Friday, December 31, 2010

May Slugs Find Your Massonia Unpalatable

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May slugs find your Massonia unpalatable,
may your every cutting strike;
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May the rain be sweet and plentiful,
and fall precisely when you like.
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May your Mesembs sprout like rabbits,
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may those wascally wabbits eat not at all--
Bars

May your Spring's fantastic colors...

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...be just as good in Fall.
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May 2011 bring us all the most beautiful garden ever.

Happy New Year!

Evelyn

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Agave ovatifolia

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Powdery silver with a touch of blue, with brown-burgundy spines. Symmetrical and bold, without taking a huge amount of space.

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These are all at the Huntington in San Marino. My own specimen, bought as A. ovatifolia, is looking more and more like a mislabeled A. parryi.  A discussion of A. ovatifolia here.

My little probably-parryi, only about 8" wide up to now:
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Possibly the similar but different A. parryi, also at the Huntington. Shorter and more squat than A. ovatifolia, but just as symmetrical:
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Compare the edges of A. ovatifolia with A. marmorata:
Agave marmorata:
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So far my taller-than-wide A. marmorata does not have the symmetry of either A. ovatifolia or A. parryi. I mainly wanted A. ovatifolia for its' New And Cool factor, but comparing it to A. marmorata and A. parryi, I think it is the most beautiful of the three.

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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Winter Light

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Late December light is beautiful but elusive--there's often little of it to be had.  Yesterday before the rain moved in, the light was particularly wonderful.  This Dyckia looked like it was emitting its own silver glow:
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x Graptoveria 'Silver Star':
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A cactus looking like hairy icicles, upward bound:
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Mammillaria geminispina, nearly white:
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Some other stuff I  forget the name of:
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Echinocactus grusonii, Golden Barrel Cactus:
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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Neighborhood Aloe arborescens In Bloom

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I spent the beautiful sunny gardening yesterday digging mud.  I got the old pond pipes out, mostly, and the new valve is installed so I could finally move a lot of soil back where it belonged.   More rain is expected tonight, so I took advantage of the dry day. 

However digging mud creates no pretty pictures, so for eye candy, just some of the Aloe arborescens flowers in peak bloom.  We saw then along the side of the road as we took our walk.   These neighborhood Aloe clumps hang off rocky outcrops and vertical slopes, as they do in their natural range in southern Africa--no wonder they look happy and healthy.  The clumps must be twenty, thirty, or more years old as they are 10 feet (3 m) or more across.  Hummingbirds fighting over the nectar added to the show, but the hummers didn't stick around for pictures.   

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Unless you'd rather have a picture of some mud? 

Sunday, December 26, 2010

He Wastes No Space

I read an anecdote about Ralph Moore, the legendary California rose hybridizer.  He was leading a visitor around his jammed property overflowing with all kinds of roses along with other plants bursting out of every imaginable inch of available space. squeezing upward from spilled compost that had fallen between pots of roses, from low spots on fence posts, from discarded seed packets, everywhere.  Moore remarked to his visitor:  "If you have a space and don't plant something, God will."

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I think about that story when I pass by a neighbor's property.  The neighbor has managed to wedge an entire productive vegetable garden in between two guard rails on the side of the road, in what is a strip of asphalt paving with a water supply:
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Using recycled nursery pots and old buckets with holes drilled in them, this wonderful neighbor has grown tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, pumpkins, onions.
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It was not until we took a walk by that I saw he'd stuck some boards up against the backside of the curb to create a place to grow garlic:
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Magic.  Like Ralph Moore, perhaps my neighbor believed this asphalt strip could grow something, and decided to beat God to it. 

Friday, December 24, 2010

Hairy Christmas!

Hoover wishes you a very hairy Christmas.

Will pose for lunch meat:
Holiday Hoover





Storm Damage

Consumerist paradise at the end of the rainbow?  
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The drain clogged up at the top of the slope, so we lost some soil due to the run off.  The poor Podocarpus I moved back in early fall was undermined and fell over.  Nothing serious.  I righted the Podocarpus, replaced some soil, and that was that. 

When the sun finally reappeared after 6 days of rain, we went for a long walk around the neighborhood.  Right around the bend, a fallen Eucalyptus globulus.  No loss there.  Let the oaks return!  We had to maneuver our way through the branches.   We saw another big Euc tilted and ready to fall right into some power lines.  I hope So Cal Edison gets it taken out before it takes out our electricity. 

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The walk ended up as a master class entitled "Why Ice Plant On Slopes Is Bad".  The slope failures we saw were all ice plant related. 
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I think, but am not sure that the ice plant in question is Carpobrotus chilensis.  Essentially, it's a top-heavy plant with shallow weak roots.  As rain falls, the plant fattens itself up by absorbing water.  A lot of water.

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The roots cannot support the added weight, and the whole plant, along with part of the slope ends up sliding down.  We saw this several times:
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In immediately adjacent areas, on the same types of slopes, the original native vegetation appeared to be mostly Lemonade Berry, Rhus integrifolia.  No failures of the Rhus.  They were all fine, and looked better than the Carpobrotus as well.

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On a lot where regrading is in progress, we saw some slight failure of the unprotected bare slope:
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I am sure they will plant something other than Carpobrotus.  It's fairly well known that ice plant will pull down a slope.  The latest slope "solution" seems to be Aptenia cordifolia, which is only slightly better than Carpobrotus.  I bet $10 that's what they plant.  It's cheap and quick and popular and not called "ice plant", so it must be good, right?   If you simply take a walk after a long and heavy rain and look at results, you can appreciate that Rhus integrifolia would be a better choice, but how often do builders choose native plants? 

Ummm...never? 

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Cost Effective Rain Water Storage: I Crunch The Numbers

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Most everyone in Southern California who lives in a house has a driveway--a slab of concrete that functions as a way to get the car from the street to the garage (most everyone in Southern California has a car unless they like to stay at home all the time). There is a large proportion of cars that sit only on the driveway, never in the garage, because the garage is full of stuff. However, cars in the garage or on the driveway, there's unused space under nearly every one's driveway--a wonderful place for a cistern to store rain water, lots and lots of rain water.

When we bought our house in 1999, I asked the landscape architect about the viability of putting a rain water cistern under the driveway. She looked at me like I had an extra ear growing out of my forehead. Intimidated, I dropped the idea. What I should have done was gotten a different landscape architect--maybe.

Watching thousands of gallons of perfectly good rain water rush down our drainage culvert on the way back to the ocean every year pains me no end.

Aaaarrrrggghhh!!!
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I save as much rain water as I can from every storm, and distribute it to the most arid parts of the garden when everything starts to dry out. In this way, I can usually avoid using the sprinkler/drip system for half of fall, all of winter, and the first part of spring. Can I do better? Yes, but...

I started to think about the cost of storage vs. the cost of water.

The problem with saving rain water is that water takes up a lot of room, and there's usually not a good place to store it for longer than a few days or weeks. Water is also very heavy.

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Storage options are frustrating. The rain barrels on the market are expensive relative to the amount of rain they can hold. There is a kind that resembles a terra cotta oil-jar. They are gorgeous, but expensive when you calculate the amount of storage space vs. the cost of the water you are saving. Our for-profit water company charges us about $6 for 100 cubic feet of water (748 gallons). One of those very pretty oil-jarish rain barrels costs $150 and holds 65 gallons of water. Rough calculations determine that I would need to spend $300 on two containers to hold a little over a dollar's worth of water. There's more to the calculation, though.

Let's say the containers lasted 10 years, which would make the cost $30/year. If I filled and distributed, filled and distributed rainwater say 5 times per year (an optimistic number), that would make my cost to save rain water only about six times as expensive as buying the water from the water company. Which doesn't quite make sense. Any other options?

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To go a cheaper route, there are plastic garbage barrels at about 10 dollars. They hold about 40 gallons, so I would be spending about $30 to store that dollar's worth of water. These barrels only seem to last about two years. Either a hole develops in the bottom, or one of the handles rips off, so I'm not going further with the calculations on those, because there is a sturdier, cheaper option: recycled plastic food grade 55 gallon drums.

On craigslist, the going rate is about $10/drum, or an initial cost of a little over $20 for that dollar's worth of water. If you phone around to car washes (they buy their detergent in them) you may be able to get some for free. Five fillings a year, pro-rated over 5 years of use (barrels get brittle over time), the price starts to look reasonable, at a par or slightly less than buying it from the water company. Plus you can use them for five years, and when they do get brittle, you can still recycle them, which is "green", isn't it? These drums look like the best choice when you think about the cost.

I also looked around the web at the cost of cisterns. A quality fiberglass tank, capacity 3000 gallons, that could be buried under my driveway can be had for about $7,000 to hold (by rough calculations) $24 worth of water, not including the cost of digging up the driveway, digging a hole for the cistern, disposing of the displaced soil, and replacing the driveway. Let us say (too) conservatively, $3000 for that to give us a round number of $10,000 to hold $24 worth of water.

But we'll prorate over 30 years, (though the tank can last much longer than that), costing us around $350/year. If we were able to fill/distribute 5 times, we'd be spending $350/year for water we can buy at $120. Of course, water prices will increase, inflation, drought-restrictions and all that. But the fact is that all in all, the water company can deliver water cheaper than you can store it.

So maybe the landscape architect looked at me like I was nuts because I was indeed nuts.

Or perhaps the moral of the story is to get some food-grade 55 gallon drums off craigslist if you want cost-effective rain water storage. They are pretty easy to plumb up yourself with common plumbing parts so the water can run from your downspouts into the drums and thence out a valve to your hose, and the drums don't take up an unreasonable amount of space. You can paint them up pretty, too. At this point it looks like the best option.

Three other points: first, my water is very expensive because our water company is for-profit, so if you raise an eyebrow at my prices, realize that your ROI may be even lower than mine if your water is cheaper, and it probably is.

Second, I should also mention that looking for an old but still viable water storage tank on craigslist or freecycle or is another potentially inexpensive option. There are also these square plastic tanks encased (for strength) in metal cages--you can sometimes find those as well. Food processors buy vegetable oil, syrup and suchlike in tanks and you may be able to find some. I think they hold about 250 gallons, but are a lot harder to move around than drums.

Last, I have neglected to mention that of course rainwater is magic, you can water and water with imported water and never get the plant growth that a few gallons of rain will give you. But you already knew that, right?

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Monday, December 20, 2010

Drippy

The leaves have tumbled down,
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the sky is filled with mist;
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water heaven sent,
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from every leaf and petal...
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...drips!