those autumn leaves, so-cal edition

Here’s a short roundup of some of the leaf col­ors going on in the gar­den. This is South­ern Cal­i­for­nia so it was tough com­ing up with the stereo­typ­i­cal siz­zling reds and yel­low and oranges of a lot of autumn gar­dens in colder cli­mates. But I think we’ve got some pretty cool col­ors, includ­ing the color that might cause the most envy from the north­ern lat­i­tudes: green!

Unfor­tu­nately this is what the pre­ced­ing plant looks like when you back away from the few remain­ing col­ored leaves. Most of the autumn color is from the pile o’ bricks in the background.

I’ve men­tioned my fond­ness for the look of poi­son oak before. This is a rel­a­tive from Cal­i­for­nia and much of the rest of the coun­try, Rhus aro­mat­ica, a.k.a. R. trilo­bata, the Gro-Low clone. It’s not poi­so­nous, but not so amaz­ingly col­ored as its evil cousin either.

Yel­low­ing apri­cot leaves…

Euphor­bia tiru­calli, the Sticks on Fire clone, show­ing the orange and red col­ors that start to develop as the tem­per­a­ture plum­mets into the high 30s. I’ve grown–and bat­tled to remove–the typ­i­cal green ver­sion which gets pretty huge and out of con­trol. This clone doesn’t get nearly so huge, but I don’t trust that fact enough to let it out of a pot.

This photo of a lit­tle plum is more inter­est­ing than pretty. These are the Decem­ber leaves of one of those multi-variety grafted trees. Each of the vari­eties is col­or­ing up in its own way.

Another Euphor­bia, E. cotini­fo­lia. This one’s a bit of a cheat. The leaves are this color all year until they drop for the winter.

A close look at the chalk dud­leya, D. pul­veru­lenta. Some of the white stuff cov­er­ing the leaves has been rubbed off in the fore­ground leaves.

On the left, the mediter­ranean Phlomis mono­cephala, in its stressed gold-green sum­mer col­oration. Soon the plant will turn greener with more rains. To the right, Central-California Coast native Astra­galus nut­tal­lii with leaves edg­ing towards blue and gray.

And all over the gar­den are seedlings show­ing lots of that green color I talked about. Here’s a young plant of the local sting­ing lupine, Lupi­nus hir­sutis­simus. It doesn’t really sting, but the lit­tle haris can def­i­nitely poke you. Han­dling a dried plant after it’s died down in the spring with­out gloves is not one of the more pleas­ant things I’ve done.



Happy fall, every­one. I hope you all enjoy what­ever col­ors the sea­son brings you.

December 04 2010 | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags: | 9 Comments »

one wall to go

The house projects con­tinue. We’ve worked around my lit­tle stu­dio build­ing and are now on the final stretch, 22 feet of wall that backs a raised planter. There’s only one win­dow to worry about on this wall, but all the plants are mak­ing it a del­i­cate demo­li­tion operation.

Mashed Heucherias

Some of the green­ery is look­ing a lit­tle trod­den on. This is a row of island coral bells, Heuchera max­ima, that hasn’t escaped the occa­sional stomp­ing on by a ran­dom foot. But for the most part these should look okay in a cou­ple months after the rains perk them up.

Pruned green rose

I pruned this plant out of the way. It’s my only rose, the green rose that I’ve been grow­ing since my early teens. Sep­tem­ber and Octo­ber aren’t prime rose prun­ing sea­sons, but I’m hop­ing the plant doesn’t mind too much.

Bonbero pepper

This plant, a Bon­bero hot pep­per, so far has escaped being stepped on or hav­ing pieces of old sid­ing dropped on it. It’s near­ing the end of its short period of pro­duc­tiv­ity, so I won’t stay up nights wor­ry­ing about it. Still, now that the hot pep­pers are col­or­ing up red against the leaves, I’d miss hav­ing it in the garden.

We’re still unde­cided about what color to paint the sid­ing once we get it up. I was think­ing dark and dra­matic, and only some­what kid­ding sug­gested to John that we “paint it black.” When we got down to the final layer of old tarpa­per it was a chance to pre­view what a dark color would look like behind the plants.

Black and white walls

Here’s the black of the tarpa­per with the new white Tyvek house wrap for con­trast. The white looks awfully harsh against the plants in the fore­ground. White is a good to accen­tu­ate some sinewy branches or the archi­tec­tural con­tours of a dra­matic plant. But the con­trast between the white and the plants is really extreme, and we prob­a­bly won’t be going with light col­ors. The dark col­ors recede nicely behind the plants, a fea­ture that might be nice in this nar­row gar­den space. The leaf col­ors con­trast against it gen­tly, but I worry that the plants might get a lit­tle lost.

One of the really pop­u­lar tinted stucco col­ors being used in the neigh­bor­hood right now is a dull dark green color, which to me seems like the worst color pos­si­ble for set­ting off green plants. Silver-leaved medit­ter­anean and native plants can stand a chance of con­trast­ing against it, but it’s pretty deadly for leaf-green plants. So we def­i­nitely won’t be doing dark green.

But a dark urban gray? I even thought of a dark red, but the house came with what seems like ten acres of brick­work, so I think that’d be too much as well.

We still have a week or two before we com­mit to a color. What would be hip, sooth­ing and flat­ter­ing for plants all at the same time? I’m one of those peo­ple who could spend hours look­ing at paint swatches, but that’s eas­ier to do than the hard con­struc­tion work that I need to get out of the way before get­ting to paint colors.

That said, I’m still a big believer in the power of color, and it could be more impor­tant deci­sion in the long run than where we decide to move a wall out­let. Deci­sions, decisions…

October 06 2009 | Categories: gardeninglandscape designmy garden | Tags: | 7 Comments »

colors from kale

I was out pick­ing kale. In one pile I had the leaves for din­ner, in the other the older leaves that were going to get recy­cled. Pretty inter­est­ing col­ors to the leaves, I was think­ing… (Color toys below from Colourlovers.)

kale-colors

Kale
Color by COLOURlovers

Kale_Plaid_I
Color by COLOURlovers

Kale_Plaid_II
Color by COLOURlovers

June 15 2009 | Categories: rambles | Tags: | 7 Comments »