Agaves

“Blooming Canthas!”

They are over here, IMG_0429 they are over there, I have never seen so many eight spotted foresters everywhere. moth

Alypia octomaculata

These colorful moths are often mistaken for butterflies as they visit flowers during the day. moth They seem particularly fond of sand cherry flowers, I counted five on the small tree. DSC05504 There are plenty of flowers in the hell strip at the moment, cactus don’t get too close to that swash buckling opuntia! johnny-depp opuntia “Shiver me paddles” paddle Has to be rum. hell-strip This pyracantha has so many blooms it looks like it is covered in snow. bloom I keep meaning to move that bat box to a higher location but there are always anoles living in it. 4599849547_455ef3717a_b copy “We really should go and visit Bill and Margaret in the bat box sometime dear.” I took a picture through the round hole to see if I could capture the anoles “at home”… Tumnus-House-600x256 …it was amazing what they had done to the place. blooms The pyracantha’s pungent aroma is not everyone’s cup of tea. Feather grasses are looking well groomed at the moment, DSC05631 with our recent breezy weather they have been reeling all around the patch. “Take your panicles by the hand…” groan Behind the feather grasses… DSC05628 …inland sea oats on their fast rise. DSC05519 I needed this image on St Patrick’s day. She is still on the hunt for a four leaf clover. Lucky for her I have plenty of it in some of the most inaccessible places in the patch. hunting There is a fine stand of it below this mature sotol. hunting This works brilliantly for me, as in… “You will find one in there I am sure of it, just keep pulling them out. When you are done here there is another patch around the base of the barrel cacti you can search.” DSC05584 “right over…. clover …there. I bet there are a few four-leafers in there.”   Stay Tuned for:

“Holey Bridges”

 

All material © 2014 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant) 14th century planet Earth techniques

Oh Yes,

another

drum-roll-please

second place for the ‘most aesthetically unpleasing plant after a freeze award’

has just been awarded to this…

Frost

…Agave americana.

toptenz-clapping-audience

It was once a mythical creature that enveloped and sank many a boat crossing my stock tank with sharp writhing arms,

healthy

and now it has been reduced to beef jerky. Oh, how the mighty fall.

One plant that turns color and strangely lives up to its name after a few hard freezes is the cardboard palm (it is actually a cycad).

Zamia furfuracea

 

healthy

What were once olive green leaves that feel like cardboard to the touch, (hence the name Cardboard Palm),

Frost_Damage

turn to a rusty orange-brown aged-mahogany after a freeze. I have had these two cycads for many years now, both usually return from the ground with fresh green growth in the spring.  Considering this is a native to the southeastern Veracruz state in eastern Mexico this plant has done quite well for me under the canopy of my post oak.

Note: This plant is poisonous to animals and humans – no treatment for the poisoning is currently known.

DSC02874

Got that?

Feb

Enough of the brown and wizened – we have cone flowers on the rise, not to mention larkspur and bluebonnets, and then there is the early blooming

Texas scarlet flowering quince:

blooms

Wingardium_leviosa copy

Chaenomeles speciosa


 

Feb

The flowers of this small shrub emerge before the foliage develops, a very early and prolific bloomer.

Moving Along:

This is what happens to an iPhone when it gracefully pirouettes through the air and performs a spectacular landing on top of a pointed piece of decomposed granite.

DSC04981

It didn’t stand a chance.

I decided to channel my annoyance on my one remaining pampas grass. It has been long in the tooth for a few years now after all.

protection

I went into the house, put on my dedicated pampas removal outfit (complete with my new magazine and duct tape forearm protectors, an idea I adapted from):

World-War-Z-06

The thinking here being, if these could stop the gnashing teeth of

images

 it should provide adequate protection from a pampas.

removal

The passage of time has been long enough for me to forget just how stubborn these large grasses are to get out of the ground (I started with three) and this one was a monster. I believe it had rooted in two additional areas from the main grass. It was a tri-pampas and it took me all of 30 minutes hacking at it to get it to topple.

It would have been less but every couple of minutes I had to perform my customary

bugs

to escape the scurrying unmentionables that boiled out of its rotten interior.

the-screaming-skull-woman1 removal

Yes…in there.

At least there wasn’t a snake.

I do like pampas, especially the pink variety and they look great for a number of years, but they do have a garden shelf-life unless work is put into pruning them back every year when they mature. I have heard of people burning them back to the ground in the winter months – I would imagine this helps maintain the original form of the plant, but for fear of igniting my neighborhood and obtaining a Darwin award this is really not practical in the Patch.

blooming

Finally:

I recently returned to a landscape I completed.

Design

Here is the water feature that was installed with baby roses as a backdrop:

Installation

About a year later,

fountain

and the boulder has taken on some great coloration.

And why the post title you may ask?

Nothing more I am afraid.

 

Stay Tuned for:

The Doll House

 

Creepy-Doll

All material © 2014 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

 

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