Six on Saturday – Chicken Gizzards?

My garden tour this Saturday morning revealed a few new things in the garden. I have been shopping online. It seems safe to say not everything that will grow here has been tried here. Famous last words. Spring brings new things to all gardens. To tour more gardens and see what’s springing elsewhere from many different places, follow this link to Jim’s blog and check out the comments.

One new thing is the Chicken Gizzard plant (Iresine herbstii) There are a few mysteries about this plant. First, why is it called Chicken Gizzard? Second, where to plant it? The pundits disagree on whether it will grow outside here and say full sun. Full sun in Ohio (the plant was grown there) is one thing, in South Florida it’s a whole different thing. A dilemma to be solved.

The miniature pineapples are flowering.

An example of how tough bromeliads are. I was clearing some bromeliads, cutting this pup off early this week, left it on top of the bucket, not feeling decisive about where to replant it, then forgot about it. It just kept on growing. This is a silvery purple brom with pink flowers. I may remember the name…

I hope this is a praying mantis and not an evil plague.

A Dracaena reflexa I am pruning to a multi trunk tree. It is at least 10 feet tall.

Mangoes are looking more like mangoes!

That is all from South Florida. Our crazy warm weather continues – it is forecast to be nearly 90F/32C here today. I am heading back out to plant that bromeliad pup before it gets too hot.

Happy Gardening.

27 comments on “Six on Saturday – Chicken Gizzards?

  1. tracyrinella's avatar tracyrinella says:

    90! Woah, it’s early to be that hot. I think that is plague :(. I can’t believe how fast your mangoes are growing. The bromeliad doesn’t care, it’s growing. tzgarden.blogspot.com

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Rosie Amber's avatar Rosie Amber says:

    Gosh that’s hot for March, I believe. What a name! Chicken Gizzard plant! It did make me chuckle. Thanks for including it.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. fredgardener's avatar fredgardener says:

    I have the same Iresine plant as you but with red foliage! My sister has been growing one for 3 years (which is about the same size as yours) and took cuttings from hers which she gave to me. They rooted well, grow very slowly in the greenhouse all winter. I can’t wait for summer. On the other hand, they are very thirsty! I have to water often.
    Superb dracaena and yum the mangoes.
    Last thing, in my opinion, it’s not a praying mantis, but rather a katydid (after googling, it would be Amblycorypha oblongifolia, the oblong-winged katydid which is developed in the eastern US)

    Liked by 2 people

  4. It is always a dilemma of where to put that new plant that you don’t really need. Been there. The cold north sent us a front and it is 53 degrees right now which you know that in the South that means freezing! I’m cleaning beds and all I can think about is hot chocolate.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Karen's avatar Karen says:

    The weather has been crazy, way too hot for this time of the you. The praying mantis will help keep little nasties away. 😊

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Eliza Waters's avatar Eliza Waters says:

    Your mangoes are growing fast! They were wee nubs the last you posted.
    Not a praying mantis… a katydid (female) of some kind. Mine hang out on my calendulas, exterior walls and maple trees. They don’t seem to do much damage and I love their mating calls in late summer evenings. Lullaby music!

    Liked by 1 person

  7. smallsunnygarden's avatar smallsunnygarden says:

    Please do let us know if you find out why it’s named “Chicken Gizzard plant”! :) As for sun or shade, I can’t help but think of the big box garden center which always kept signs up warning, “Many of our plants come from S. Calif. Full sun in Calif. is not full sun in AZ.” No indeed!! 

    That Dracaena is mouth-wateringly beautiful! 

    I hope you get a cool-down with the weather before it goes full-on summer. Winter has ended early for us here too.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thank you, are you Amy? Many friends call me Amy. I am waiting for bigger trunks on that dracaena. I am hoping for a cool down. Summer usually starts in about six weeks…

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      • smallsunnygarden's avatar smallsunnygarden says:

        Yes, I’m Amy too! :) I would love to be able to grow Dracaenas, but I can’t see how in the world I would keep the humidity high enough for them–indoors or out. Normally we would also have about six weeks before summer really starts, but so far everything is ahead of schedule this spring. But we did just get some cooler weather and a bit of much-needed rain from the tail end of the big storm that’s been battering the west coast. We’ll see…

        Liked by 1 person

      • I’m flummoxed by lemmoni marigolds.. it’s supposed to be cooler here soon.

        Liked by 1 person

  8. tonytomeo's avatar tonytomeo says:

    Chicken gizzard was one of the first houseplants that I remember. It grew seemingly wild around the koi pond in the lobby of the old San Jose City Hall. It and a few other flashier foliar plants were likely remnants from when the building was new. (Now that I think of it, the building was less than twenty years old back then.) I thought that the name was funny. Incidentally, as Fred mentioned, the mantis is a katydid.

    Liked by 1 person

  9. Cathy's avatar Cathy says:

    Phew, that is hot! The Dracaena is amazing – only seen as a houseplant here. And the mangoes appear to be doing really well.

    Liked by 1 person

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