bye-bye birdie

bird-of-paradise-plant

Yesterday’s big gar­den task was to take out a big bird of par­adise that we’d planted twenty years ago.

Left: The “before”…

after-removal-of-bird-of-paradise-plant

…and the “after”…

gbbd-feb09-bird-of-paradise

The plant had some good things to rec­om­mend it: big splashy flow­ers (if you’re into that sort of thing), a robust plant that needs min­i­mal main­te­nance, and a require­ment for no addi­tional water­ing beyond what it gets from rain­fall here near the coast.

damaged-brick-from-bird-of-paradise-roots

But one bad trait that you don’t often see dis­cussed is that over time the roots can do dam­age to nearby hard­scape. Ours had lifted the brick patio nearby by over an inch over just the past year.

hedge-trimmers

John’s first inspi­ra­tion was to use the hedge trim­mers. The idea was that they’d make quick work of the bird, cut­ting through the lower stalks as if they were but­ter, and we’d be done in a cou­ple min­utes. They sort of worked, but had a hard time cut­ting through the fibrous stalks. It might take an hour, not two minutes.

felco-pruners

Since it was such slow going I decided that doing things man­u­ally, with the trusty hand pruners, would work at least as well and not intro­duce the issue of los­ing a fin­ger or two to the blades.

turckload-of-bird-of-paradise

The local land­fill has a pro­gram where they’ll accept greens waste with­out charge, chop it to bits, process it into mulch or com­post, and sell it for next to noth­ing. But cer­tain fibrous plant waste is exempted: things like palms, bananas, bam­boo and a few other plants…including bird of par­adise. So, any­thing on the list of for­bid­dens has to be dumped as reg­u­lar urban waste.

bird-of-paradise-at-dump

I’m not up on dump fees around the coun­try, but our lit­tle expe­di­tion cost $34, about the same as a trip to the zoo ($35 per adult) and a deal com­pared to a day at Sea World ($55–65). And with no food stands sell­ing deep-fried munchies, it was prob­a­bly a lot less fattening.

native-plants-at-the-dump-riparian-area

While at the dump, it was a chance to see some of the rare local ripar­ian habi­tat whizz by the win­dow at 35 mph…

native-plants-at-the-dump-roadside

…and some bloom­ing buck­wheats. It’s not quite a native plant gar­den, but the edges of the land­fill shield some pro­tected and uncom­mon species.

In fact, imme­di­ately to the east, is Mira­mar Mounds National Nat­ural Land­mark, a piece of land des­ig­nated to be of spe­cial inter­est in a pro­gram admin­is­tered by the National Park Ser­vice. The Land­mark comes to life dur­ing the win­ter rains, with ver­nal pools sud­denly dot­ting mesa tops. The fed­er­ally endan­gered San Diego mesa mint breaks into bloom, and the ground around the pools comes alive with toads the size of your thumb­nail and Pacific cho­rus frogs…or so I’ve heard. Although I’ve vis­ited ver­nal pools before, I’ve never made it to Mira­mar Mounds proper. Bounded by free­ways, the dump, and part of the adja­cent mil­i­tary base, access is restricted. It’s def­i­nitely on my list of places in town I’d love to visit.

July 12 2009 06:42 am | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags:

4 Responses to “bye-bye birdie”

  1. Barbara E on 12 Jul 2009 at 8:52 am #

    Just feel good that you weren’t remov­ing Agave amer­i­cana — that one can really hurt! I’m impressed with your hard work on a sum­mer day!

  2. Helen/patientgardener on 12 Jul 2009 at 11:21 am #

    Bet you have lots of plans for the extra space you have gained

  3. Town Mouse on 12 Jul 2009 at 7:16 pm #

    Isn’t it lib­er­at­ing to take out a bit plant like that? And what an inter­est­ing drive to the dump…

  4. lostlandscape on 13 Jul 2009 at 8:42 pm #

    Bar­bara, that agave would be pretty painful to deal with–and HUGE. The project hap­pened in the cool of the morn­ing and in the shade. It could have been worse!

    Helen, you’re read­ing my mind!

    Town Mouse, now begins the hard part of deal­ing with the roots. Ack ack. The dump has always been one of my favorite places–not pretty by any means, but incred­i­bly interesting.

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