Saturday, September 6, 2014

Deep Roots Garden Center

On a recent visit to Deep Roots Garden Center in Manhattan Beach, I was surprised to realize that I'd never written a post about it.  When it opened, I lived in one of the nearby beach cities but not long afterwards we moved to our current house, roughly 15 miles to the south, so I don't have an opportunity to drop in regularly.  However, the garden center specializes in water-wise plants and, as I'm currently on the hunt for more drought-tolerant selections, I swung by there twice recently, once with my camera in tow.

The garden center sits on a relatively small plot on Sepulveda Boulevard, surrounded by retail businesses on 3 sides and homes in the rear.  The staff makes maximum use of the space they have available.


The parking lot doubles as storage for fruit trees, like this Guava tree, and bedding plants

Entryway to the garden center's main area



There are lots of succulents, although some of the most interesting are available only in large containers at hefty prices.

I loved this Aloe greenii 'Icena,' seated next to a Beschorneria yuccoides

There were lots of small succulents

And some very big ones, like the Furcraea and Agave 'Blue Glow' here

I couldn't find the ID for this Agave but I liked the bright spines

This Aloe camperi 'Jennifer' was new to me

I think a spiral Aloe may go on my Christmas wish list

Dyckia 'Naked Lady' isn't as spiky as those I have but it was attractive

If I knew where to put this Synadenium grantii, a relative of the Euphorbia, it might have come home with me


Beyond the succulents, there are shade plants.


Maybe it was the red background but I fell for this Begonia 'Paul Hernandez,' which grows 4-6 feet tall but, with nowhere to put it, it was left behind

Unfortunately, Cordyline 'Caruba Black,' shown here with Persian Shield, requires lots of water



Perennials can be found lined up at the other end of the garden center.


I'm trying to think of a place for this purple smoke bush

Digiplexis 'Illumination Flame' looks great in front of a red wall



Edible and water-wise plants are a few steps up and toward the back of the property.  I came in looking for Leucadendron 'Jester,' which they had but only in large pots.

The Leucadendron collection

A variety of drought tolerant plants arranged around a huge driftwood centerpiece





I came home with a Grevillea 'Ned Kelly,' a Vitex agnus-castus, and 2 Pentas lanceolata.  As a bonus, I got a good picture of a Gulf Fritillary.




All material © 2012-2014 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party

Thursday, September 4, 2014

My favorite plant this week: Cuphea ignea 'Starfire Pink'

Asking myself what plant I could feature as my favorite this week, I started wondering whether I was running out of plants to present after 47 favorites posts.  However, I could almost hear Loree, the host of this weekly favorite plant meme, laughing at the thought.  I went into the garden and immediately came up with several plants I haven't previously highlighted in this fashion.  What's most amazing about the one I chose, Cuphea ignea 'Starfire Pink,' is that it took me so long to do so.  This evergreen, ever-blooming plant has shown up in innumerable posts since I began blogging, sometimes labeled and sometimes not.




I have 12 of these shrubs spread around my garden.  They laugh at heat, tolerate shade, and do a fair job at handling drought, although the more water they get, the better they look.

3 Cuphea are grouped together on each side of the front border, along with shrub roses, Coleonema pulchellum 'Sunset Gold,' and Agapanthus

The 3 Cuphea in the front of the dry garden are looking woe-begone after the heat of summer and restricted irrigation but they'll recover once the weather cools and I cut them back this fall


Annie's Annuals & Perennials classifies this Cuphea as indestructible.  It's suited to USDA zones 8-11 (Sunset zones 11-13, 16-24, H1 and H2).  It grows about 3 feet (1 meter) tall and wide and it produces flowers, literally, all year.  I cut mine back hard once a year but they recover relatively quickly.

The pink and purple tubular flowers are about an inch long



It's a bee and hummingbird magnet.  I see hummingbirds feeding at these plants, even the drought-stricken ones in my dry garden, almost every morning.  I took a video of the hundreds of bees surrounding the plants in the front beds but, as it appears that the only way to show you a non-blurry version of it is to load it into YouTube first, I'm making do here with still photos taken with my with my point and click camera, which can't begin to capture the buzz around the plants.

This poor photo, taken in May, is the best one I've managed to take of the hummingbirds with the Cuphea

This was the best of my bee close-ups


Cuphea ignea 'Starfire Pink' is my contribution to Loree's regular favorite plant feature at danger garden.  You can find her favorite, as well as links to other gardeners' favorites, here.


All material © 2012-2014 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party

Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Wide Shots - September 2014

Fall is officially 3 weeks away but, with Labor Day behind us, my fall planting plans are moving into hyper-drive, despite the fact that our daytime temperatures remain in the mid-to-upper 80sF (27+C) and no significant rain is expected until November.  I reached an agreement with a local landscape service on a price to remove my front lawn, which will make a dramatic change in the garden's overall look and feel.  While waiting for that work to begin, I've been researching landscaping ideas for lawn-free front yards and drought-tolerant plant selections in general.  I've started scouting the local nurseries too.

The birds aren't concerned about fall planting so long as the fountain keeps flowing



The wide shots of my garden, undertaken in connection with a meme started by Heather of Xericstyle last year, have been useful in my planning process.  In the case of the backyard, most of what I'm planning to do there involves filling in the holes in the borders created by the summer's heat- and drought-related plant losses.  The wide grass pathway between the borders will remain in place for now but I expect it'll go next year.  I couldn't face pulling it out this year given the expense and work associated with the overhaul of the front yard.

There are several pots sitting in the backyard borders, like the one with Rudbeckia shown here in front of the fountain, as temporary replacements for plants that fell prey to the heat and drought 

I have a working list of the plants I'd like to introduce in the extended fountain bed (described here) when the weather cools

There's an empty space under the peppermint tree (Agonis flexuosa) at the mid-point of the border on the right I need to fill but I've yet to be struck with inspiration



In the south-side garden, I'm focusing most of my attention on replanting the bed alongside the arbor.  When we moved in, this bed was occupied by a 60 foot (18m) Eucalyptus tree, which was removed at the instigation of a neighbor as it blocked her view.  The soil in that area is very dry, fast-draining, and light.  It's also the prime focus of the raccoons that pay me regular visits, perhaps because it's so easy to dig.

The arbor and most of the plants along the exterior edge of the bed on the right of it will be kept

The plants in the center of the bed as well as the Helichrysum, shown in this picture in the background on the right,  are slated for replacement.  I've already picked up a Grevillea 'Bonfire.'  Other plants on my shopping list include Agave 'Blue Glow' (I'm hoping it'll deter the raccoons), Lomandra longifolia, and Correa 'Dusky Bells.'

The sad Zinnias on the right side of the pathway in this picture will be pulled.  I've already added Grevillea juniperina 'Molonglo' and, while it's small, will fill in with some low-growing succulents.



I have to admit that I'm VERY nervous about pulling out the grass in the front yard.  I'd originally planned to take out only a portion of grass up front this year but, given our ongoing drought, as well as the current condition of the front lawn, it seems appropriate to bite the bullet and take it all out now.  We're going to cover the area surrounding the Magnolia tree with decomposed granite, expand the existing borders a bit, and add stone pathways.  I'm also considering the addition of boulders and large plants to create a visual break between the Magnolia and the south-side garden.

The lawn on both sides of the front walkway will be removed all the way to the side yard path


The vegetable garden remains woefully neglected.  Rather than filling the raised planters with vegetables, I may use them as temporary holding areas for plants to be installed elsewhere in the garden during the fall.  At the moment, the only concrete plan I have for that area is to move my Acer palmatum 'Purple Ghost,' presently in the bed I intend to renovate in the side yard, to the bed alongside the garage.  Acer 'Sango Kaku' has thrived there so I'm hopeful that the new location may be hospitable to 'Purple Ghost' as well - although it's not dead, it's barely hanging on in the side yard.  (I've blamed the raccoons for its condition but the Santa Ana winds that blow through that area are part of the problem.)

Acer palmatum 'Purple Ghost' is intended to fill the blank area below the garage window to the left of 'Sango Kuku'



I cleaned up the dry garden a bit in August, clearing out plants that weren't doing well to make room for the ones that remain.  I've replanted the statice (Limonium perezii) and added more hairy canary clover (Dorycinium hirsutum) and a few succulents.  The Cuphea 'Starfire Pink' badly needs to be cut back but I'm waiting until the weather cools.  I'll probably add more succulents and another Leucadendron salignum too.

A somewhat neater dry garden

The hummingbirds continue to visit the 3 Cuphea shrubs at the front of the front of this border despite their drought-stressed appearance


I've no specific plans for the back slope, which I'm currently letting get by on its own.  On the other hand, I'd planned to do some work in the lower area running along the street before my attention shifted to the front yard.  Time, energy and funds permitting, I'd still like to extend the dry stacked wall down there but my guess is that it'll be spring, at earliest, before I get to that.

For unknown reasons, the prior owners left the stacked stone wall along this slope half-finished.  As a temporary measure, I extended it with stone picked up here and there in the garden but I need to haul in stone and properly complete the wall as a precursor to replanting the slope.



That's it for this month's wide shots.  I expect I'm going to be quite busy.  I'll keep you posted on my progress!


All material © 2012-2014 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party

Monday, September 1, 2014

In a Vase on Monday: Summer Reruns

Today is Labor Day, officially a date to observe the advances made by workers or, more specifically, the achievements of labor unions on behalf of workers.  For most people here in the US, the date is more closely associated with the end of summer than with the labor union movement, which I personally find sad.  But that's not a topic for this blog or this post, which celebrates bouquets assembled from what's available in the garden.  In my garden, some of the flowers that bloomed earlier this summer have produced a fresh flush of blooms, including the beautiful Eustoma grandiflorum 'Borealis Blue,' which I've used as the centerpiece of this week's vase.





I've combined the Eustoma (aka Lisianthus) with other summer reruns, some of which are also enjoying a new flush of blooms:

  • 4 stems of Angelonia augustifolia
  • 3 stems of Coleonema pulchellum 'Sunset Gold'
  • 2 stems of Hebe 'Wiri Blush'
  • 2 stems of Pelargonium peltatum (ivy geranium)
  • 5 stems of Pennisetum setaceum 'Rubrum'
  • 3 stems of Pseuderanthemum 'Texas Tri-star'


White Angelonia, from a mix purchased as part of a 6-pack in June

Variegated foliage of Pseuderanthemum 'Texas Tri-star' in close-up, accompanied by Coleonema and Pennisetum plumes

Vase photographed from the back

Hebe 'Wiri Blush' is still flowering, although the blooms are fewer and smaller than those produced earlier this summer

I brought this trailing ivy geranium from our former house but have no ID on the variety



The vase I selected this week didn't keep the blooms in place, even after an inordinate amount of fussing, so I used a rubber band to tie the heavier stems together.  I placed the Pelargonium and Angelonia stems in separately so I can remove them easily when they tucker out.  I've previously discovered that the Pelargonium petals fall apart after a few days in a vase.

As usual, I ended up with a vase of leftover elements.  The stems of these materials were either too stiff or too short to work in the larger vase.

The leftovers include Cuphea 'Starfire Pink,' a bee and hummingbird magnet, Pentas 'Nova,' Salvia 'Mystic Spires,' and Plectranthus zuluensis



The vases are in position.

The larger vase sits on the dining room table

and the smaller vase ended up in the guest bathroom



I hope you have a great day, however you're spending this Monday.  Please visit Cathy at Rambling in the Garden to see her vase and to find links to the creations of other gardeners.


All material © 2012-2014 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party