Palms

“Takes Two to Tango”

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I went on my rounds the other day in the front of the Patch. Pulling on the the occasional 6ft strands of Bermuda grass that insist on growing through my rosemary urgh and admiring just how fast oleander grows and how prolifically it blooms when something caught my attention curbside.

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Below my opuntia tree,

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which is covered in buds and a few blooms. I noticed something bright, something orange.

I moved in closer.

Ignoring the weeds and the seeding Mexican oregano (I do very little maintenance in my front garden), there it was, shining brightly in the heart of my King sago palm.

Cycas revoluta

 

Cycas revoluta

How could I have missed this golden egg?

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There were numerous other artifacts lying around the pollen coated base, I assume tribal offerings from the little folk who must now be worshiping the new Megalithic Structure on this plant that dates back at least 200 million years.

Sagos are cycads rather than actual palms as the name suggests, and they are dioecious, which means there are male plants and female plants and, like humans, to reproduce it takes both sexes.

Male sago palm flowers like this one produce a long (occasionally multiple), golden pollen cone-like structure called a strobilus. Most Sagos must be at least 15-20 years old before they are mature enough to bloom and reproduce.

Here is the female plant seedpod, about the size of a basketball,

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Photo credit: brewbooks

and here it is opening up, revealing the internal seeds:

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In their native habitat of southern Japan Cycads are pollinated by wind or insects, but to ensure pollination here in Central Texas you can dust some of the male pollen into the seed basket.

This can be done by crudely cutting off the male appendage and shaking it over the female

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to disperse the pollen…aw come on!

A single male strobilus has plenty of pollen and can be used on several females at a time, or on one several days in a row.

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Enough Austin!

Researching this post I did come across some hilarious documentation that stated some home owners have been so ’embarrassed’ with their neighborhood-shocking male strobili that they actually threw towels over them to hide them.

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Imagine that scene?

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I also found out that sago palm seeds contain two carcinogens, macrozamin and cycasin, which can apparently be absorbed through the skin – so use impermeable gloves when working with these seeds.

Now…to find a female plant!

Does anyone in Austin know of one / seen one / have one and are willing to get these plants together?

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Finally:

More welcome spring rains are hitting us…at about an inch an hour!

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When this happens,

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this happens to my Buddha’s belly bamboo…

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she’s a 40ft leaner.

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 This Alphonse Karr bamboo also lowers its much smaller culms when saturated.

Fragrant mist flowers

Fragrant mist flowers are out of control with the surprise moisture, as is this evergreen wisteria that threatens to consume anyone who lingers too long on my garden bench.

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Spent poppy heads have buckled in the rain, dispensing their royal seeds through their crowns and into the damp granite.

And we all know the next devious scene…

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They know what to do when it rains…

f10051ceb15f2f55a88abe22693e212eStay Tuned for:

“Megasporophylls!”

All material © 2013 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

 

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My latest front and back garden design and install, this one is in East Austin.

The claustrophobic boxwoods, confined circular beds around the pecan trees and the metal edging were first on my list for the dumpster. This property was made more complicated due to the grade differences. Everything was mounded, the driveway was low, grass areas high and I really wanted to open up the existing linear (and sunken) walkway to the street.

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Then it was the turf’s time to go dumpster-diving.

This existing cactus bed had some nice specimen plants and a large sago palm and opuntia that stabbed me repeatedly throughout the course of the installation process.

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This metal fence also served no purpose as the wooded fence behind it created enough security and enclosure, this was also removed to further open up the space to create a better flow through the property.

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The back garden had an over-sized hot tub (that was removed) and a lot bricks that had buckled as the ground shifted.

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It is a documented fact that the removal of bricks defies all conventional laws of physics. There are always 35x more bricks excavated than were originally in the ground.

Large amounts of decomposed granite was delivered,

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in this case three dump trucks full, this was #1…and that is a lot of granite.

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lots of boulders and flagstone.

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Here are some before and after images:

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Enlarged cactus and succulent bed, side metal fence removal and new meandering pathways.

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Flattening of the grade to create a less segmented appearance, organic flagstone pathway replaces linear concrete walkway to street.

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Hot tub removal, back patio and a stock tank planted up with cattails (naturally).

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Planting bed definition,

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introduction of a small water feature. The home owner already had this little fountain, it worked out perfectly in terms of scale and volume. I have been sensitive to the audible volume of things in the landscape ever since my wind-chime kerfuffle some years back:

http://www.eastsidepatch.com/2008/05/wind-chimes-and-my-post-oak-a-darwin-award-nominee/

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360 unification.

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The future home of…well something?

Back in the Patch:

Remember when I finished this brickwork,

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and the traveling folk moved in?

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If you recall I gave them an ultimatum to tidy their camp up or leave,

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imagine my surprise when I took a walk up the garden, turned a corner and…

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found that my traveling folk had turned all posh with a capital P!

We needed a new tent and it was spring break after all.

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They have practically been living in here since I pitched it.

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Even our house-elf has taken to the new temporary structure.

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Of course it is hard to avoid technology in the tent when you are still in WiFi distance from the house.

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 Moving along:

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My ponds are awaiting the drop of the catkins from this overhead post oak, my net is at the ready.

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Salvia has wasted no time with our recent warm temperatures.

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brimless+cloche1920’s high fashion holly fern unfurling.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here is a great combination, if you have the space:

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Sabal major with an understory of Texas red bud – my “borrowed view”.

Finally:

yeti

Yetis may or may not exist in the Siberian mountains but I do know they exist in the Patch.

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Stay Tuned for:

“Candy Apples”

 

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An everything but the kitchen sink time travel machine!

All material © 2013 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

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