of the plant, and pull. muhlenbergia-rigensIf you find the node, the stem yanks out with­out much resis­tance. It’s not a chore you can do eas­ily while wear­ing thick gloves, and with­out gloves you’ve likely to shred your hands. For­tu­nately this a grass that looks stately and archi­tec­tural whether or not you pull the dried stems. We left most of the plants as they were.

After just two hours of tidy­ing the gar­den looked even bet­ter and ready for the dry months ahead.

Jump ahead one week…

plant-sale-wet-pavement

Even though June is typ­i­cally one of our dry months, today was cool and driz­zly as John and I headed for the Mas­ter Gardener’s plant sale at Bal­boa Park.

plant-sale-fig

We parked near the park’s jumbo More­ton Bay fig (Ficus macro­phylla). It’s an amaz­ing plant, but like many figs, it’s not a good choice if you’re con­cerned about keep­ing your home’s foun­da­tion intact. I was appre­cia­tive of hav­ing the park, a great publicly-funded shared space, where you can go to enjoy spec­tac­u­lar plants that don’t make sense to plant in most home spaces.

plant-sale-lined-up

Rain or shine, the peo­ple make a trail to this plant sale. This is half an hour before the sale, with all these brave souls stand­ing in the heavy mist wait­ing to get first crack at this year’s offerings.

plant-sale-shoppers

…and this is dur­ing the first few min­utes of the sale.

Some high­lights this year were bromeli­ads from Bal­boa Park’s prop­a­ga­tion program–big plants for the price of a Happy Meal–and an entire table of dif­fer­ent salvias. As thrilled as I am with the genus salvia, I resisted the temp­ta­tions. No space in the gar­den is no space in the garden.

plant-sale-johns-plant

But John didn’t show the same restraint. He likes his suc­cu­lents. And the more unla­beled the suc­cu­lent is the bet­ter. I swear he does this to drive me crazy, know­ing how much I like my plant names. (The suc­cu­lent expert on site looked at it and said that it’s some sort of cras­sula rel­a­tive, which is what I’d have called it. Okay, we have a fam­ily name, and now only 1400 species to go through… Any help out there?)

Although we didn’t end up drop­ping a lot of change on this sale, many peo­ple with more space in the gar­dens found inter­est­ing plants to pop­u­late their spaces. And the pro­ceeds from the sale go to a good cause.

So these two Sat­ur­days showed a cou­ple way you can help the botan­i­cal orga­ni­za­tions around town. You can donate your labor. Or you can do what comes nat­u­rally for most Amer­i­cans: Go shopping!

June 20 2009 01:19 pm | Categories: gardeningplaces | Tags:

5 Responses to “two saturdays”

  1. Daniel Mount on 21 Jun 2009 at 11:31 am #

    Did you ever find out which cras­sula that is. I would have bought it too, even though I’m a stick­ler for names. I love the kale post­ing, great sen­si­bil­ity. I will visit your blog again. D.

  2. lostlandscape on 21 Jun 2009 at 6:48 pm #

    Daniel, still no pos­i­tive ID. I’ve trawled through online list­ings of a lot of cras­sula species but noth­ing looks too much like it so far. And thanks for the com­ment on the kale post. I’ve heard fo art match­ing a sofa. Maybe peo­ple need clothes that match their veggies?

  3. ryan on 22 Jun 2009 at 4:19 pm #

    You might try send­ing a photo to cac­tus jun­gle blog.

  4. Country Mouse on 28 Jun 2009 at 5:35 am #

    I’ve been to More­ton Bay and seen a locally famous old exam­ple of the More­ton Bay Fig. It’s in Cabool­ture, near Bris­bane, Queens­land. My par­ents lived in a tiny town nearby for sev­eral years.
    I’m “think­ing about get­ting into suc­cu­lents” as they are good for the defen­si­ble space around the house. I’d like to use Cal natives but on the other hand it could be fun to go wild with non-invasive exotic ones.

  5. lostlandscape on 28 Jun 2009 at 3:29 pm #

    Coun­try Mouse, so there’s really a big fig in More­ton Bay? That’s com­fort­ing to know that they don’t pull exotic-sounding names out of the air to stick onto plants.

    Our local paper often extols using suc­cu­lents for fire bar­ri­ers. One piece: http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20071111/news_1hs11save.html (Don’t ever ever plant the green form of Euphor­bia tir­i­cal­lii rec­om­mended in the arti­cle, how­ever, unless you want a mon­ster on your hands that drips evil, blind­ing latex goo.) I’m sure you’re famil­iar with the native suc­cu­lents, the dud­leyas and agaves and yuc­cas and such. But it’s hard to say no to all the other inter­est­ing choices.

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