exotic plant, exotic pest

The upper canopy of my two plants of Aloe bar­berae (aka A. Baine­sii). The left one is the larger, typ­i­cal form. The one on the right is the dwarf form from Mozam­bique. The one on the left is the one affect by aloe mite.

I’m heart­bro­ken that one of the two big tree aloe in the front yard is under attack by aloe mites, the scourge of many aloe grow­ers. The suc­cu­lent expert at one of my local nurs­eries just shook his head when I asked for any­thing that would make the mites go away. Of course I ran to the web for advice. Dis­cus­sions splat­tered all over the charts, from guard­edly opti­mistic to “throw the thing in the trash.” I started to uncover sev­eral ref­er­ences to the syn­drome that the aloe gall mites gen­er­ate as “aloe cancer.”

The best dis­cus­sion I encoun­tered I’ve seen so far is at Xeric­World forums, where the whole range of opin­ions gets expressed by a num­ber of experts. The thread has lots of pho­tos of infected plants and of the mites them­selves. Grow­ers expressed suc­cess with insec­ti­cides (even though mites aren’t insects). Oth­ers had zero results even with ded­i­cated miti­cides. Most peo­ple rec­om­mend plant-surgery, and one per­son treated affected areas with bleach.

A newly devel­op­ing gall.

One of the galls pro­duced by the plant in reac­tion to being attacked by Aloe mites.

Sun­bird Aloes, a com­mer­cial firm in South Africa, the land of aloes, rec­om­mends a com­pletely dif­fer­ent treat­ment: formalde­hyde applied to the gall.

There’s also an infor­ma­tive page hosted by Michael J. Green hosted at the Gates Cac­tus & Suc­cu­lent Soci­ety [ here ]. The author here points out that the gall is pro­duced by the plant in reac­tion to a chem­i­cal pro­duced by the mites, a com­pound sim­i­lar to 2–4-d, one of the main ingre­di­ents in the infa­mous Viet­nam War her­bi­cide Agent Orange.

Closeup of another of the galls on the trunk.

Most of the treat­ments are intended for spot treat­ments when only part of the plant is infested. But my poor plant has a major infes­ta­tion all over its main trunk, and that’s been affect­ing the growths far­ther up. It’s been in grad­ual decline for sev­eral years, but it’s going down­hill quickly. At first I thought it was gophers eat­ing the roots, or the renters next door stop­ping water­ing of their lawn and the aloe roots that extend under it. But I’ve finally fig­ured out the awful truth. Even the plant seems to real­ize its dis­tress since it’s start­ing to shoot new growths from near the base of the trunk.

I step back and try to be philo­soph­i­cal and maybe even mar­vel in my grief that such tiny, nearly microsopic crea­tures can take down such a large plant. It’s all a part of the cycle of life that we cel­e­brate with the sea­sons and the changes plants go through. Only with some­thing tree-sized I was hop­ing for some­thing that would out­live me, not a twenty-year rela­tion­ship that would end in tragedy.

The end of one of the leaves being pro­duced at the base of the plant. I’m not sure if this might be early signs of mite dam­age or a bad reac­tion to some of my dra­con­ian treatments.

If any of you have had luck with some­thing let me know! In the mean­time I’m try­ing a few treat­ments. As much as I try to avoid chem­i­cal nas­ti­ness in the gar­den, I’m des­per­ate. I’m remov­ing the galls and swab­bing the infected area with a 50% bleach solu­tion. I’ve applied the sys­temic insec­ti­cide imi­da­clo­prid at the roots, hop­ing that the insec­ti­cide won’t affect the ben­e­fi­cial bugs feed­ing on the plants nearby. Then I tried to spray just the affected plant–a big 12–16 footer–as best as I could with Bayer 3-in-1, which in addi­tion to imi­da­clo­prid con­tains the miti­cide tau-fluvalinate. I don’t know that these treat­ments will do any­thing other than relieve me of guilt that I didn’t try what I could to save the plant.

Wish me luck.

July 26 2010 | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags: | 12 Comments »

agonizing over the right pot

I’m a lit­tle embar­rassed to admit that peo­ple often hate to go shop­ping with me. Plants, clothes, paint col­ors, cheese…it can some­times take me a long time to make up my mind. I admit that these aren’t life-or-death deci­sions I’m mak­ing. But as far as I’m con­cerned that’s no excuse not to pay atten­tion to the process. Some things in life are still very impor­tant.

Dur­ing last week’s plant shop­ping adven­ture I picked up three lit­tle aloes I wanted to pot up for the back patio. I was sur­prised by how quickly I was able to pick between all the cool offer­ings. Some col­lec­tors like one of every­thing that catches their eye. By con­trast I guess I like to col­lect one thing in depth. Accord­ingly I picked an inter­est­ing genus of plant (Aloe) and then decided on three con­trast­ing but com­ple­men­tary exam­ples. I was a lit­tle both­ered that two of the three were unknowns, but I don’t begin to con­sider myself an aloe col­lec­tor. They looked cool and the price was rea­son­able. Deci­sion made.

Then came time to select pots for the plants and for the loca­tion where they’d live. The local Home Depot had some func­tional designs but noth­ing that excited me. Then I was off to my favorite local nurs­ery. Even when I set some basic rules for myself (“noth­ing match­ing,” “a sim­ple design not detract­ing from the plant,” “earth tones or glazed blue for color”) I ended up with lots of work­able options. Since the nurs­ery has a good return pol­icy I picked six to take home to see how they looked on the patio and with the plants.

None of the pots were really pricey, but in all cases they were priced higher than the plants. A lot of the prof­its in the nurs­ery and land­scap­ing biz aren’t the plants them­selves, but all the stuff that goes with them.

So in the end I kept four of the pots and rejected the cen­ter and right of the largest pots in the first photo. The extra pot now houses a lit­tle divi­sion of Aloe mac­u­lata (a.k.a. A. saponaria) that I dug up from the front yard. It’s typ­i­cally an aggres­sive colonizer–the Matil­ija poppy of aloes–spreading under­ground via long stolons. I’m not sure how it’ll do in a pot, so this is an experiment.

Here’s part of the fin­ished edge of the patio. Clock­wise from the top: Aloe andon­gen­sis, A. saponaria, unknown red aloe.

And here’s the last of the aloes, yet another unknown, nearby in its new pot.

In my teen years I did some infor­mal study of Japan­ese bon­sai and ike­bana, the art of arrang­ing branches, leaves and flow­ers. Pro­por­tion pro­por­tion pro­por­tion were big themes in both, and one of the stan­dard for­mu­las was that the con­tainer should be approx­i­mately one and a half times the height of the plant mate­r­ial. In all my pots the plants seem too small, but as we all know plants do that amaz­ing thing: grow. Since some of these are unknown species I have no idea how much they’ll grow. But I hope they’ll come to look more at home in their new digs.

Okay, now it’s time to worry about the next big thing…

July 19 2010 | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags: | 5 Comments »

the huntington desert garden

The late-December light was fad­ing when I headed to the wild and won­der­ful plants that make up the Huntington’s Desert Gar­den. The gar­den dates back many decades and fea­tures some immense spec­i­mens the likes of which you’ll almost never see. But what I love most about the gar­den is that it incor­po­rates these great plants into land­scapes that both honor the plants and use them in strik­ing combinations.

Many aloes were bloom­ing with their dra­matic spikes of hot, bright col­ors. The the­atri­cal light­ing helped to make some of the scenes even more dramatic.

(Be sure to click onthe third image to enlarge it. In its unearthly weird­ness, it’s got to be one of my favorite gar­den pho­tos I’ve ever taken.)



One zone of the gar­den focuses on plants you’d find in Cal­i­for­nia. Here a cre­osote bush serves as a screen for a radi­ant gray-white agave.

And this scene employs the coastal and Chan­nel Island buck­wheat, Saint Catherine’s lace (Eri­o­gonum gigan­teum)–a plant that tech­ni­cally doesn’t come from a desert–with other dry­land plants. The gray-green foliage on all of them helps to unify this diverse planting.

The Hunt­ing­ton is in a warm sub­trop­i­cal area just east of Los Ange­les. That doesn’t mean that it’s warm enough for all of these plants. Patio heaters of the kind that you see out­doors at restau­rants keep plants warm at night in one area of the gar­den. (These are the frigid depths of Decem­ber, after all.)

Now, as much as I was try­ing to focus on the over­all land­scape, I have to share a few pho­tos of indi­vid­ual species that caught my eye.

Look­ing up at a very large Yucca fil­if­era from Mexico…

(There’s an extremely sim­i­lar shot of the exact same plant on the Germanatrix’s post on her visit to this same gar­den at the end of Novem­ber. Check it out: here.)

Two tall palms with immense tree aloes, Aloe bar­berae. At the Hunt­ing­ton the species is iden­ti­fied as A. baine­sii, but the tax­on­o­mists have had a change of heart. I have two of these in my lit­tle front yard, the tallest of them still under twenty feet but still impres­sive at that size. The writeup on this plant says it can hit fifty feet or more. The Hunt­ing­ton spec­i­mens are just about there, I’d guess.

A dynamic and lyri­cal tan­gle of leaves on sev­eral plants of the var­ie­gated form of Agave amer­i­cana… (Homage to some­body… later Willem de Koon­ing? Franz Kline?) Agaves with their per­fect rosettes seem to appeal to the part of our brains that appre­ci­ate sym­me­try and order. This plant­ing sub­verted the expected into a beau­ti­ful mess.

A tall, dense stand of Cleis­to­cac­tus straus­sii

As we left the Hunt­ing­ton the light that had made the Desert Gar­den extra-interesting was col­or­ing up the flanks of Mount Wil­son and the the rest of the San Gabriels.

Not far away from the Hunt­ing­ton is Pasadena, the site of the annual New Year’s Rose Parade, which should be get­ting under way not long after this post hits the web. (Okay, it’s sort of a lame way to try to segue this post to the topic of New Year’s Day, but–hey!–I had to give it a try.)

Happy New Year’s to all of you, and best wishes for a healthy and pros­per­ous year filled with amaz­ing botan­i­cal highlights.

January 01 2010 | Categories: gardeninglandscape designplaces | Tags: | 11 Comments »

peak february bloom

The storm was pass­ing, and the after­noon light was per­fect. The suc­cu­lents bloom­ing in the front yard never looked bet­ter. I had to get the cam­era for this one!

february-succulents-in-full-bloom

In bloom are Aloe arborescens (orange-red) and a cras­sula species or rel­a­tive (yel­low). To the right, not in bloom but still dra­matic, are two clones of a tree aloe (Aloe bar­berae). The low filler plant to the right is the Cal­i­for­nia native coy­ote bush (Bac­cha­ris pilu­laris pilu­laris ‘Pigeon Point’). I don’t nor­mally love the neighbor’s big pointy juniper in the back­ground, but I think it com­pletes this pic­ture nicely.

February 08 2009 | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags: | 6 Comments »

view into the january garden

front-window-aloe-viewThis is one of the rea­sons why peo­ple live in a Mediter­ranean cli­mate like San Diego, suf­fer­ing the fre­quent 70-plus degree day­time tem­per­a­tures. Here’s the view out the front room win­dow onto this huge, mound­ing pile of bloom­ing aloe. I think it’s A. arborescens, one of the more com­mon species that you see all over town. (There’s a lit­tle epi­den­drum orchid bloom­ing just out­side the win­dow, but who’s going to pay it any atten­tion with the aloe going off in the background?)

aloe-bloomsA closer look at the flowers…

aloe-and-agave-leaves…and a closer look at the leaves of the aloe (ser­rated edges, much softer than they appear) and the agave (straight edges).

For some peo­ple, it’s not win­ter with­out see­ing snow. For me, it’s not win­ter until I’ve seen the aloe. Okay. I’m ready for spring now.

January 30 2009 | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags: | 3 Comments »

in bloom: this big aloe

Sorry. I don’t know the species, but it’s for sure an aloe, pos­si­bly Aloe arborescens. It’s pretty com­mon in South­ern Cal­i­for­nia but spec­tac­u­lar nev­er­the­less, espe­cially in bloom:


Aloe in bloom

This is the plant in the front yard. It’s now mound­ing some­thing like 6 feet tall and maybe 8 wide, and cov­ered with these tall spires of coral-orange-red flow­ers. You can eas­ily for­get that there are other things bloom­ing.

Aloe plant


Like other aloes, it orig­i­nates in South­ern Africa, if not South Africa proper. It left a Mediter­ranean cli­mate sim­i­lar to California’s, and thrives on the warm, dry sum­mers and cool, moister win­ters. Some sum­mers it endures more than a month with no sup­ple­men­tal water, and it’d sur­vive just fine if it didn’t get half of how much it gets. But like many things it responds to a lit­tle coax­ing, and with a lit­tle water looks a lit­tle less feral.

There’s a def­i­nite hier­ar­chy among some ecologically-concerned though a lit­tle purist gar­den­ers. Fake Eng­lish coun­try gar­dens that in the desert that is Cal­i­for­nia require lots of water and are filled with overfed dis­pos­able plants bloom­ing them­selves to death are near the dregs of the dregs at the bot­tom of the list. Drought-tolerant land­scap­ing rises lots higher. And in the high­est regard are the drought-tolerant gar­dens that rely solely on native plants. So this aloe is a middle-of-the-road choice in social con­scious­ness. If it were human it’d prob­a­bly drive a Sub­aru and vote for fairly pro­gres­sive causes, though it might be caught throw­ing recy­clables out with the land­fill trash or lis­ten­ing to Howard Stern.

It’s inter­est­ing that a plant can have been in cul­ti­va­tion here for a cen­tury or more and still be con­sid­ered an exotic species. Human ances­tors that might have brought the plant with them would now be long-gone, though their prog­eny could be con­sid­ered native to wher­ever they were born. Biol­ogy, though, has a much longer mem­ory, and with good reason.

Some of these species brought over from other places could take over the biota, just like the human exotics have pretty much dis­placed the native pop­u­la­tions that were here before them. Those of us who aren’t Native Amer­i­cans are the human kudzus, the human tamarisks, the human tumbleweeds–opportunistic col­o­niz­ers of a benign new prospect. Some of these other gar­den plants could well go on to be the scourge of the con­ti­nent. But in the end the plants and the immi­grants all share the basic will to survive–survive first and ask moral ques­tions later if at all.

For­tu­nately, this aloes seems con­tent in its place as it gets big­ger, and big­ger, and big­ger, shad­ing its com­peti­tors and smoth­er­ing smaller plants around it.

Uh oh.

Sure is pretty though, eh?

January 14 2008 | Categories: gardeningmy gardenplant profilesrambles | Tags: | 1 Comment »