Tired of burying my head and hands in the weeds, I took some time to appreciate the foliage in my garden before the flowers take over with their early spring blast, which is already gearing up, encouraged by weeks of warmer than usual temperatures.
I'll start with a few succulent vignettes before focusing on individual stars that deserve closeups.
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| This grouping in my north-side garden includes Agave ovatifolia 'Frosty Blue', A. 'Kichijokan' (in the small pot), A. parryi var. patonii, A. pygmaea 'Dragon Toes', and A. victoriae-reginae |
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| Also in the north-side garden is this combination of Agaves and Mangaves, most notably Agave funkiana 'Blue Haze' and Mangave 'Lavender Lady'. The smaller Mangaves include 'Purple People Eater' and 'Catch a Wave'. |
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| This mix in the succulent bed in front of our garage includes Agave attenuata, A. 'Blue Glow', Phormium 'Rainbow Sunrise', and very red Aeoniums, which may be 'Velour' |
On to the closeups! I'm proceeding alphabetically for lack of a better plan.
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| Acanthus mollis goes entirely underground in the summer months here, which wasn't the case in my former, very shady garden just 15 miles to the north. It's always a welcome sign when the 3 plants I have materialize once more following our winter rainy season. Two of the plants are in the front garden and the third is in my south-side garden, half-buried under a large Vitex trifolia. |
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| This mix of various Aeoniums is a personal favorite, with the red color of some of the Aeoniums playing off the red bark of Arbutus 'Marina' and Phormium 'Amazing Red'. That Phormium was planted in 2014 but hasn't looked this good in years. |
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| This clump of Aeonium, which I think is comprised of more cuttings of the 'Velour' cultivar, looked near death on the dry back slope during the summer. It was restored by the rain. |
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| This is Agave angustifolia 'Marginata', which I recently cleaned up after is was covered in leafy debris. A mimic, Yucca gloriosa 'Variegata', can be seen poking out of its spot inside a nearby stump to the agave's right (commonly used as a toilet by the local raccoons). |
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| This clump of Agave attenuata on the back slope was planted from pups taken from the front garden years ago. I removed some of the rosettes in the late fall but it's still a dense clump. |
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| The foliage of 5 Drimia maritima (aka sea squill) bulbs emerged on the back slope following our progression of rainstorms. Choked by ivy and self-seeded alyssum (Lobularia maritima), the sea squill occupies an area along our fuzzy property line with the next door neighbors on our south side. There's no fence between us but the land does drop off relatively sharply on their side. Much of the ivy, the Yucca, and the ornamental pear trees are on the neighbors' side. There are self-planted calla lily plants mixed in with the sea squill bulbs too. |
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| I grow Echium candicans 'Star of Madiera' as much for the foliage as for its blue flowers. I cut this one back hard after it finished blooming last year and was worried that I'd gone too far. |
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| Echium webbii is my second favorite in the genus. I've had a hard time keeping its size contained in the past. This plant came from the original Annie's & Annuals as a replacement for a prior specimen. I haven't previously had success propagating it from cuttings and I've never found it in local garden centers so I hope I can manage containment and/or propagation this round. |
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| The gophers made a mess of the Hesperaloe parviflora in my south-side garden last year. I recently cleaned it up and cut out most of the Salvia clevelandii that sits next to it so it's looking good (even without flowers). |
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| This 'Red Wing' Mangave is another of my favorite succulent plants. There are signs of pups underneath its leaves I need to carefully extract. |
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| Melianthus major (aka honeybush) is off and running once again after yet another hard pruning. Its leaves look like they were cut by pinking shears. |
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| This noID staghorn fern (Platycerium) has been sitting in a pot for a couple of years now. I've been planning to get it properly mounted or at least set up in a basket but have yet to get to that. However, even in a pot, it has personality. I should save it from the rampant bird-planted asparagus ferns at the very least. |
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| This Prostanthera ovalifolia 'Variegata' (aka mint bush) is happy in this back garden space off the patio. The 3 I had in pots didn't hold up over the long term. |
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| This Yucca rostrata 'Sapphire Skies' may not look like much but I have great hopes for it. I got it in a 4-inch pot by mail order from Annie's Annuals & Perennials in 2019. It spent its first 2 years in a pot to bulk up before I planted it here in my street-side succulent bed. It's bigger but has yet to develop anything like a trunk. |
The creep of spring flowers can't be ignored as the foliage of various bulbs and seeds signal that flowers are in the offing.
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| Clockwise from the upper left: noID Iris germanica at the bottom of the back slope, the only place they're really happy; Iris hollandica 'Pink Panther', one of many Dutch Iris I've planted; seedlings of Lagurus ovatus (aka bunny tail grass), off to an early start; sweet pea seedlings (Lathyrus annuus), already climbing the support in my cutting garden; lilies (Orienpet Lilium 'Moon Blend' in this case) sprouting in front of and behind the Yucca 'Bright Star'; and one of many calla lily plants (Zantedeschia aethiopica) growing on the back slope |
That's a wrap for this week. All too soon, I'll be flitting around my garden to collect photos of flowers for Bloom Day - between weeding sessions of course. Weather Underground is projecting a thirty percent chance of light rain late next week, whereas AccuWeather is showing a sixty percent chance. It wouldn't be all that surprising if that prospect simply evaporates over the next several days but I can't help hoping it comes through - we've been very dry since early January, and February is historically our wettest month.
All material © 2012-2026 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party
Gosh, Echium candicans 'Star of Madiera' takes my breath away everytime, no bloom necessary!
ReplyDeleteYour second photo is my favorite. Wonderful soft light (late afternoon?); a splash of purple and violate daisies in the background; great support for Agave funkiana 'Blue Haze': so good!
Chavli
It's the Echium 'Star of Madiera' that pushed me in the direction of a foliage-centric post this month, Chavli. It's been singing its siren song for well over a month, yet I still didn't manage to get a photo of it in the perfect light. It's a beauty!
DeleteYes, I took the second photo featuring Agave funkiana in the late afternoon as the sun-shadow extremes earlier in the day were too extreme. The Osteospermum daisies provided a nice accent too ;)
An acanthus hybrid popped up in the front garden after the rain, possibly 'Summer Candles' which I moved to the back -- totally forgot it was there. It's never bloomed, as far as I can remember. So glad you still have 'Dragon Toes'! It's been a while since I've seen that agave. The 'Velour' aeonium is something special!
ReplyDeleteI haven't had luck with the Acanthus hybrids, Denise. I've long held the opinion that, if you plant an Acanthus, you'll never get rid of it but 'Whitewater' put an end to that refrain. It not only never bloomed but also promptly disappeared! As to Aeonium 'Velour', I have a number of the large Aeoniums with red foliage but 'Velour' has been the most satisfying by far.
Delete'Frosty Blue' is gorgeous! Love your mangaves as well. I'm glad to hear Echium candicans bounced back after a hard prune, I need to cut mine back after it blooms this year. It's eating everything up. I think your staghorn fern looks fantastic there, and happy!
ReplyDeleteThat Agave 'Frosty Blue' was planted in 2012, one of the first agaves I planted after we moved here in late December 2010. It's gained a major presence in the dry garden on the north side and I dread the day it chooses to bloom.
DeleteMy experience with Echiums in general is that they want to be cut down to a lower foliage rosette - they don't like being cut to bare wood. The straight species ('Pride of Madiera') self-seeds rampantly here but I've yet to see the variegated type do that.
That first photo set a high bar for the ones that came after, so gorgeous! Also, it was nice to see your much maligned Yucca rostrata, he's a handsome little guy even if he's not a fast grower.
ReplyDeleteI have to remind myself that my Yucca rostrata was truly tiny when it arrived by mail order in a 4-inch pot. I can't find a photo of the baby plant but I found one when it planted it in the ground 2 years later in 2021 and it was still small. Patience isn't one of my virtues but I'm happy it's survived with little help from me.
DeleteThere is so much to love here. That second photo is such a lovely scene. I really like the Agave 'Blue Haze' and want to research it further. I'm finally taking the plunge and eager to try some agaves. The echium and the red mangave are to die for too. This reminds me that I must find a proper home for my melianthus major this year. It is in a pot at the moment and still going strong.
ReplyDeleteAgave funkiana may not be the best agave to start with as it's VERY prickly, Phillip. Although I like its shape and the subtle stripes in its leaves, I've yet to avoid being stabbed every time I reach in the clear weeds around it or the debris that periodically collects between its narrow leaves (even using long "tweezers")! You might want to look at Agave ovatifolia as its both beautiful and easier to work with - I've also heard it's hardier in the cold winters of the PNW than many others. Agave attenuata is spike-less but, while vigorous here, would probably need winter protection in your climate.
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