Sunday, April 17, 2016

Bloom day and foliage follow up

Just a few shots from the garden in honor of bloom day (at Carol's) and Foliage follow up (at Pam's)....

Yucca blooms adding flowers to this foliage dominated vignette

Agave is finally happy in this spot!

This one was a tiny pup 3 years ago... It needs mulch!

This 'cream spike' is like a foliage flower...

Can't wait for the bottle brush to start adding flowers here... There are so many buds this year!

Agave 'kisso kan', in the ground (!), another foliage plant that looks like a flower...
And no post would be complete without a view of the hillside right now...
Every day, there are more ice plant blooms

Orange and pink!


Saturday, April 9, 2016

Random Shots

Here are just some of the gazania rigens that are turning the hillside orange. I always have to smile when I see these for sale - these are self-sown. Although I'm always tempted by the pink-ish ones... maybe introducing some genetic diversity would be good?

the shading on this one is pretty

these are a pure yellow, no rays at all

in person, this one is a dark orange, fading to dark yellow

light and dark orange

this one is orange, no rays

here the stripes go almost to the edge, and look like brush stokes

this one is a very light yellow

I wonder if buying a few pink ones at the store will help get a greater color variety? Although I have to admit, the yellow/orange color scheme on the hill side in the spring is working out nicely:
Almost like it was planned that way!

Sunday, January 31, 2016

Orchids at the Huntington

I can't grow orchids well at all - the one I have at home puts out a new leaf every once in a while, but has never rebloomed. Here is some inspiration from the orchids at the Huntington (in the conservatory of course).


I think this is what mine would look like - if it ever made another flower

I love all the different flower shapes

the one little drop of water hanging from the flower!

the little pink part seemed like it was a full circle

All the colors!

I liked both the flower and foliage on this one!

this was one of my favorites - it looked like morse code!

the white parts of this one were back lit so they looked almost transparent!
Visits to the Huntington are good for weeks of inspiration! And if anyone has any good ideas for my orchid, please share!



Sunday, January 24, 2016

Lately on Gardening Turned Up to 11...

These days, i find myself posting on Instagram more often. Here are some of the latest pictures not from my own garden...

This is what the last week of January looks like #attheH @thehuntingtonlibrary #apricotblossom

A photo posted by Renee (@renee661) on


visiting the huntington...

#aloes blooming and #agave #attheH @thehuntingtonlibrary

A photo posted by Renee (@renee661) on


to recover from too much time doing this:

#lax from the air #herewegoagain

A photo posted by Renee (@renee661) on


be prepared for an avalanche of Huntington pictures on Instagram this week!

Saturday, June 20, 2015

Bloom Day - June 2015

I'm late for Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day, but while I wait for the front yard to be ready for pictures, I wanted to document at least some of my blooms for June. So far, the weather has been weird - colder than normal until last weekend, and then up to 100 deg+ the last 2 weeks. But the blooms keep coming:
Coreopsis  Moonbeam starting to bloom

Epilobium canum / california fuchsia  
Common Thyme + an all white 'Hot Lips' Salvia

Vitex agnus-castus, with yucca's 
Germander - Teucrium Chamaedrys making a purple carpet

Yellow from the Yarrow's and left over Palo Verde blooms

Artichoke blooms (I'd rather look at them than eat them)

Hardy Lantana that came back for the 2nd year in a row!

There are more blooms to be seen at Carol's Blog, with all the on-time entries of beautiful flowers everywhere.

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Front Yard - Before

Changes are afoot in the front yard! Before all the work is finished, I figured I should remember what it looked like before. Last year, the front garden looked like this:
The lawn in all it's green glory
The front yard was one of the first things I "fixed" after moving into the house. After all, when the first thing two of my neighbors asked was "welcome to the street, when are you fixing your yard?", I can take a hint! At that point, I didn't have much experience gardening in the desert yet, so while a lot of the front garden ended up not being grass (dry stream bed, planting beds), going with grass most of where it had been before made some sense. There is a narrow planting bed up near the house that allowed me to start experimenting with plants:

The planting beds (about a year ago)
As I figured out more and more things to grow (and decided I really didn't like mowing), I started to think about removing the grass. Especially after the back garden was done with no grass, and the drought carried on, it became more obvious that taking out the grass was a good idea. The final push was a few simple things: the drought got worse, there were rebates, and i realized just how much water the lawn was taking... Since my back garden is mostly desertscape, I switched to the same watering schedule in the front as in the back, and within about 2 weeks, the front garden looked like this:
horrible looking grass
mostly dead grass
The plants that were not grass were fine, which helped me realize how much extra water had been going to the lawn. And then my lawn mower broke too, so that was the end of that! After a few weeks of research, measuring and a design sketch, I was able to get the same landscape contractor I've used before to great results to come tear out the grass, update the irrigation, do hardscaping, and add some plants. After the first day of work, I came home to a blank slate:
Here we go!



Sunday, May 24, 2015

Blowing off the dust...

Well, at least it hasn't been a whole year...

Even though the blog has been neglected, the garden has not. These days, i'm mostly posting on Instagram, under #gardeningupto11 It's easier and faster... Here are some recent shots:


...and i came home to the #Opuntia blooming! #cactus #succulent #flowersofinstagram #cacti

A photo posted by Renee (@renee661) on

One of my favorite areas in the garden #gardeningupto11 #flowersofinstagram #sticksoffire

A photo posted by Renee (@renee661) on

All the snails came out after the #rain #gardeningupto11

A photo posted by Renee (@renee661) on

From this weekend. #gardeningupto11 #flowersofinstagram #Opuntia #flowers #cactus #succulent

A photo posted by Renee (@renee661) on



But changes are coming for the front garden (bye bye grass!) and I want to make sure to collect all the plans in one place, so I'm reactivating the blog! But while I'll try to do better than one post a year, let's not hope for more than one per month...

Friday, July 4, 2014

Happy Fourth of July!


It was already too hot to look for flowers this morning, so red, white and blue pots it is!


Monday, June 30, 2014

intruders!

The red yucca is flowering in blue?
Hey! Hesperasloe parviflora flowers don't look like that!

Seems like my Morning glory (Ipomoea tricolor) seeds from last year found their own trellis. I suppose I could weed them out, but they add some interesting color, and don't seem to harm the red yucca much.

There is definitely no chance of me pulling this one out:

Morning glory growing in O. microdasys
It picked an excellent place to grow - well protected from predators and gardeners alike!

Friday, June 27, 2014

Favorite Plant this week: Eschscholzia

My favorite plant this week started out as a self-sown "weed"
before the flowers opened - obviously Eschscholzia californica
I was very excited that a california poppy had decided to self-seed in my garden. They are very common here (the CA poppy reserve is fairly close) but none had ever decided to grace my garden before.

And then the flowers opened:
um - poppies around here are yellow or orange. not both.
A bit of research reveals this is likely Eschscholzia californica ssp. maritima - the coastal form of California poppies. It has bluer, more compact foliage that the species, and a distinct yellow flower with orange center. As best I can tell, my "weed" matches all those characteristics.

It decided to grow in the middle of all the purple flowers, one of the "shadier" beds in the garden

it didn't start blooming until early June - way later than all the natural poppies at the reserve or in the mountains
I'm not sure how a coastal poppy ended up in my desert garden, when there are so many more "normal" orange poppies around. But I'm happy it did! I'm planning to plant some of the standard species next fall, but i hope this one comes back too!

I'm joining Loree at Danger Garden for her favorite plant meme - although I'm sure I won't be posting weekly! Her favorite plant is always worth a look, and the comments at her blog have more awesome plants to look at here.

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Front Yard Filled with Spikes

purple, red and blue
The front garden has been taken over by bloom spikes. Above is red yucca and Calandrinia grandiflora. The Caladrinia is not supposed to be hardy here, but try telling it that. It's busy trying to take over the entire flower bed.
looking back to the street, with the soft leaf yucca behind it
 These plants will bloom all the way to fall. They nearly died back in the winter, but started growing and blooming in early fall. The flowers only last a day each, so they don't make very good cut flowers, but they are pretty in the garden. I might want to think about whether there is such as thing as too many spikes though!
purple against a different blue

Saturday, June 21, 2014

More Pups!

Hello there!
After noticing pups on my Agave parryi ssp. truncata I decided to go look and see if any of my other agaves had grown pups. I found a couple of unexpected ones - the one above is an Agave 'Little Shark' pup, I think. Here is mom:
Agave 'Little Shark' - one of three
I was also excited to see not just one, but two pups from Agave americana 'Mediopicta Alba' in the front gravel garden. On is very close to the parent plant:
pup just to the right of the parent plant - about 2 years in the ground, 1 year in the gravel
The second pup was hiding under all the rose petals:
2nd pup under the rose petals and grass leaves
The A. 'Mediopicta Alba' is on the north side of the house, which gets a lot less sun that the back garden, and basically no extra irrigation. It will be interesting to see how fast these pups grow. The parent plant hasn't gotten much bigger in the 2 years that it's been in the ground.