friday garden roundup

After fin­ish­ing my cof­fee and read­ing some of the news­pa­per this morn­ing I took a quick sur­vey around the yard.

melianthus-major-plant-with-dried-flowers

Honey bush (Melianthus major) is a South African species that I’ve had for a cou­ple years now. Although it responds to water­ing with a lot of spunky growth, it’s also good with min­i­mal addi­tional water­ing. I have two sprin­kler heads in the gar­den, and this plant gets by on the over­spray from one of the heads after it’s made the sages and tan­ger­ine tree happy.

The maroon flow­ers unfurl from the branch tips in spring and dry to these brown spikes. I’ve left them on the plant to help me decide if I like the way they look or not. The bed they’re in in has a lot of mound­ing plants, so the spikes give some ver­ti­cal interest.

melianthus-major-leaf-detail-with-shadows

melianthus-major-leaf-detail-backlit

The leaves are heav­ily ser­rated and are the main rea­son for grow­ing the plant. Here they are, with shad­ows, and back­lit by the morn­ing sun. They look a lit­tle fierce, but they’re actu­ally soft, like rub­ber. They do have a bit of an unpleas­ant odor if you brush by them. Com­bine that fact with the plant’s even­tual size–six to twelve feet–and you’ll see that it has “dra­matic back­ground plant” writ­ten all over it.

bromeliad-backlit

The melianthus grows next to a bromeliad that truly is nasty and spiny. (I’ve men­tioned this plant before…) Pretty though, even when it’s not flow­er­ing. And it takes next to no water when grown in mostly shade.

exfoliating-bark-on-dr-hurd-manzanita

Next to the honey bush and bromeliad, in a plant­ing that spans two or three con­ti­nents, is a young man­zanita, Actostaphy­los Dr. Hurd, shown here in a detail high­light­ing its exfo­li­at­ing bark. Although one of the faster grow­ing manzanitas–it’s grown eight inches since February–this still isn’t a plant for the impa­tient. Cur­rently it’s exactly one meter tall, and will hope­fully hit its design height of ten feet before I’m back dia­pers. Even­tu­ally it’ll make it to fif­teen feet or more.

basil-from-cuttings

In the front of the same bed, next to a sprin­kler head, are some basil cut­tings that I’ve posted on before. Six weeks after plant­ing out, the largest plant is maybe eight by eight inches and is big enough for me to con­sider tak­ing an occa­sional snip for the din­ner table. In a month I should be ready to make batches of pesto.

plastic-grass

The final photo isn’t my gar­den, but look­ing across the street, where they’re installing plas­tic turf. The neigh­bors are respond­ing to our new water restric­tions by mix­ing syn­thetic grass with palm trees. The look will be some­thing like the wet Hawai­ian par­adise they had before.

But I do worry that syn­thetic grass, even if it looks some­thing like the real thing, does noth­ing to address people’s fun­da­men­tal expec­ta­tions of what a gar­den should look like in a fiercely dry cli­mate. And in my most unchar­i­ta­ble moments I think that installing plas­tic grass is like treat­ing heroin addic­tion with methadone. And to this gar­dener, installing some­thing as dead as plas­tic grass lands with a thud as loud as the one cre­ated by the infa­mous 1978 remodel of a Sun­set Boule­vard man­sion by a Saudi sheik that fea­tured planters full of plas­tic flowers.

But hey, they’re doing what makes sense to them, and they will be reduc­ing their water use.

July 17 2009 10:13 am | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags:

5 Responses to “friday garden roundup”

  1. Darla on 17 Jul 2009 at 12:23 pm #

    Your pho­tos are great.……across the street? Indoor/Outdoor carpet…

  2. James Golden on 17 Jul 2009 at 6:20 pm #

    I’m with you on the fake grass. Too bad peo­ple do such things.

  3. tina on 17 Jul 2009 at 8:29 pm #

    Syn­thetic grass? What will they think of next. And hey, you are so right that if it works for them that’s great. I think I’d have a bunch of cacti and gravel if I lived in a desert like area.

  4. Barbara E on 18 Jul 2009 at 6:30 am #

    I really just do not under­stand this thing with plas­tic gar­dens. I’m busy cut­ting back dry native plants and remov­ing organic mulch to com­ply with the fire depart­ment cita­tion, while oth­ers are putting down mate­ri­als like syn­thetic grass and “mulch” made of tires and brakes that, although not very flam­ma­ble, will release toxic fumes if they do start to burn. Where’s the sense? Where are the but­ter­flies? Aargh!

  5. jo on 24 Jul 2009 at 1:30 pm #

    Yes, but.……think of all those peace­ful non-mowing days. No engine noise and no fumes. Bliss.

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