Happy Valentine's Day!
I took advantage of a week of dry weather and sunny skies to tackle a few garden chores. The first involved finishing up the job that resulted from removal of a battered and over-sized 'Blue Flame' Agave in my south-side garden. When I published my post on the project, I'd already cleaned up the area, added soil suitable for succulents, and planted cuttings of blue chalksticks (Senecio serpens). I finished replanting the area this week.
I added a few more Senecio cuttings, a mix of Aeoniums, and an Agave ovatifolia that I'd purchased in a 4-inch pot several months ago and potted up in a 1-gallon container. As you can see, the agave's still very small. I've left a relatively wide path, partly to accommodate the agave's eventual size but also to facilitate maintenance. |
Top left: Aeonium 'Dark Star', branching variety that grows 2 feet tall and wide
Top right: Aeonium 'Jack Catlin', develops low-growing clumps with green centers and burgundy edges
Bottom right: green Aeonium 'Jack Catlin', needs sun to develop those red edges
Bottom middle: Aeonium 'Octo Ink', which sports a singular tall black rosette 1-2 feet in size
Bottom left: Aeonium 'Velour', branching variety with green centers and purple edges on lower leaves
*'Dark Star' and 'Octo Ink' are Steve Super hybrids. The others are cuttings from my garden.
I received delivery of eight plants I'd ordered by mail prior to the rainstorms and got all of those into the ground.
My order from Annie's Annuals & Perennials arrived Friday afternoon |
And yesterday I tackled pruning of a large shrub, one that wasn't on my original project list.
The shrub in question, Grevillea lavandulacea 'Penola' is barely visible in this shot taken from inside the house during a rainstorm last week |
But, close up, its lovely flowers are densely packed along most of its branches |
More rain is on the horizon. There are two more back-to-back atmospheric rivers currently forecast to show up Saturday and continue into Tuesday. We got off easy with the earlier storms, ending up with only a chimney leak and relatively minor damage to my lath (shade) house; however, others in California didn't fare nearly as well. Over four hundred mudslides were reported, as well as nine deaths. As the ground hasn't had much time to dry out we can only hope that those in the most vulnerable areas will be better prepared this time.
Note: I hope to publish my Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day post on Friday, February 16th.
All material © 2012-2024 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party