shopping for a manzanita

I had a wish list with me on my last pril­grim­age up to Las Pil­i­tas Nurs­ery, a spe­cial­ist in Cal­i­for­nia native plants located about a fifty-minute drive north of my house. One of the plants on the list was pointleaf man­zanita, a.k.a. Mex­i­can man­zanita, Arc­tostaphy­los pun­gens.

Pointleaf man­zanita plant [ source ]

There are dozens of dif­fer­ent man­zan­i­tas. Some creep along the ground. Oth­ers approach being tree-sized. The Las Pil­i­tas selec­tion of this species has the char­ac­ter­is­tic nice red man­zanita bark, a grace­ful upright growth habit, ter­rific drought tol­er­ance, plus a mature size that was per­fect for the places I wanted to put it: about six feet tall and four wide.

When I got to the nurs­ery I found one plant remain­ing, in a five gal­lon pot. Valerie at the nurs­ery and a gen­tle­man were look­ing it over, and he clearly was inter­ested. They noticed me. There was talk of arm-wrestling.

In the end I guess I looked intim­i­dat­ing and the gen­tle­man walked away. The prize was mine. So I came home with a nice large starter plant for where I wanted one for the front yard. I’d wanted sev­eral more, how­ever, to put along the back fence. While I could have ordered some plants, I thought it might be inter­est­ing to try grow­ing some from seed.

The most excel­lent Theodore Payne Foun­da­tion in the Los Ange­les area offered seeds for this man­zanita, along with the über-weird and won­der­ful Core­op­sis gigan­tea and a hand­ful of other plants that proved irre­sistable at from-seed prices.

The ship­ment arrived last week, almost no time after I’d sent in the order. (It’s pretty old-school–You actu­ally have to fill out a paper form and mail it in…)

Envelope with acid-soaking instructions

Enve­lope with acid-soaking instructions

When I opened up the enve­lope, how­ever, I knew things weren’t going to be easy. H2SO4? Isn’t that sul­fu­ric acid?

September 30 2008 | Categories: gardeningplant profiles | Tags: | 2 Comments »