Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Late Arrivals

Given the name of my blog, it seems entirely appropriate for me to follow up Friday's Bloom Day post with another one featuring stragglers that appeared following last week's deadline and those I simply missed in the course of my earlier survey.

The late arrivals are too pretty not to share, and as summer delivers warmer temperatures, I can't guarantee that they'll be around in mid-July.

By process of elimination, I've concluded that this is Epiphyllum 'King Midas', which I found in my lath house shortly after I'd published my Bloom Day post.  It should be more peach than pink but I suspect it'd already faded by the time I photographed it.

More daylilies have bloomed.  Hemerocallis 'Cordon Rouge' is on the left and H. 'Sammy Russell' is on the right.  The latter came with the garden.

The true lilies have been taking their time about blooming.  I've been watching Lilium 'Orange Planet' from my office window for weeks.  It finally opened its first blooms yesterday morning.

I didn't even notice the Lilium 'Montego Bay' below and behind 'Orange Planet' was blooming until I leaned in to get a closeup of 'Orange Planet'

This is Rosa 'Golden Celebration'.  It's heavy flowers tend to take a nose dive, hiding themselves in its foliage.


There were other flowers I just overlooked.

The small flowers of Oscularia deltoides seem to open all at once when I'm not looking, almost completely covering the plant's foliage.  This plant also managed to swamp the Agave 'Mateo' in a large pot alongside it before trailing down into the street side succulent bed below.

I noticed the silver foliage of this Helichrysum retortum before I noticed its papery flowers

Despite the vivid maroon color of the flowers of Pelargonium sidoides, they're easy to miss due to their small size

Low-growing Pennisetum orientale (aka Chinese fountain grass) is dormant during the winter months and always manages to surprise me when it reappears

I planted this intergeneric hybrid of Stachys and Lamium, called Stachys 'Lilac Falls', in 2016 and subsequently believed it'd died off but 2 good years of rain brought it back.  It only grows a few inches tall but it can spread 2-3 feet wide.


I've spent much of the past week in garden clean-up mode, pulling endless weeds, cutting back dead bulb foliage, deadheading flowers, pruning - you get the drift.  Some plants are committed to world domination so I've also spent a lot of time thinning those out.  None of that was worth photographing but I thought I'd show you an updated view of the area on the south-side of the house I addressed when we removed an overgrown 'Blue Flame' Agave.

This is the view from the dirt path behind the bed.  The Aeonium cuttings are filling out and coloring up nicely and the dark Aeonium arboreum 'Zwartkop' in the background is looking its very best.  I cleared a LOT of weeds around the Dasylirion longissima to the left of 'Zwartkop'.  I think that tiny Agave ovatifolia in the middle of the bed may have grown a smidgen larger..  There were some California poppies in the bare area but most of those have already died back.  I can still walk into the bed but I'm not sure how long that will last.


Salvia clevelandii 'Winnifred Gilman' is in full bloom, filling much of the previously open space

The Acanthus mollis I've tried to remove several times is blooming in the middle of a Vitex trifolia.  Note the 2-headed Acanthus flower stalk - that's the first time I've seen that.

Metrosideros collina 'Springfire' is done blooming for the season but it's gaining girth rapidly, which may become an issue


As temperatures continue to climb, further garden cleanup activities are likely to be confined to the early morning hours.  The insect population appears to have already upped its game as I'm now covered in bites from something or another.  But the birds and the lizards are keeping me company while I work.

The western fence lizards have come out in droves

I found ravens having a conference in my cutting garden yesterday morning.  Most immediately flew away but these 2 continued their conversation from a distance atop a peppermint willow.


Best wishes for a happy hump day!


All material © 2012-2024 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party


18 comments:

  1. Remembering the tale of King Midas from childhood, I'd expect your gorgeous Epiphyllum to be more the color of Rosa 'Golden Celebration', or even Lilium 'Orange Planet' (which is mostly yellow to my eyes). Either way, I find that gentle soft pink charming!
    With so much going on in the garden this time of year it's very nice to find overlooked blooms and other surprises, although a lizard would send me running... thankfully I can still outpace slugs :-D
    Chavli

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    1. Oh, the western fence lizard is quite a little character and you might become charmed if you saw them fifty times a day during the summer months, Chavli ;) They have bright blue throats and bellies, and they regularly perform push-ups to attract females. They're curious but they scurry out of the way to avoid people when they get close and they don't bite. They help prevent the spread of Lyme disease too - when the ticks that carry it bite them, a substance in the lizard's blood neutralizes the bacteria carried by ticks that cause the disease!

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  2. Those lilies and daylilies are beautiful, and the roses, too! I love to see the landscape and wildlife photos, as well. We are just coming out of three days in the 90s and high humidity after a cool start to the summer. It's A/C time. The garden is growing like crazy, though, with warmth and plentiful rain. (I love what you said about the ravens and their conversation.)

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    1. 90s - ugh! Thankfully, our marine layer has been more tenacious than the forecasters have given it credit for in our area, keeping our temperatures in the low 70s thus far. There's no chance of rain, though!

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  3. The acanthus is gorgeous. Rosa 'Golden Celebration' is such a good color.

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    1. I planted a second 'Golden Celebration' rose but it's in an area that's much too dry. It needs to move; however, I haven't a clue as to where at this point.

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  4. More lovely flowers! 'Springfire' flowers off and on year round once it is well-established. (At least mine do.) The Epi is grand and the lillies look as delicious as tropical fruit salad. Lizards eat slugs and all sorts of bad bugs. Hooray lizards!

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    1. I think my 'Springfire' is just coming into its own - after 7 years in the ground! I suspect it could use a little fertilizer too, as its leaves are paler than those I see in photos online. In the same area, I noticed that a "Mickey Mouse plant" (Ochna serrulata) I installed in 2014 is finally looking like something, although it's still only a foot tall so maybe the soil there needs a boost.

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  5. Gorgeous, it is that time of year where things can pop up and surprise/remind you of their existence. I love the lilies. The foliage on Helichrysum retortum is beautiful.

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    1. I didn't know what to expect from Helichrysum retortum but I'm glad I gave it a try as I really like the foliage. The small papery flowers are just a plus.

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  6. 'King Midas' is a stunner! I too am in a battle with an Acanthus mollis that refuses to go peacefully. Happy Summer Solstice!

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    1. I can't claim I wasn't warned about Acanthus mollis but it was a centerpiece plant in my former tiny garden, where it was almost evergreen so I thought I'd try it in my current garden. It's foliage is beautiful; however, it dies back to the ground during summers here and its death throes aren't at all attractive.

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  7. A beautiful Epiphyllum, glad you didn't miss it! Love the peachy rose and the papery flowers of the Helichrysum, as well as that fat lizard... glad they are helping with the the pest control. :) Eliza

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    1. The lizards need to earn their keep somehow, Eliza - we have zillions of them!

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  8. A friend of mine just gave me a cutting of Epiphyllum 'King Midas'. Nice to see your photo!

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    1. Coincidentally, I found an earlier photo I'd taken of the Epiphyllum I called 'King Midas' in this post yesterday and, based on that, it's actually 'Monastery Garden', Gerhard! I mentioned that it should be more peach than pink but the flower's shape looked more like the photos of 'King Midas' I saw online. I really do need to label their pots! 'King Midas' also has lovely flowers.

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  9. I've got an Acanthus syriacus that is beginning to spread around. Similar problem. Impossible to remove, dies down in early to mid-summer, leaving a spiny brown mess to clean up. Not the easiest of the drought tolerant plants for the garden. Golden Celebration rose is beautiful posed up for us.

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    1. Well, I guess I should count myself lucky that at least Acanthus mollis isn't spiky. Now that our temperature has passed the 90F mark, I expect all my Acanthus will be going back underground very soon.

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