pride of barbados


Here is the poor wizened chap – the 20ft flower stalk is still upright but has finished blooming (you can see the debris from the flowers building up). The Agave is dying from the leaf tips inward. I am going to follow and post pictures of the gradual decay of this plant.



Here is the bean stalk – all the flowers have died now. A detail of the trunk reveals hundreds of baby plants.

. . . .and now for some running Bamboo in Stock Tanks :


stock-tank-planter
Here is my latest stock tank addition (4ftx2ft), this one contains a black bamboo (Phyllostachy Nigra) – the black culms against the neighboring fuchsia Oleander will provide good color contrast. The broad-leaf loquat will act as a backdrop for the fine leaves of the bamboo to complete the trio. All these plants are young,  I will revisit next year to see if the scene develops like I hope it will. I am also planning to plant in front of the tank to soften its base, perhaps Cast Iron plant?

This plant has been in numerous containers over the last few years, all too small, and as such the plant has struggled. Even though the bamboo is 4 years old it is quite stunted and the culms are very small. I am hoping that this “pot” will be large enough to finally give it a kick-start. I have had success with this container planting method with a Golden Bamboo (Phyllostachys aurea) in the front of my house so I thought I would repeat it.


Here is a Golden Bamboo 3 weeks after transplanting and lots of new culms.


stock-tank

As a side note, although this container is on the large side (especially in the cooler states) I believe it’s size to be the “sweet-spot” for a Texas bamboo container if you have the space. Small containers in Texas are as much use as the toilet they installed on the international space station.

Other extroverts in the garden right now:


Amaranthus, collectively known as amaranth or pig-weed running amok in my front yard – will put on a
good show in the fall. The word comes from the
Greek amarantos “one that does not wither,” or the never-fading (flower).



The national flower of Barbados is the Pride of Barbados
(Dwarf Poinciana or Flower Fence). Great tropical leaves!



Sticking on the Barbados theme – Barbados cherry is native to the Lesser Antilles from St. Croix to Trinidad, also Curacao and Margarita and neighboring northern South America as far south as Brazil. Mine is one of the smaller varieties and it is packed with cherries right now. When it was flowering it was hard to even walk past this plant for the large numbers of bees that would swarm. I think my neighbors must have thought it strange that I repeatedly had a flailing spasm exactly in the same place down my pathway, every-time I would walk past it.

Stay Tuned for:

“The Bermuda Triangle”


All material © 2009 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

 

Remember that extra wide trench?

As well as running electricity to a couple of GFCI boxes and water to the back end of the garden, this trench was also to serve as a cactus and succulent bed.  The soil here needed better drainage so I decided to remove a couple of feet.  I transported this soil to the opposite side of the garden and built up another ‘hill’ for future planting. I generated the shape of the bed, installed some weed edging and laid down weed suppressant material and a layer of pea-gravel in the trench.  I then got a delivery of decomposed granite and wheelbarrowed it in from the front of the house.  It is funny but like the Home Depot ponds, small areas of land also defy the generally accepted laws of physics – to fill in an area always takes 3X more soil than what you anticipate, or what was actually excavated out of it!

At least that is how it feels.

My decision to do a cactus and succulent bed was actually based more out of necessity than design – a friend of a friend of mine was moving and as luck would have it, he had a whole bunch of plants already in pots sitting at the back of his garden that he didn’t want, score! – I just needed full sun and the right soil to get them to a good start.

The bed in its first year (far right) – a top dressing of pea-gravel was laid on top of the decomposed granite.



Agave just planted                        Same Agave today  in bloom                  Agave Americana Variegata

year_4

Cactus and succulent bed – 4th year


Moss boulders define the bed shape – Gopher Plants (Euphorbia biglandulosa) weave between them.
Succulents and Blackfoot Daisy’s have filled in the gaps between the main plants.
Dwarf Bottlebrush (Callistemonviminalis) ‘Little John’ and Pride of Barbados (Caesalpinia pulcherrima)

provide some contrasting warm colored accents.


Gopher Plants (Euphorbia biglandulosa)                        

Detail of the Agave Base

Dwarf Bottlebrush fireworks, and Pride of Barbados.

Rosettes of succulents form a dense mat between the agaves and cacti.


Cacti and succulents always offer the most unexpected surprises, in the most unexpected forms.

troll

Stay Tuned for:

“I Built a Vine Tunnel, and a Troll moved in”


All material © 2009 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.