I met a good friend for lunch earlier this week. We'd worked together at a start-up company many years ago, she as legal counsel and me in human resource management. After that company was acquired by a larger one, we both moved on to different opportunities but we got together once or twice a year until the pandemic. Meeting up again after five years, we had a lot of catching up to do so it was a very long lunch! She told me about her kids, the eldest already in his second year of college, another on the brink of launching out into the world on his own terms, and the youngest looking for ways to meld her love of ballet with a future career. I brought her up to speed on my nieces and nephews, my trip to the Puget Sound, and my recent bout with COVID, among other things. A non-gardener, she asked me if I was "done" with my garden, and I replied with the familiar refrain that "gardens are never done." I also mentioned the situation in progress five miles away from me, where a very old landslide has stepped up its pace, apparently as a result of two years of heavier-than-usual rainfall. She lives fifty miles to the south and it's not daily news there as it is in Los Angeles County. Land movement, once measured in inches or less a year, has accelerated to feet per month. As power lines fell and underground utilities were affected, electricity has been indefinitely turned off to some three hundred homes and gas was cut to nearly the same number. Efforts were underway to pump the water "seepage," measured in gallons per minutes in spots, into special wells as a way of slowing the slide when another geologic survey was ordered prior to expansion of that plan. They found a second, bigger, faster-moving slide hundreds of feet underneath the first one so plans are now uncertain. It's a chilling example of the challenges nature can impose. Still, the affected residents are trying to find ways to stay in their homes.
Anxious as I am to see the start of our rainy season after our long dry period, I also have to hope that any rain we get this year may fall only lightly on the affected area. Meanwhile, I'm making adjustments to my garden as circumstances change. In the front garden, I've done a lot of tweaking.
The photo on the left shows the second Phormium I removed several feet away from the first one. I left the most stately Phormium in place as you can see in both after shots. |
I pulled everything that had been in this barrel and planted coleus 'Indian Summer', 2 Pentas lanceolata, white Impatiens, and another polka dot plant |
This Prostanthera ovalifolia (aka mint bush) planted in the back garden shows you what it should look like. It's one of my favorite plants. |
In the north-side garden, I'm still holding off on cleaning up the large Phormium 'Apricot Queen' that was scorched during our recent heatwave but I took steps to protect my whale's tongue agave.
I lost 10 persimmons in the process. I don't personally care for the fruit but my neighbors do. |
I've started tidying up the back garden but I've little to show for it other than some cuttings so far.
I haven't done much with the south-side garden yet either beyond pruning away the worst of the dead foliage on Coprosma 'Plum Hussey'.
Before and after photos of the tall Coprosma are shown above |
The pruning looks more severe from the back |
The cooler temperatures this past week have raised my spirits despite the damage summer's heat has inflicted on my garden. I'll be chipping away at my other projects well into November. I got another energy boost yesterday when I saw these:
My Proteas are about to bloom! These are both Protea neriifolia. The one on the left is 'Claire' and the one on the right is 'Pink Ice' but at the moment they look close to identical to me. |
All material © 2012-2024 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party