Wed - April 21, 2010Duchesse de Bravant
I
always wonder whether my Duchesse de Brabant, originally purchased from the
Antique Rose Emporium sometime before 1990, is really a Madame Joseph Schwartz.
Sometimes her blooms are pinkish, but more often they are white with just the
slightest pink tinge.
Posted at 12:24 PM read more/see more pictures.... Sun - July 13, 2008graceful weaver's bamboo and Timor black bamboo
Here are two new bamboo plants we just received last week from Tropical Bamboo
in Florida. The first one, show at left, is a graceful weaver's bamboo,
Bambusa textilis gracilis, and the second one is a Timor black bamboo,
Bambusa lako.
I was most excited about getting the Timor black bamboo. When mature, it will have glossy black culms. The little one-year culms are already dark. The graceful weaver's bamboo, now that I see it, is even more enchanting. It is so graceful and lovely already! I had been longing for more bamboo, since our one giant timber bamboo turned out so wonderful.... Posted at 09:42 PM read more/see more pictures.... fifty-foot timber bamboo: more picturesOur
giant timber bamboo, Bambusa oldhamii, is six years old now, fifty feet
tall,with culms that are 4.5 inches thick. It's the best thing I've ever
planted. Click on the picture or "read more" to see a full-height picture of
the entire bamboo!
Posted at 09:10 PM read more/see more pictures.... Sun - June 8, 2008three feet longHere's
another picture of my Monstera deliciosa, whose leaves are now nearly
three feet long. That's a yard stick in the picture. When Patsy McPherson told
me to plant houseplants outside, it was the best gardening advice anyone ever
gave me. They love this gulf coast climate!
Posted at 04:55 PM read more/see more pictures.... Mon - June 25, 2007Papaya leaves
Papayas are not my favorite fruit, but the papaya tree is lovely. Here's a
picture of one of my young papaya trees in the rain. The pair of trees has just
gotten taller than me and are almost up to six feet. Before they're done, they
will certainly be taller than the house.
The seeds for these papayas were a very kind gift from a friend in Hawaii, who says that this type of papaya, 'Sunrise,' is much tastier than others. We planted the entire packet; some grew, many dyed young. Only this pair survives. They are very sturdy so we have high hopes that they will live to grow up. Posted at 09:27 AM read more/see more pictures.... Thu - September 28, 2006lovely mushroom
I don't know what kind of mushroom this is. I photographed it in my front lawn,
near the street, on September 28. It's amazingly delicate and lovely. The top is
not meaty, like most mushroom caps; it looks as thin as a sheet of paper,
curling up to let its spores go.
Posted at 10:21 AM read more/see more pictures.... Mon - May 15, 2006mysterious Nightshade family volunteer
A new plant appeared suddenly by our front door about a month ago. It was rather
attractive, with a splash of purple on its first leaves, so I gave it favored
weed status and did not root it out. Then a bloom appeared whose pale violet
fused petals and waxy yellow stamens (almost forming a tube around the pistil)
made it look very much like a potato flower. The leaves weren't like a potato's,
though; a potato has deeply divided leaves. Nightshade? Again very similar, but
its petals curve back more than our mystery plant. Its hairs made me itch for
hours after I touched it, though it lacked any obvious
thorns....
Posted at 02:41 PM read more/see more pictures.... Sat - May 6, 2006Philodendron selloum blooms!My
Philodendron selloum plants, which like the Monstera deliciosa
are commonly known as split-leaf philodendrons, are nine or ten feet tall, with
leaves about two feet long. We planted them out in a shady area as small
inexpensive houseplants from Target in 1994. They're never really frozen back,
though we live in zone 9a, perhaps because of the protective wooden fence at the
north and west sides, and our house to the east. When they were small, we tossed
blankets over them when a hard freeze was predicted, but that has obviously been
impossible for many years now. If we ever get a freeze again, the plants will be
damaged, but should grow back from their
roots....
Posted at 08:16 AM read more/see more pictures.... Mon - August 22, 2005'Delicious monster' leaves over two feet long
This Monstera deliciosa (also known as the Windowleaf, the Swiss Cheese
plant or, ambiguously, as one of the Split Leaf Philodendrons) started out as a
houseplant, tiny and inexpensive, but took only a couple of years to start
producing leaves that are over two feet
long....
Posted at 02:23 PM read more/see more pictures.... Thu - August 18, 2005Giant Timber Bamboo in a city backyard
"You
planted bamboo in your yard! Doesn't it spread?"
No, not all bamboo tries to take over the entire block. There are two different types of bamboo, clumping and running. Clumping bamboo is safe.... Posted at 12:18 PM read more/see more pictures.... Antique Rose - Madame Isaac Pereire
Madame Isaac Periere has the most wonderful scent of any rose I've smelled,
described in books as a true damask rose scent. The scent is much more
delightful than the scent of a tea rose. The flowers are beautifully shaped and
large. The only drawbacks to this plant are her disinclination to bloom much out
of season....
Posted at 08:45 AM read more/see more pictures.... |
USDA zone 9
Texas Gulf Coast Links
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Published On: Apr 21, 2010 12:29 PM |