Showing posts with label Eucomis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eucomis. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 3, 2020

In the garden of friends, 2020 version

I know I'm not alone in missing the time I would have spent with family and friends this year, it's been so hard! Usually my friends Erin and Matt—from Seattle—would have visited over summer, and I would have visited them too. Time spent together, on our patios is something we treasure. So, I feel very fortunate that a quick visit to their patio occurred last month—and yes we were careful to obey proper COVID protocols.

Does it make me a bad friend that I had to stop and take a photo of their front steps? I mean we hadn't seen each other for months, but fresh paint and expertly arranged planters—with agaves!—demanded appreciation...


Usually my arrival for a visit would have meant walking up those steps and into the house, but—on theme—nothing's normal. Instead Erin went around to unlock the back gate, while I walked past the door and around the corner of the house, where I discovered this blooming cordyline. You guys, I've been visiting them in this house for over 20 years and I've never walked around this side of the house. How is that even possible?


Okay, now I'm in familiar territory: the back patio. All these plants however, this is a new(ish) development. I mean there's always been plants, but not this many!
Bromeliads and mangaves!
Aloes...
Mangave 'Bloodspot' (?)
Blooming tillandsia...
Dyckia some-something... (love this one!)
Ditto...
I got one of those black spines stuck in an index finger when I brought my bromeliads indoors this autumn—removing it was not pleasant. Bromeliads can be just as dangerous as agaves... you've been warned.
Another look at the gang...
And then we move to admire this eucomis bloom, and in a container no less!
I've always coveted that turquoise pot with the raised squares on it. 
Reminds me of the echeveria I picked up and it fell to pieces.
Excellent bromeliad coloration...
All of my horsetail has moved on, perhaps I need to look into reacquiring a pot or two, I do love it.
Another great cordyline clump, with trunks even!
Matt had hung several tillandsia using a heavy black coated wire which he wrapped around the base of the plant and then looped over branches, or in this case against the house. It's an idea I will be stealing.
Here's a parting shot of the patio and the bottle of wine we finished off (Erin had gone in the house to get dinner going)...
And here's a portrait of the plants I stole. Ha, just kidding. Matt wanted to lighten his load—as far as what he has to winter-over indoors—and he knows I can't say no! I feel very lucky to be trusted with these. The "small" (it's relative) tillandsia up-front is Tillandsia x smalliana, which Matt tells me is a natural hybrid between T. balbisiana and T. fasciculata.
Vriesea fosteriana
Tillandsia jalisco-monticola
And finally Tillandsia novakii, what a visit! Here's hoping that next summer we can resume our traditional style of visiting...
Weather Diary, Nov 2: Hi 66, Low 37/ Precip 0 

All material © 2009-2020 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Friday, June 26, 2020

More from my visit to Old Germantown Gardens

I really only intended to take photos of the blooming lilies, but when faced with an extraordinary garden, well, pictures just kind of happen!

I believe this garden is 2-acres in size. The pair who garden here, Bruce Wakefield and Jerry Grossnickle, have been working this land for nearly 30 years. Every time I visit I am in awe of what they've created.





I had just talked with Bruce and Larry about the wildlife in the garden, and then this guy shows up. They have a deer fence but also deal with raccoons and rabbits. As I'm now dealing with a bunny that looks a lot like this one, I was all ears for any ideas they had for ways to keep my garden safe.

This beauty was identified as Podophyllum 'Red Panda'...and it's so red! Shockingly so. Makes my 'Red Panda' look like a dud.



Eucomis bicolor, I covet this patch of pineapple lily goodness.

Wollemia nobilis

This crazy chipmunk was determined to ignore me and get at all of whatever it was eating. So cute though. 

Finally, the xeric garden...
I was surprised to see these agave so overtaken by other plants. They look perfectly happy though, despite all the rain we've gotten over the last month. 
This one had a visitor that  was quite happy to stay put, not minding me one bit.
Time to head up that pathway...
Oh but first I must stop to admire the Nolia hibernica 'La Siberica' bloom, I'm sure it must have been more striking in it's heyday. Oh and it looks like a Yucca rostrata is going to be blooming too...

Of course I had to stop to admire all the agaves...

Up top now, by the house and greenhouse. A nice large space for entertaining.
Looking over the edge of the deck, back down at the garden.
And back towards where I was standing to take the first photo of this area.
Let's look in the greenhouse...

Dioon edule and Scadoxus puniceus...

Back outside...

Leucadendron 'Ebony'
And I'll end this visit with a Banksia grandis, compact coastal form. Pretty sweet, eh?

Weather Diary, June 25: Hi 84, Low 59/ Precip 0 

All material © 2009-2020 by Loree Bohl for danger garden. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.