Coastal Southern California really only has two seasons - a cool season during which we get rain (if we're lucky) and a warm-to-hot season, which seems to be getting longer with each passing year. While our nights are still definitely on the chilly side, we're getting more and more days with temperatures in the upper 60s and lower 70s (Fahrenheit). I can't say Spring has exploded into being yet but it's slowly creeping in. More rain might push floral production along more quickly but it's not clear we're going to get much more of that. In fact, yesterday I heard that
California's snowpack is currently sitting at 59% of average with no rain or snow in sight, which doesn't bode well.
Despite the lower than desired rainfall, my usual February blooms appear to be right on schedule.
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Ceanothus arboreous 'Cliff Schmidt' on my back slope is putting on its best display yet |
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Echium handiense 'Pride of Fuerteventura', a native of the Canary Islands and always the first of my Echiums to bloom, is putting on a good show |
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Euryops chrysanthemoides 'Sonnenschein' (left) and Euryops x virgineus 'Tali' (right) are pumping out blooms in the same color but different sizes |
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Pyrethropsis hosmariense (aka Moroccan daisy) is pretty in both bud and bloom |
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Pyrus calleryana (aka ornamental pear) is a messy tree with funky smelling flowers but it stands out at this time of year |
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The flowers of Ribes viburnifolium 'Catalina Perfume' are tiny but plentiful |
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My prostrate rosemary have been blooming for some time but the flowers are now too profuse to ignore |
Cooler temperatures have given the African daisies their usual seasonal boost.
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The photos on the left and the top right are Arctotis 'Opera Pink' and the one on the lower right is my favorite Arctotis 'Pink Sugar'. I went overboard this fall pulling up scruffy 'Pink Sugar', assuming that I could get more with little problem but, despite the fact that my remaining plants are blooming, I've yet to be able to find more in my local garden centers (even though I've submitted 2 special orders for them). |
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Gazanias are popping up all over, although the progeny of many of the self-seeded plants haven't replicated their parental stock |
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Osteospermums definitely prefer temperatures on the cooler side |
I was particularly delighted by the appearance of a couple of early blooms.
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Anemones don't do well here, seldom surviving more than one season, and I don't plant them every year but this year I ordered some special tubers and planted them in my cutting garden in early November. This is Anemone 'Mistral Rarity', the first to bloom. |
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I often complain that hellebores are slow to bloom here. This year Helleborus 'Blue Lady (left) and 'Phoebe' (right) are a month or so ahead of schedule. 'Phoebe's' foliage also seems to have taken on some variegation. |
Certain plants can always be depended on to show up.
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Bauhinia x blakeana (aka Hong Kong orchid tree) has been blooming for months |
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Camellia williamsii 'Taylor's Perfection'produced its first blooms before Bloom Day last month, peaked in late January, and is now on the decline |
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Coleonema pulchellum 'Sunset Gold' has also been blooming for months but the flowers blanket the shrubs now |
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Gomphreana decumbens 'Itsy Bitsy' has recovered from the hard pruning it received in November |
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The large-flowered Grevilleas bloom year-round. Clockwise from the left: Grevillea 'Peaches & Cream' in a wide shot and a close-up, 'Ned Kelly', and 'Superb' |
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The small-flowered Grevilleas join in at this time of year to produce a profusion of blooms. Clockwise from the upper left: Grevillea 'Scarlet Sprite', G. lavandulacea 'Penola', G. alpina x rosmarinifolious, G. sericea, and G. rosmarinifolious. |
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Leucadendrons (aka conebush) don't have flowers in the conventional sense but their bracts take on the appearance of flowers this time of year. Clockwise from the upper left: Leucadendron 'Safari Goldstrike' in a wide shot and close-up, 'Wilson's Wonder', 'Blush', and 'Safari Sunset'. |
I picked up a couple of new flowering plants this month.
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In pots by the front door: Boronia crenulata 'Sharks Bay' (left) and hybrid Pericallis 'Magic Salmon' (right) |
I've organized the best of the rest of the blooming plants by color for the record.
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Top row: Brachyscome angustifolia 'Brasco Violet', Campanula poscharskyana, Felicia aethiopica, and Freesia Middle row: Iris germanica in bud, Lepechinia bella, noID Muscari, and noID Violas Bottom row: trailing Lantana and Polygala fruticosa |
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Clockwise from the upper left: Cyclamen, Cuphea ignea 'Starfire Pink', Eustoma grandiflorum, Leptospermum scoparium 'Pink Pearl', and Lotus jacobaeus |
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Clockwise from the upper left: Argyranthemum fruticosa 'Everest', Cymbidium Sussex Court 'Not Peace', Hippeastrum 'Moon Scene', Digitalis purpurea 'Dalmatian White', and Westringia 'Morning Light' |
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Clockwise from the upper left: Alstroemeria 'Indian Summer', Euphorbia rigida, Phylica pubescens, noID Narcissus, and Rudbeckia hirta 'Denver Daisy' |
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Succulent blooms, top row: Aeonium arbroeum, Aloe 'Johnson's Hybrid', and A. 'Safari Rose' Bottom row: Crassula multicava 'Red', C. orbicularis var rosularis, and C. rupestris 'Springtime' |
That's a wrap until next month. To see what's blooming in other parts of the US and elsewhere in the world,
visit the host of Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day, Carol at May Dreams Gardens.
All material © 2012-2020 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party