moss boulders

Hairy Roger

The last time I posted, this cactus must have been a pup!

Yes it has been that long…so long in fact that in the interim WordPress changed its page editor on me and moved all my tools around.

Gutenbergers!

Where to start…where to start?

 

It has been so long that Loki is now pushing-on the size of Kumo especially clad in her winter coat.

She now uses him as a warm, funky-smelling cushion on our colder nights.

At 10 months Loki is already dominating the patch and keeping the dove and squirrel population firmly at bay.

No complaints from me.

I just hope she doesn’t challenge the local urban fox like she did the other night…that was a screaming match.

I always open the door very slowly to let her in the house at this point, no telling what unfortunate creature may be dangling from her mouth…oh yes.

On an equally gross note my satsuma tree put out an equally disgusting array of bile fruit (as per the annual norm). I do like the winter color they put on though which is the main reason I grow them.

At least that is what I keep telling myself.

As usual I bribed my daughter into some satsuma ‘sampling’, it is now an annual Patch tradition after all and one that never fails to have me in stitches.

“Same as last year Dad…err, disgusting?!”.

You never know, one of these years they might just be sweet and delicious instead of generating unsavory faces akin to the infamous Montreal escargot tasting of 2017, but I highly doubt it.

The tranquil view of a nice sunset is somewhat diminished with a rather large refrigerator lurking around in the landscape and luckily for me it was bulk pick up week. Yes, it was finally time for her to leave for probably less greener pastures.

Eager to stay where she had been for the last 9 months she had one more fight left in her…

…Stupid Refrigerator.

The end of an era.

Or is it?

Now we get to look at the backside of it from our front windows for a few days.

The fridge that just keeps giving.

Staying with major domestic appliances for a moment, we no longer have to go outside (or fight with a tarp) to use our washer and dryer. Oh no, we now have this smart stackable ‘indoor’ solution…

The sheer luxury.

These two Texas sages

Leucophyllum frutescens

have been getting leggier and leggier over the years, it was time for some drastic hook-saw action.

“Owf with their Heads!”

Now to wait and see what happens.

I have read that Cenizo does not respond at all well to heavy pruning.

I think leaving but a few feet of stump sticking out of the ground qualifies as heavy pruning. Worst case I will replant, but I am curious to see what happens and how they will respond to their brutal decapitations.
That adjacent yucca is next on my pruning list, it drives me crazy when there is dead growth hanging down like that.

 

This one is quite tall and requires some help from a cedar stump to support a spiraling trunk.

Moving Along…

Wheel-barrows full of turf?
Dirt trenches and lots of running back and forth? It can mean only one thing…

Another client ‘Normandy Phase’ was well under way.

This time the war-zone was a large back garden in Austin. The goal was to blend some hardscaping and plantings around the house and introduce a water element while nibbling away at the overall turf coverage (turferage).

Pallets of oversized Oklahoma flagstone were dropped at the front of the property and hauled to the back on dollies…a very time consuming activity. I like to use the natural edge of the flagstone to define planting beds or contouring around turf areas, eliminating the need for any additional and superfluous edging materials that always look unnatural in a landscape.

The good people at https://hillcountrywatergardens.com/ drilled a hole through this attractive moss boulder to create a low-level, naturalistic water feature off the back deck.

Here it is up and ‘running’:

The water feature uses rain water collection tanks to top up levels in the hot months. Cafe river rock was mostly used to hide the water collection basin and was in keeping with the natural color palette of the scheme.

Lighting courtesy of
Steve Serum at keepinitgreenaustin
was also introduced to illuminate the area and to broadcast up into the distant oak trees.

Turfstone was used to form a connecting pathway at the back of the garage and to aid drainage. A steel barrier was needed here to hold back the turf and soil.

I will leave you with this very bizarre Opuntia know as Pricklypear (opuntia engelmannii) or fondly known as the ‘Hairy Roger’.

This is on my most wanted list. I would love to grow a hairy 10ft version of this like my regular opuntia tree.

 

On that note,

Stay Tuned For:

“Fire-pits & Giggles”

 

All material © 2019 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

 

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Kumo appears very happy that we are back home, adorning his new and very apt collar motif.

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https://www.eastsidepatch.com/2012/04/exploding-goldfish/

Please do not click on the above link if you are eating.

It did not take any time before he was under the bed pulling his guilty face, in trouble once again for soliciting underwear:

 

It is always interesting, after being away for some time, just how many changes can happen in a shot span of time in a garden.

Sheldon

I had prepared before our trip by filling up my marginal stock tank plantings with water and mosquito dunks, cleaning pond filters, thinning out the Walskers (as you do) and checking on my magnificent, ahem, strobilus (you know where this is ultimately going to go), among other more menial administrative tasks involving the Naboo.

Naboo

Considering the prolonged high temperatures while we were away all the plants fared very well, a testament to the natives…and by this I am of course referring to the plants.

But there was this:

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Opening my back door I was shocked by this Yucca recurvifolia and wondered why on earth, during my absence, it had decided to try and crawl across my decomposed granite pathway to the adjacent planting bed?

chevy-chase

Was it the needle palm?

secret-life-of-plants-book

Perhaps they had been planning this for weeks?

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Closer examination of the tragedy revealed that it’s trunk had snapped at the base?

Very odd.

I examined the cavity for any sign of ants, rot or weevils but found nothing, in fact the base and root structure appeared solid. I cut the plant at the tear and wrestled it painfully into a trash can to put out for city collection.

I was later reprimanded on pick-up for not putting it inside a lawn bag…now that would be a plastic ripping, incredibly annoying activity in 100 degree weather if ever there was one, I thought to myself whilst exhibiting facial remorse for fear of actually having to do this.

mystery

The plant was surprisingly heavy and I know there was a day of high winds while I was gone, but was it strong enough to topple this well established plant?

Quite the mystery.

Sago-Palm

On this collapsing note, it appears that I have waited too long to gallivant around the city during the hours of darkness waving my strobilus. This is probably a good thing considering the current nighttime temperatures, it would quickly get very uncomfortable dancing around a parking lot in a trench-coat.

I knew I should have performed the deed before going away,

be..be..before this happened.

Sago-Palm

101603_fg8For fear of letting out more Benny Hill double entendres I will not go into more detail as to what has happened to it…shrinking, shriveling, drooping etc, it is plainly evident.

This is a real shame as only this week I discovered another fine female specimen just down the road at

photo(1)

Pappadeaux.

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Now that my own strobilus is well, what it is, I promise I will not post any more of this Cycadic nonsense, well, not until next year’s escapades.

Galloping Along:

More welcome storms and rain hit Austin again this week,

Damp_Ground

it is turning into a pretty good summer.

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So says this Japanese aralia, and this now

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enormous thryallis.

This ever-expanding datura is blasting out it’s ghostly trumpets

flowers

to attract pollinators.

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Life is slowly returning to “normal” in the Patch.

East Side Patch

Leaves and dead things have been removed, patios swept and

pond

the waters are slowly clearing.

East Side Patch

She has been distributing her Scottish collection of artifacts we lugged home here and there in the garden.

ESPatch

Me?

east-side-patch

I have been busy finishing a front duplex design.

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On a restricted budget and time frame, the desired scheme had to offer maximum visual impact with the minimal scope of work to sell the property.

Duplex_front

A full plan was originally submitted as a starting point for discussing what would be implemented and what was not to be, based on the constraints.

Installation

Once agreed, the first order of the day was to replace the metal fence, planting-bed creation and subsequent sod removal.

DSC01689DSC01690Troublesome side and back corridors were planted and covered in gravel to cover up the washed out bare and uneven ground and improve drainage and visual appeal.

There was little to no access to these tight areas so a lot of the aggregate had to be carried in by hand in buckets.

This process required a very meditative and zen mindset for fear of losing one’s mind over the repetition, heat and the continued gnashing of ferocious mosquitoes on flesh.

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This particularly stubborn area required obscure bodily motions reminiscent of Psy’s amusing moves.

Psy copy

The front beds were graded, amended, planted and dressed with the same Tejas black gravel as the corridors for continuity.

Landscape-Design

Emphasis was placed on the front left corner being the visually prominent corner from the driveway and upon entering the property. A solitary loquat will grow fast and soften the edge of the wooden fence on the right, Mexican bush sage and a central oleander will take care of the rest.

hardscaping

The large moss boulders had some nice coloration to them, picking up the new color of the house.

I went by recently to find things flowering, it will be very cheerful when the oleander and sages fill-in and join-in.

Landscape-Design-Austin,TX

Stay Tuned for:

“Blast from the Past”

 

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Thinking of you Monday.

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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