Six on Saturday – Seasonal Hints

Fall is something that must be searched for in my garden. The clues are fruits, berries and weeds going to seed. If a wider net is cast the mullet run can be seen in nearby waters. The mullet run happens when baitfish (mullet) start coming south for the winter, the predator fish go crazy and a lot of action can be seen in the water – fish jumping out the water by the hundreds. This has just started, but I always enjoy the sight.

I am joining the SOS crowd with six sights from my garden. To see what other gardeners have spied follow this link to Jim’s blog.

This is a ‘Lemonade’ Aechmea bromeliad (Aechmea blanchetiana) The Blanchetiana is available in several fruity colors – raspberry, lemon, orange that reflect the color of the foliage. This is planted in front of a six foot fence. These are common in South Florida, I was startled by them at first sight.

Fruit on the Beautyberry (Calliocarpa Americana). The range of this plant always surprises me. It is native from South Florida to New England in the US.

Fruit on the Gumbo Limbo (Bursera simaruba). Birds enjoy the fruit and there are many seedlings around the garden emphasizing how much.

A few Rangpur limes are ripening. These are deep orange when ripe and usually aren’t ready until December. I think the tree is thinning its crop.

Coleus tree is looking a bit better.

Another bromeliad showing fall colors – Aechmea rubens. These have the same texture as straw flowers and last for months in the garden.

That’s all from my garden this Saturday.

Happy gardening!!

In a Vase on Monday – New Summer Favorite

I am a fairly recent convert to Zinnia lover. It all started with a pack of Green Envy seed planted a few years ago to satisfy my desire for chartreuse cut flowers. I let the Envy go to seed and ended up with a new generation of greenish beige zinnias no one would envy so I bought some new seed. These are Zin Master Zinnias. They are living proof open pollinated seeds are what they are. These were advertised as a mixture of sizes, shapes and colors. The plants are prolific, all about three feet tall, and produce enough flowers that I cut a Vase every other day. The colors and flower size are the only things that are mixed.

My feelings are not mixed. These zinnias are my new summer favorites. For some reason, I have never grown zinnias in summer. I have them in containers – the ones that get the full brunt of South Florida summer sun are producing the most flowers. I am in awe and fully intend to grow more. Stay tuned.

A closer view:

The flowers are Zin Master Zinnias; purple foliage is Purple Prince Alternanthera; A bit of chartreuse coleus and some Asian Sword Ferns complete the vase. The crystal vase was a gift from my dearly departed brother.

I just found a few bags of seed starting potting mix on my front porch….fall zinnias should be appearing in a couple of months. And a few other things.

Thanks to Cathy for hosting IAVOM. Follow this link RamblingintheGarden to her blog to see more vases.

Six on Saturday – Formations

Tropical Depression Four formed over Cuba this week, my phone tells me it is 365 miles away. I could feel the wind and caught the scent of the ocean in the air first thing this morning. The storm is headed for the West coast of Florida, so here on the East coast we should get ‘some rain’. It is already pouring down and the weather guessers are madly issuing proclamations. A social media search for the Weather Channel host is usually the best indicator of where the storm will hit. The Jim Cantore effect. I haven’t seen him yet.

I think a dragonfruit formed in my garden this week. This is much more exciting than a tropical storm. For more SOS garden tours, follow this link to Jim’s blog.

The dragonfruit bud. These are a night blooming cactus native to Central America. They are also called Pitaya. This one has been sort of languishing in the garden for several years. Last year I had one flower and no fruit. This year, three flowers and perhaps one fruit!

The flower. These last for one night and must be viewed early in the morning.

The (fingers crossed) fruit. The others turned completely yellow or brown.

One that didn’t make it.

More local avocados:

I’m still enjoying zinnias daily. This red one is a favorite.

Happy Saturday gardening to all!

Six on Saturday – Mixed Feelings

This Saturday morning my tour brought up a few things in the garden I have mixed feelings about and a few love/hate relationships. I’m starting with love going to mixed and ending with hate. For more, likely less emotional SOS garden tours, follow this link GardenRuminations to visit our host, Jim.

I love Cattleya orchids peeking out of a tree trunk.

I love the new Dendrobium orchids establishing in my Gumbo Limbo tree. These produce flowers in spring.

Loving the ever expanding group of Rain Lilies (Zephyrantes rosea)

It’s safe to say I have mixed feelings about vines, especially this one. Meet Yellow Allamanda (Allamanda cathartica). Sure, it’s pretty, but also a rampant thug. It forms tubers like potatoes (very toxic). I may pull it out with my SUV this winter. I say that every year.

Soap Aloe (Aloe saponaria) is a nice architectural plant that grows a little too well and needs to be thinned. It’s oh, so sharp. Hmmm.

Yes, I hate these. Yellow Agama lizards. There is also a rainbow version running around the garden, red and blue. These are African lizards introduced by the exotic pet trade and they have become invasive. Up to a foot long, they eat native lizards and stake out my butterfly plants for fine dining. There are sometimes packs of them, they scuttle away on the path as I walk through the garden – like a horror movie. EEk!

Happy Gardening!!

In a Vase on Monday – Zen, Zin & Min

I am enjoying my new crop of zinnias – ‘Zin Master’, planted in big terracotta pots. I have been cutting most of the flowers in hopes of getting actual long stemmed zinnias – something that has always eluded me, my zinnias are always very short in stature. These are the longest stems I have ever grown and have a wiry appearance that I like. I visualized this vase as a Zen Ikebanaesque arrangement with winding stems of zinnias intertwined with the Min – Miniata Bromeliads. It was not to be, the glass frog serving as a base was not up to the challenge of the weight of the flowers. I had to add rocks on top of the frog to keep everything upright. I ended up not having a very Zen flower experience at all. It is what it is. A soup bowl filled with flowers.

The Zin – ‘Zin Master’ Zinnias grown from seed started around the first of May. I am enjoying the color mix, but thought I would get some different types of zinnias. I guess these are semi-double something. I bought some Cactus Mix seeds this week to spice things up. I am not quite sure what will happen in mid July with seed starting. Always an adventure.

The Min. These are Miniata Bromeliads (Aechmea miniata). A reliable summer flowering shade perennial, if one can think of bromeliads as perennials. The tropical plants always twist my mind a bit in sorting out what they are – house plants, perennials, epiphytes, plain weird? The big green leaves in the back are from a coleus and the vase is actually a soup bowl.

That is all from South Florida this Monday. I’ll be seeking further garden Zen from Zinnias this week. Follow the link to visit Cathy at RamblingintheGarden and see what’s appearing in other vases this week. Or soup bowls.

Six on Saturday – Summer Delights

My garden walk-around this morning produced photos of a few garden delights that followed me to the kitchen. I picked the last of the Thai dessert mangoes and am down to eight ripening on the counter. I have also been making desserts, plotting desserts, making salsa and chopping and freezing bags of fruit. The Zin Master Zinnias have been beautiful producing flowers and really attractive plants. I have had a vase of these by the kitchen sink for a couple of weeks. For an international garden walk-around experience visit Jim’s blog, Garden Ruminations and follow the links in the comments section.

This weeks mango dessert. Mango-Blackberry Coffeecake. Nice and not too sweet.

The bitter end of the mango harvest. These are all Thai dessert mangoes, Nam Doc Mai. I think the reason these are not found in grocery stores very often is they go from not ripe to emergency chop and freeze in a matter of hours. The one on top is hitting the emergency point.

We are still in the kitchen. Admiring the Zin Master Zinnias. Thanks to SOS, I now know how long it takes from seed to flower. About two months.

Foliage on Zin Master Zinnias. I have cut all the flowers!

Back to the Bromeliad garden for some July fireworks. These are very reliable July bloomers. Aechmea miniata Bromeliads.

Another hot summer flower, Firebush (Hamelia patens var patens) I have grown to love orange in the garden since moving to Florida.

More fruit, Rangpur limes coming along. These are orange when ripe and the juiciest limes I have ever encountered. There are at least 50 on the tree and these are very perishable, so I could be having another freezer festival late this year.

Happy Summer Gardening!!

In a Vase on Monday – Summer Brew

I put this vase together on Father’s Day, so it was very appropriate to use one of my parents wedding gifts as a vase this week. My parents married in 1950, I think these teapots must have been popular at the time. I remember this teapot sitting on the kitchen counter very frequently as my mother used it to brew tea for iced tea year round. A pink plastic pitcher of iced tea was a constant presence in my childhood. If you grew up in the Deep South, iced tea is the beverage of choice for lunch and dinner (or if you are really Southern, lunch is called dinner and dinner is supper)

The flowers in this vase wouldn’t make a tasty brew. I am fairly certain the Tropical Gardenias are toxic, but it might smell pretty good.

A closer view:

I have accepted a few (guffaw) wild grape vines as a fact of life in my garden. These are muscadines (Vitis rotundifolia) I think it would take a small thermonuclear device to get rid of all of them and then I would have to start over. Not happening. So I cut a few here and there, add some to a vase, make a wreath and feed wildlife. The Gardenias are Tropical or Florida Gardenias (Tabernaemontana diviricata); our massive rain event this week produced a wonderful flush of flowers.

Pink flowers in the vase are the bitter end of the winter annual Giant Dianthus. I am puzzling over what to do with it. Put it in a shady place and hope for a miracle or consign it to the compost heap? It is a dilemma. Light blue flowers are Blue Plumbago (Plumbago auriculata); deep blue spikes are Mystic Blue Salvia, the spikes are oddly shorter due to dry weather earlier in the summer. A few sprigs of chartreuse coleus and fuzzy grey Licorice Plant (Helichrysum) add color.

Thanks to Cathy at RamblingintheGarden for hosting this weekly event. Follow the link and find more vase enthusiasts from around the world.

Happy Gardening!!

In a Vase on Monday – Sayonara Spring

Memorial Day marks the beginning of summer in the US and that is today. I am reluctantly bidding Sayonara to spring and battening down for the summer months. The summertime blues (and purples) came right on time to the garden.

Afternoon thunderstorms have already been making their presence known. These are a double edged sword, I am grateful for the rain quenching the thirst of the garden – however, the growth of warm season weeds has been astounding. My paver driveway is already studded with Horseweed (Arghh) and the Johnson’s Grass is peppering the beds. These tropical weeds have the ability to produce a zillion seeds and the highest fertility rate of any known plant. The roots on these weeds have a peculiar ability to grip sand and can only be pulled right after a rain. Time for battle.

Front and center are Tropical Gardenias (Tabernaemontana diviricata), I have difficulty resisting these when cutting flowers, and here they are again. Lavender spikes with purple backed foliage are Arabian Lilac (Vitex trifolia). I think these get a bad rap here for being weedy and invasive. I planted one and still have one. They do have an odd growth habit I have not conquered. A few stems of the white version of Tropical Red Salvia (Salvia coccinea) are in the middle.

Adding a deeper blue vibe to the vase in blue spikes are Mystic Blue Salvia. The white spikes are Sweet Almond Bush (Aloysia virgata); purple striped foliage is Inch Plant (Transcandentia zebrina) – I think this grows an inch a minute in summer and another battle to wage soon.

My compost pile should expect some new additions! No seedy weeds, though.

Follow this link RamblingintheGarden to visit Cathy’s blog and travel the world’s gardens through vases linked to her post.

Six on Saturday – Treats in the Trees

South Florida gardens provide some interesting treats from trees. I was looking up during my garden tour this morning and took note of the flowers and fruits on the trees. Some are treats for me, others for birds and bees. To see more SOS garden treats visit Jim’s blog, Garden Ruminations.

The Thai dessert mangoes are tantalizing to me. Every morning I walk out to see if they are changing color yet. This morning I noted a slight peach haze on the one on the far right. I’m waiting with baited breath.

I like palm flowers. Talk about different. These are Dwarf Pygmy Date Palms (Phoenix roebellini) flowers. They need a male and female tree to produce dates and I have one, so no go on dates in the garden.

Another palm flower. The Christmas Palm or Adonidia merrillii. Most people cut these off so they don’t have to deal with the fruit. I use them in flower arrangements and enjoy the fruit. It looks like Christmas ornaments.

Flowers on the White Geiger tree (Cordia boissieri). I enjoy this little tree, though it is a puzzle to prune.

Fruit on the White Geiger tree. These eventually turn into good sized white berries and the varmints eat them all. I am told they are edible but not tasty.

The Gumbo Limbo (Bursea simarouba) is currently the bee magnet in the front garden. The entire tree is buzzing with bees pollinating the flowers.

Happy Gardening!!

In a Vase on Monday – L’ Estate

Decades ago (no need to discuss how many) I spent the summer in Cortona, Italy with an Arts Studies Abroad Program. This time of year usually causes me to reminisce about riding around on a bus listening to Vivaldi’s Four Seasons and eating pasta. For the life of me I could not remember the Italian word for summer – L’ Estate.

Summer has dropped its full load on South Florida this week. The skies are black with thunderstorms this afternoon and we have had ‘feels like’ temperatures over 100 F this week. No need to discuss humidity, my husband refers to this as ‘Africa hot’.

The vase was done in all hot colors in honor of the arrival of L’ Estate.

The close up:

In orange, Firebush (Hamelia patens) sets the tone for the vase. A few bits of Licorice Plants are the grey, fuzzy foliage. Chartreuse foliage is from an unnamed coleus, the gift that keeps on giving.

White flowers to cool things down are from the White Geiger tree (Cordia boisseri); varigated foliage is from Piecrust Croton (Codieum varigatum) and a few Lady Di Heliconias (Heliconia psittacorum) are in red and yellow. The vase is a florist orphan.

Sitting in an air conditioned space listening to Vivaldi seems like a really good idea right about now. Maybe for several months.

Visit Cathy at ramblinginthegarden to see what other gardeners are popping into their vases.

Happy Gardening!