Quantcast
Channel: Late to the Garden Party
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1805

Cleaning Up: One step at a time

$
0
0

In coastal Southern California, fall is the best time to refresh the garden.  As we're still vacillating between summer and fall weather, it's too early to do any extensive planting but I've taken advantage of the cooler temperatures we've had off and on to get started on some of the smaller clean-up projects.

I started by sifting my compost.

These are the compost bins my husband built in April 2020 using scraps of various kinds we had on hand.  Note the giant bird of paradise (Strelitzia nicolai) in the background on the other side of the fence in my neighbor's garden.  Those plants had an unexpected impact on my composting process. 

The bin on the right had been three quarters full when I stopped adding new material and just let it "cook." The bin was about two-thirds full when I harvested the contents.  The bottom third was full of roots that apparently migrated from the other side of the fence.

The screen, left by the prior owner of our property, sits atop a support my husband built to fit over a trash can when we were sifting soil out of the sod we dug out during removal of our lawn.

I filled one garbage can and two-thirds of a second.  Other than the roots of the bird of paradise, there was relatively little extraneous material but I did remove a surprising number of produce labels and grubs.  With the exception of fragments of a coconut fiber liner and a couple of avocado skins, most everything we'd added to the bin had composted nicely.

I've distributed all the screened compost.  It doesn't go far enough but every little bit helps.

I spread compost in the area surrounding the Yucca 'Bright Star' I beheaded after it was brutally pruned by a well-intentioned gardener.  I divided Gaillardia seedlings and replanted them around the Yucca (now underneath a wire cage to protect it).  The seedlings may or may not survive our "Indian Summer" conditions.  The Yucca cutting I'd saved was potted up after dusting its base with rooting powder.  

After digging out a dead Coleonema and cutting back two Cuphea 'Starfire Pink' shrubs, I spread more compost in this bed along the driveway and transplanted two Hippeastrum 'Aphrodite' bulbs I'd previously grown in pots.

My biggest project thus far involved one of my favorite beds in the front garden.

The bed in question is the foreground on the right.  This photograph was taken at the end of June, when everything still looked lush.

I followed the advice of Hoover Boo of Piece of Eden and cut back the orange-flowered Cuphea 'Vermillionaire' to just a few inches tall to give it an opportunity to rebound.  That led to an effort to cleanup the ornamental grass (Seslaria 'Greenlee's Hybrid) planted along the edge of the bed, which had spread over the flagstone path and was encroaching on other plants within the bed.  I may have gone overboard there.  The course of concrete bricks was added by my husband in an effort to keep the grass roots from spreading.

As Hoover Boo predicted, the Cuphea are already springing back.  I added one new plant from a 6-inch pot yesterday and spread compost throughout the bed.

I also trimmed back Acacia cognata 'Cousin Itt' a bit and dug out the Cotyledon orbiculata that had been growing up through the middle of Abelia 'Kaleidoscope'.  I'm trying to simplify my border plantings, relying on mass plantings to a greater extent than I have in the past.

I added three new Gaillardia 'Arizona Sun' to the plants already there.  I think I could use one more.  


The last little project this week involved planting an Aloe lukeana I received from Gerhard of Succulents and More back in August.

There are a LOT of Aeoniums in my street-side succulent bed.  I use them as fillers when I don't know what else to plant in an empty spot.  But Aeoniums don't look their best in summer, when they curl up and go dormant.  The less water they get, the worse they look so I decided to pull the clump behind the Agave attenuata.

The Aloe lukeana went in behind the Agave.  It may get crowded when the Aloe reaches its full size but, in that case, I can cut back the Agave, which is currently producing a lot of pups.

This week, we had more uncomfortably warm days (mid-90sF) than cool ones but the weekend forecast promises the return of cooler temperatures.  I'm looking forward to (literally) digging into some bigger projects.  Meanwhile, I'll send you off with a wish of that you find some happy hours gardening and a couple of pretty floral shots from my garden this week.

Passiflora tarminiana x manicata 'Oaklandia'

The first bloom of Dahlia 'Break Out'


All material © 2012-2021 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 1805

Trending Articles