Taking photos of the plants means there will probably be a few posts in a row with some of my favourite plants, today it is one of the agaves. There are several forms of agave filifera: the compact, the plain green and the variegates. I got the agave filifera variegata as a small plant and have been carefully growing it on for the last few years.
Has good stable variegation, this one has two colours but there is one with three. Last year it produced it's first pup and at the time I couldn't decide if I was going to leave it to clump or split it. By this spring two more pups had appeared and so it was potted into a much bigger pot in the hope of separating them out a bit.
It has been sitting on the patio wall all summer where it can be admired and has flourished. The offsets have grown into nice plants in their own right and the clump as a whole looks great.
I would imagine winter wise it would be quite hardy. The other filiferas all have excellent cold hardiness, the normal forming being planted out unprotected. However given it is one of my prized plants it is another one that gets brought inside and put somewhere good. Without water it can be placed somewhere on view without needing to worry about it getting leggy.
I can't wait to see what it looks like this time next year, at that point I may need to decide if I want to pot it up again into a really large bowl as a real feature.
Friday, 3 October 2014
Wednesday, 1 October 2014
Euphorbia pugniformis ready for winter
It is getting to that time of year when the plants have to be packed up and moved to winter locations. Ii is a good opportunity for a clean up and quick health check.
One of the plants that always stands out is the euphorbia pugniformis, one of the medusa forms.
They are surprisingly quick growth wise, at least in growing out, the trunk is much much slower to form. While interesting form the top, the best view is form the side where you can see the trunk.
I must admit to trimming it, which many people will think is a cardinal sin. When each branch (what do you call them?) grows beyond a certain length they hang down obscuring the trunk. It also gives the plant a more messy look. So I trim the lower set fairly close to the trunk, a few weeks later the remaining bit has dried off and can be removed to give a nice clean trunk. It is a shame they are so hard to root, otherwise I would have lots of them by now.
I have never really thought about hardiness, it's far to good a plant to be risked anywhere but inside over-winter. It will be brought in in the next week or so and placed somewhere it can be admired.
One of the plants that always stands out is the euphorbia pugniformis, one of the medusa forms.
They are surprisingly quick growth wise, at least in growing out, the trunk is much much slower to form. While interesting form the top, the best view is form the side where you can see the trunk.
I must admit to trimming it, which many people will think is a cardinal sin. When each branch (what do you call them?) grows beyond a certain length they hang down obscuring the trunk. It also gives the plant a more messy look. So I trim the lower set fairly close to the trunk, a few weeks later the remaining bit has dried off and can be removed to give a nice clean trunk. It is a shame they are so hard to root, otherwise I would have lots of them by now.
I have never really thought about hardiness, it's far to good a plant to be risked anywhere but inside over-winter. It will be brought in in the next week or so and placed somewhere it can be admired.
Saturday, 27 September 2014
Look what I found
I got to spend some time in the garden today and look what I found dropped the other side of the garden gate.
It appears that the fox carried it around for a bit before deciding it wasn't edible. Amy commented on the last post asking why foxes would take plants, and I have no idea. I would guess that the digging up is to get at worms, but why they would take plants, or even just carry them in their mouths for a bit is a total mystery. Maybe it got spoked and ran off before it could drop the plant.
So while the plant is not quite what it was, at least the two largest are still around and stand some chance of surviving to form new clumps.
It appears that the fox carried it around for a bit before deciding it wasn't edible. Amy commented on the last post asking why foxes would take plants, and I have no idea. I would guess that the digging up is to get at worms, but why they would take plants, or even just carry them in their mouths for a bit is a total mystery. Maybe it got spoked and ran off before it could drop the plant.
So while the plant is not quite what it was, at least the two largest are still around and stand some chance of surviving to form new clumps.
Friday, 26 September 2014
RIP orostachys fimbriata
You may remember a little while ago my post on orostachys fimbriata (found here). It has gone from strength to strength since the photo was taken. Until last night that is. I went outside this morning to find a hole where the plant used to be and soil scatted all over the ground.
A fox had dug it up.
We have a real problem with urban foxes in London, and there is one around here that likes to dig. It doesn't seem to mind where it digs, empty flower beds, or into gravel or through plants themselves.
So where my lovely little orostachys fimbriata once was, just a hole. Careful sorting through the gravel did turn up to tiny offsets so fingers crossed I can grow these on, but it is not exactly the best time to be removing offsets.
So in memory of this lovely little cluster of plants here is the original photo as a reminder.
RIP orostachys fimbriata, and foxes beware this means war!
A fox had dug it up.
We have a real problem with urban foxes in London, and there is one around here that likes to dig. It doesn't seem to mind where it digs, empty flower beds, or into gravel or through plants themselves.
So where my lovely little orostachys fimbriata once was, just a hole. Careful sorting through the gravel did turn up to tiny offsets so fingers crossed I can grow these on, but it is not exactly the best time to be removing offsets.
So in memory of this lovely little cluster of plants here is the original photo as a reminder.
RIP orostachys fimbriata, and foxes beware this means war!
Monday, 22 September 2014
How do you know your plants have taken to their new homes.
It has been a couple of months since the succulent rockery was planted up. It's been interesting watching which plants settled straight in and which have taken they time. There are two obvious signs that the plants are happy. Firstly they offset.
The largest agave bracteosa has pupped prolifically, so much so I have to remove most of them or they will take over.
The other sign is they flower.
The campanula carpatica alba have continued to flower all year.
They offset
and they flower
If they are not offsetting, they are sending out new stems / branches
And yes they flower.
And offset
And flower
Even the last few plants in pots have been getting in on the act, you have to love the determination some agaves show,
This agave parryi is sending out pups through the holes in the bottom of the pot.
So far so good then with the main rockery, although the real test is going to be the first winter.
The largest agave bracteosa has pupped prolifically, so much so I have to remove most of them or they will take over.
The other sign is they flower.
The campanula carpatica alba have continued to flower all year.
They offset
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| Aloe Aristrata |
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| Drosanthemum hispidum |
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| Aloe striatula sending out lots of new stems |
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| The cacti not wanting to be left out |
And flower
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| Lampranthus roseus, is going to need taming if it survives the winter |
This agave parryi is sending out pups through the holes in the bottom of the pot.
So far so good then with the main rockery, although the real test is going to be the first winter.
Saturday, 20 September 2014
Echeveria afterglow is my favourite plant in the garden this week.
There always seems to be at least one echeveria in the garden looking good. This one has to be up there with the most luminous of the lot.
The leaves are covered in a fine bloom, which gives the leaves a blue colour. Unlike some of the blue / white plants this one has a pink edge to the leaves and when sun catches the leaves the plant glows.
It is a really fast grower and forms rosettes of 30 - 50cm across. I had been looking for this plant for a couple of years when I visited a friends house to find he was using them as bedding plants all around his garden. It turns out he dug up two plants each autumn, potted them up and then cut the tops off. By spring each of the bases had formed 4 - 6 offsets, which he split and managed to grow to around 40cm by the end of the summer and starting again. After that I started doing the same and worrying a lot less about them and the plants dig much better.
It warrants favourite plant this week as it is flowering nicely. For echeverias, e. afterglow has larger flowers which are covered in the same bloom as the leaves.
Sadly it is right on the verge of being hardy for me, surviving down to -6C (20F), this really challenges it, so if we have a cold winter it dies. Kept dry though it has coped with -9C without too many problems. Being such a quick grower, if if does get damaged new growth soon replaces the old leaves.
So there you have echeveria afterglow my favourite plant in the garden this week. Head over Danger Garden to see what others have selected.
The leaves are covered in a fine bloom, which gives the leaves a blue colour. Unlike some of the blue / white plants this one has a pink edge to the leaves and when sun catches the leaves the plant glows.
It is a really fast grower and forms rosettes of 30 - 50cm across. I had been looking for this plant for a couple of years when I visited a friends house to find he was using them as bedding plants all around his garden. It turns out he dug up two plants each autumn, potted them up and then cut the tops off. By spring each of the bases had formed 4 - 6 offsets, which he split and managed to grow to around 40cm by the end of the summer and starting again. After that I started doing the same and worrying a lot less about them and the plants dig much better.
It warrants favourite plant this week as it is flowering nicely. For echeverias, e. afterglow has larger flowers which are covered in the same bloom as the leaves.
Sadly it is right on the verge of being hardy for me, surviving down to -6C (20F), this really challenges it, so if we have a cold winter it dies. Kept dry though it has coped with -9C without too many problems. Being such a quick grower, if if does get damaged new growth soon replaces the old leaves.
So there you have echeveria afterglow my favourite plant in the garden this week. Head over Danger Garden to see what others have selected.
Wednesday, 10 September 2014
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