Butterflies

"Pressing Along"

Giant Timber Bamboo
Can you guess what this is?

Giant Timber Bamboo culm

The maroon hairs (oral setae) on this Pubescent Giant Timber culm will eventually disappear as it matures. The color on the new growth ranges from purple to red to green. The larger culms seem to have a lot more of this coloration going on. Giant Timber Bamboo Bambusa oldhamii is native to China, and the most commonly cultivated clumping timber bamboo here in the United States.  It is also commonly used in furniture making, most notably in Taiwan, and is even becoming adopted in the laptop market?

Giant Timber Bamboo Asus bamboo laptop
Asus U6: Ecobook bamboo laptop

Giant Timber Bamboo

Bamboo is the fastest-growing plant on Earth, it has been measured surging skyward as fast as 121 cm (47.6 inches) in a 24 hour period. This one is a giant of the bamboo world, it is the largest member of the grass family and it is thriving despite our dry conditions. This one has a soaker-hose weaving around the base of the culms and it receives a deep soaking once a week.  A great tropical look with an equally tropical rustle when a breeze hits it, we even have a bamboo wind chime hung in it for an added sailing boat sound effect!

Talking about sail boats…imagine taking a trans-Atlantic crossing on one of these beauties:

Butterfly boats
Angel Villanueva, 1492 (2008). Oil on Canvas, 24 x 36 in. Private
Collection, U.S.

morpho butterfly
Morpho Butterfly

In the artist’s own creatively descriptive words…
“1492 is a visual metaphor for Columbus’ ships. The ship’s sails are based on
the patterns found on the underside of the wings on the South American
butterfly Blue Morpho. My inspiration for this piece was a cross between the
history of the Americas and psychoanalysis: in Freudian theory the butterfly
symbolizes transformation and change. Here, the ships are rendered as the
vectors for this change. Carl Sagan once said that the discovery of America
(and all the destruction that came with it) was inevitable, bound to happen
around the time it did. Thus, the conquest is suggested by the painting as
being the result of natural forces”.

What a stunning painting! See more of Angel’s work here: http://www.angelvillanueva.com/en/paintings/index.htm

While we are on the subject…

Black Swallowtail Butterfly

The electric blue color on this Black Swallowtail butterfly’s wings was incredibly vibrant, the orange spots quite fitting against the Pride of Barbados, Caesalpinia pulcherrima that it was drinking heavily from. Each flower on this plant is composed of five showy petals with very prominent six inch long red stamens, reminiscent of the legs of the swallowtail.

Black Swallowtail Butterfly

I have had a bumper Pride of Barbados year, this year. I started out with two plants and afer a few years of self, (and helped) seeding, I am now up to eight. The best thing about these plants is that it can never be too hot or too dry for them, in fact they thrive on it!  I have no idea what or how their root structures works, but it could not be any more efficient. So much color, so little maintenance, perfect for Texas, especially this year.

Sotol Braveheart_McGoohan_as_Edward1
“The problem with sotols, is that its full of spines.”

Another bunch of drought warriors are the Sotols, they may take quite some time to reach maturity, but it is well worth the wait.

DSC08715
Looking like tribal tatoos, these Agave Americana are also no strangers to the heat.

Moving on…

The following scene may be a little disturbing to some sensitive readers, things have got worse around the decaying Cactus Man. It seems as though my over-zealous face-carving “proceedures” have created their very own Guyana Tragedy. The scene looks totally absurd now, like a bunch of dead cacti-heads wielding green table-tennis bats.  All that time I spent swelling the base nodes, then I cause this to happen! It appears that all of the main paddles were connected via a common root system / tubor/ something or other. One by one they are shriveling up and keeling over, in a way that only cactus paddles can.

Cactus Man

The Cactus Man wiggled his little green bat to indicate he had something to say, so I leaned in close. In a parched, sandy voice, he rasped out the blood curdling words…”your serve”.  I flicked him over his dead head and still got a bunch of cactus barbs in my finger…Stupid Cactus Man, with his healthy table-tennis paddle.

Cactus Man

I could have sworn that his “smile” widened somewhat when he realized he had spiked me. In his honor you may have noticed that I have made him my new online avatar.

RIP Catus Man, 2005-2009 (sorry I killed you and your friends).

Pink Pampas

On a softer note, (well at least this part of the grass), the first new blooms on my pampas grass have started to emerge. This one is my favorite with its slightly pink plumes.

Ghost Plant, Mother of Pearl Plant
Pretty, Huh?
This writhing tangle of stems belongs to a Ghost Plant, Mother of Pearl Plant
Graptopetalum paraguayense, these clusters have really struggled in this year’s drought. It used to look like this:

Ghost Plant

And finally a couple of before and after shots to offer some appeal to a house that is going to be sold…

Before After Front scheme

“Softening a corner”.

Bamboo Muhly and contrasting soft leaf yucca provide a simple and hardy planting scheme that provides a lot of punch and movement. An extremely low cost scheme, to cover a large area. I cannot wait to try this one out on the ESP hell-strips, (obviously with a more abundant amount of yuccas)!

Stay Tuned for:

“Ghost in the Machine”

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



Inspirational Image of the Week:


Crying Flowers

"Ten Teeshirts Later"

Today I finished hacking at the lower slopes of my K2 decomposed granite delivery mound, and it has finally gone!

I finished off most of my pathways, the ones at the very back of the yard still need yet more moss boulders to line the edges, but these can wait a while. I am officially over wheel barrowing this stuff to the back of the yard in this heat, the rest can wait till the fall. I have run out of cold turbans and tee-shirts and enthusiasm at this point anyway…now It is time brush the granite from my teeth and sleep for three days. Job done.


Hardscaping completed, lavender bed waiting for soil prep in September.



New flagstones layed in.     Wandering paths, you can see the future lavender bed (central).



A new pathway.

While I was taking that last picture I had an idea for a “Door to Nowhere” positioned in between the Mexican Bamboo and the Pampass. I am thinking of installing a fake doorway, it is a perfect spot especially now that a new granite pathway winds itself right up to the chain-link fence. I am envisioning an old Mexican door with a vine over the top of the frame? It would make the yard psychologically larger.


I humped this section of gate to the area and positioned it vertically to
see how something like this will look.



You get the idea! I can but dream… I think this Texas
summer heat is finally getting to me!



While I was rooting around under the Pampass grass I caught this Sphinx moth relaxing in the shade.



Sticking on insects for a minute, I have been trying to get a good shot of a yellow jacket for some time, and this chap proved to be a bit of a poser. I managed to get right up to him as he landed on some sea oats without getting stung. He was drinking out of the pond for some time before settling here. Click for a better view!

Oh perhaps just a few more…

I caught this Swallowtail on my Pride of Barbados, it seems like I got lucky today, getting up close to all these creatures. The orange spots on the Swallowtail’s wings and body really pick up on the plant in shape and color.



Check out the eyes! The Barbados even has antenna to really mix it up!



Kaaboom! I love this plant, in fact I have planted one in the middle of my circular bed. A true firework in form and totally lethal if you get close to it …the last picture was taken looking down onto it, it reminds me of…



I’m givin’ er alls she’s got captain! were at warp nine already…any mere an she will blow!

Other Mick Jaggers right now:

Great “painted” brushstroke coloration on these new Giant Timber culms.



Succulent getting ready to flower..



Soft Muhly!



Spikey octopus

Stay Tuned for:
“Bugged Out”

All material © 2008 for east_side_patch. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.

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