After a long, hot, destructive, and depressing summer, all I want is to put the misery behind me and move forward. I’ve pulled out all the aloes and agaves that rotted as a result of the heat domes we had in July and August (some mentioned here, but there have been others as well) and I’ve done some replanting, as you’ll see later in this post.
In addition, I’ve removed a few other plants that simply didn’t do it for me anymore. One of them is Agave ‘Ripple Express’, a variegated form of ‘Mr Ripple’. I had high hopes for ‘Ripple Express’, but I was never quite satisfied with how it looked. Two years ago, maybe even a year ago, I would have simply accepted it for what it was and moved on. Not so now. When a plant doesn’t play its part, it gets replaced.
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Agave ‘Mr Ripple’ |
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Agave ‘Mr Ripple’ |
You can guess what happened:
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I took advantage of our first curbside yard waste pickup of the season |
I replaced ‘Ripple Express’ with a
Jeremy Spath hybrid,
Agave bovicornuta × parrasana. It’s just a puny thing right now, but in a year or two it will
look like this. In addition, I moved
Agave shawii × isthmensis a little to the left so it has a more prominent (and sunny) spot.
The 2nd agave I dug out was a dwarf form of Agave palmeri. Space in our garden is very limited, and this agave was simply too generic-looking to warrant such a prominent spot.
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Agave palmeri (left) crowding Agave wocomahi (right) |
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Agave palmeri waiting for curbside yard waste pickup |
Now Agave wocomahi (which I love) has room to breathe.
Toward the back of the bed, I removed a
Berberis fremontii. I love this desert shrub, but it was getting too large for this spot. I knew this would happen when I planted it five years ago, and the time had come. This freed up space for a couple of new aloes,
Aloe macleayi and
Aloe penduliflora, plus
Aloe tomentosa × trichosantha planted to the left of
Agave wocomahi.
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Now Agave wocomahi (which I love) has room to breathe |
I also did a hard prune on the ‘Black Lace’ elderberry. The 4 ft. fence behind it will soon be moved towards the house by about 3 ft., freeing valuable planting space behind the elderberry. I’m (not so) patiently waiting for our contractor to fit us into his schedule.
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‘Black Lace’ elderberry and a bunch of aloes. After the fence has been moved back, I’ll plant about a half dozen more aloes.
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Around the corner, I started to trim our
Acacia aphylla.
Troy McGregor told me that it can take a hard pruning.
This YouTube video by Australian horticulturist Attila Kapitany will be my guide when I continue next week (our next curbside yard waste pickup is in early November).
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Pruning the lower branches of Acacia aphylla (and Grevillea ‘Scarlet Sprite’ behind it) has created enough space to plant a medium-sized agave (Agave ‘Blue Ember’) |
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Another yard waste pile |
Abutilon palmeri (filling the left half of the photo below, bordered by a Jerusalem sage on the left) is a wonderful southwestern native that needs very little water. I pruned it often, but it really wants to be in a bigger space.
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Abutilon palmeri circled in yellow on the left |
Wish granted. I cut it way back, dug it up, and moved it to the far side of the Jerusalem sage (Phlomis fruticosa). There it can grow as large as it wants, even into the driveway to the left. Two weeks later, it’s looking good, and I’m cautiously optimistic it will survive the move.
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Abutilon palmeri after the move |
The spot previously occupied by
Abutilon palmeri is now home to a new Baja fairy duster hybrid (
Calliandra ‘Mexicali Rose’ by
Civano Growers). It’s similar to ‘Sierra Starr’, a hybrid with the same parentage, but a bit more compact and more densely branched. We have a ‘Sierra Starr’ on the inside of the fence (off to the right in the photo below), and it’s done very well.
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Calliandra ‘Mexicali Rose’ |
Replanting in other spots in the driveway bed:
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Newly planted: Aloe comosa, Aloe cheranganiensis, Aloe volkensii var. multicaulis |
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Newly planted to replace rotting aloes: Aloe squarrosa × Aloe glauca var. spinosior (center) and Aloe hereroensis (right) |
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Newly planted to replace rotting aloes: Aloe suprafoliata (yellow form) × Aloe arborescens (yellow form) and Aloe squarrosa × Aloe glauca var. spinosior (right) |
More room for new plants:
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Room for another aloe (still to come) |
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Room for a few more cacti (still to come) |
The peak of aloe flower season is still a few months away, but a few early bloomers are pushing inflorescences:
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Aloe suprafoliata |
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Aloe lukeana (two separate plants) |
A few more odds and ends:
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The ‘Harmony’ kangaroo paw I cut back hard in late August has already grown new leaves |
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I love love love this Mexican tulip poppy (Hunnemannia fumariifolia) that has been blooming for months now. It’s a volunteer that seeded itself in just the right spot. |
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I know I posted a similar photo recently, but I just can’t help myself. My favorite early evening sight in the front yard: Dioon argenteum and Hechtia ‘Silver Star’ |
And finally, a preview of what’s to come: a deluge of sycamore leaves from next door that will go on for at least three months. I’m toying with the idea of throwing bird netting (
something like this) on this bed to see if I can trap the leaves. Worth a try?
© Gerhard Bock, 2024. All rights reserved. To receive all new posts by email, please subscribe here.
I bought a pop up netting for just the same reason for my Agaves that are under a Texas olive which sheds leaves like crazy a couple of times a year. It works but I don't like looking at the netting in the garden. I don't use actual bird netting because birds can get trapped in it and perish. Such a dilemma! You are so lucky that your city will pick up yard waste loose like that. Anything we have has to go in the garbage can and be wrapped in a plastic bag.
ReplyDeleteWe have curbside yard waste pickup every two weeks from late October to early March. Lots of trees with lots of leaves around here.
DeleteI ordered some netting. It's worth a $10 investment :-)
Oh, and I have a Agave shawii × isthmensis from Jeremy Spath as well. Mine is in the shade here in Phoenix and doing well.
ReplyDeleteIt's a great cross, isn't it? I hope it'll stay on the smaller side.
DeleteIt is a great cross and, yes, I hope it stays smallish!
DeleteMy head is spinning with what you've got done already! As you can drop your "deleted" plants in the street for pickup, I'm surprised you don't have neighbors sifting through the refuse. I'd forgotten what that Aloe 'Birds & Bees' looked like until you refreshed my memory - what a beauty! My Aloe lukeana is putting up a flower stalk again too.
ReplyDeleteWhen we moved to Davis 20+ years ago, we had curbside yard waste pickup *every week*!! We were so spoiled then!
DeleteI'm so happy to hear that your Aloe lukeana is about to flower.
Oh you really went all out and got your hands dirty! It feels good to get rid of a plant if it's not working - I have so many different spots I need to "rework". When I see how big Acacia aphylla gets, I'm a little scared of my 2' tall one. So many fabulous agaves and aloes, and the Hechtia and Dioon are absolutely dreamy together! The Mexican tulip poppy is so cheery, I love that. Nice reworking, and your fence is being moved? That's exciting.
ReplyDeleteAcacia aphylla can be pruned hard, apparently. We'll see soon enough, haha.
DeleteOMG! ‘Ripple Express’ looked smallish in your first photos, then by the street... it's HUGE! Have you pruned your ‘Black Lace’ elderberry before? I prune mine every spring before it leafs out, it seems to thrive on that treatment. Is the fence being moved solely to provide more planting space, or is there another issue at work?
ReplyDeleteThat Dioon argenteum is gorgeous!
Often it's hard to convey a sense of scale. 'Ripple Express' was just a juvenile! I really prefer a more symmetrical agave.
Delete'Black Lace': I prune it every year, typically in the spring. But with the fence being moved, I needed to create better access so I had to do it now.
Fence: There is an L-shaped raised bed inside the fence, but with the way it's positioned, it hasn't been very useful. I'd rather have the planting space outside the fence where plants will get sun. Also, we'll have a gate into the backyard on that side of the house as well.
I would be so crabby if I was your yard waste disposal team! That's a lot of spines, serrations, and blood. Hope they suited up in some armor. Big transformations to get rid of plants that haven't performed. I'm looking forward to see how everything turns out.
ReplyDeleteThe city uses a tractor to pick up the yard waste and deposit it in a rear-loading dump truck, so no human has to deal with the piles in person.
DeleteYou've been so productive in spite of that hellish heat we had earlier in the month ! You are so right concerning pitching those plants we don't love. I've gotten much more draconian over the years.
ReplyDeleteI used to feel so guilty when I dug up a perfectly fine plant :-)
DeletePoor Mister Ripple. Couldn’t he have been rehomed?
ReplyDeleteUnless you have heavy-duty equipment, its pretty much impossible to dig up a plant this size without seriously damaging it. Plus, in my experience, finding somebody who wants a plant this large is equally difficult.
DeleteGerhard, I know you're grown both Eschscholzia californica and Hunnemannia fumariifolia. Do you recommend one to the other, in terms of one plant staying green longer, flowering longer, selfseeding etc. I've looked them up both in my Sunset Garden Books but they're not very helpful. Thanks in advance.
ReplyDeleteI would recommend both: Eschscholzia californica for late winter and spring flowers and Hunnemannia fumariifolia for flowers from summer into fall. For practical purposes, consider Eschscholzia californica an annual (it died back completely in the summer) and Hunnemannia fumariifolia a perennial that's green year round. Both reseed, but Eschscholzia californica much more so.
Delete