In A Vase on Monday – The K.I.S.S. Concept

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The Monday Vase

This crystal vase was given to me by my late brother many years ago for Christmas. I know he would like it that I am using it for arranging flowers, especially during the holidays.

This is simply an arrangement of Heliconia psitticorum with its foliage and a couple of Boston Fern fronds for texture. Parrot Flowers they are called in many places. They actually do remind me of Parrots, kind of.

I attended design school about thirty years ago, Ouch! And one of my teachers favorite saying was “use the KISS concept”. This did not involve the Rock n Roll band or any crazy makeup.

It was Keep It Simple Stupid. I can relate on some levels but simple has limitations in gardening. Deep thoughts, I need to work on my Christmas tree:

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Here is my retired racing Greyhound Alan helping and wishing everyone Happy Holidays!

 

 

 

Bolivian Sunflowers

Bolivian SunflowerBolivian Sunflower

I have been noticing these plants for the past few years and it always seems weird to me to associate Sunflowers with December. Gigantic Sunflower Shrubs, at that. I also assumed incorrectly they were some sort of Helianthus. Not the case, this is a Tithonia, Tithonia diversifolia – the Bolivian Sunflower. In another perversity of plant naming, the Bolivian Sunflower is native to Mexico and Central America. I am fairly certain Bolivia is in South America. This could be explained by the fact that the name Mexican Sunflower is already taken from a small perennial, another Tithonia.

The Sunflower HedgeThe Sunflower Hedge

A neighbor has a hedge of Bolivian Sunflowers screening the backyard. This Sunflower hedge is at least 12 feet tall and in full bloom right now. This plant grows foliage Spring and Summer and flowers through most of the Fall and Winter. It has just really started blooming in earnest and should continue for a couple of months. Another one of those kooky benefits of living in South Florida, Sunflowers all winter.

As this plant has the potential of attaining a height of 16 feet and bears 6″ flowers profusely, I imagine it can put out quite a few seeds and offspring could become a problem. I am not sure I would try planting a hedge, but maybe installing one or two to screen a view where the lawnmower will run over any nearby seedlings. One has to practice selective lawn mower placement of plants in South Florida, if there is any question of overabundance. No winter frost has meant nothing ever dies. Or anything you want gone refuses to die.

In A Vase on Monday -Mele Kalikimaka

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This vase was inspired by Cathy’s Advent Wreath (from Words and Herbs in Bavaria). I started working on it thinking I could use Podocarpus (Japanese Yew) as a base for a wreath. Unfortunately, most of my Podocarpus was weed whacked. Accidently and by my husband. I decided it would be best for the plant if I left it to grow. Oh, well. Plan B.

I  determined that the wreath wasn’t possible without the Podocarpus and decided to use some other plants in the holiday concept and ended up with this bowl, which looks more Hawaiian than Advent to me. Hence the Mele Kalikimaka – Merry Christmas in Hawaiian and difficult to spell.

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The base is Sea Grape leaves (Coccoloba uvaria). The green berries are Sea Grape as well, red berries are, I am afraid, the scourge of South Florida, Brazilian Pepper, and invasive plant that has well, nice berries. People are allergic to these plants, so be careful. The other plants in the composition are White Frangipani (Plumeria) and Boston Fern.

 

In A Vase on Monday

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One of the pleasures of gardening in South Florida is the surprises that pop up in your garden. Most of the plants in this arrangement are volunteer plants that I had no hand in selecting.

The vase is an inherited piece of well patinaed silverplate from my mother’s vast collection of ‘junk store finds’. I am not entirely sure this is a vase at all, but today it is!

As far as the assemblage of plants – the white spikes are flowers of the Snake Plant or Mother In Laws tongues (Sansiveria); the burgundy leaves are the only intentionally planted item from my garden and are Aechmea”Burgundy” Bromeliads; Boston Ferns for foliage and Transcandentia zebrina is the purple and silver foliage plant – many  people call this Wandering Jew and it is a popular hanging basket houseplant, it grows here and there in my garden. The ferny green foliage overhanging the edge of the vase is the Common Asparagus Fern, Asparagus setaceus; also a here and there plant in my garden. I am suspicious this came from my neighbor, who likes to use it in arrangements as well.

Good tidings to all and Happy Holidays wishes at the beginning of this festive season. I shall look for some more typical tropical holiday plants to arrange next week.

Winter Container Gardens for Treasure Coast Living

Container with Hawaiian Snowbush, Atomic Fireball Bromeliads, and Varigated Asiatic Jasmine

Container with Hawaiian Snowbush, Atomic Fireball Bromeliads, and Varigated Asiatic Jasmine

Temperatures are moderating on the Treasure Coast so I have put my gardening gloves back on. A container garden enthusiast from the get go, I usually change the plantings in my containers twice a year. In this part of the world, now is the time to plant what would be summer herbs and vegetables in most of the rest of the Northern Hemisphere.

Not being a diligent vegetable gardener, the produce here is so great and inexpensive it is difficult for me to spend time dealing with vegetable gardening.  While there is nothing like the burst of sunshine in your mouth when you bite into a homegrown tomato, picking the massive tomato hornworm off the tomato vines kind of cancels out the tasting experience in my opinion. As a devoted foodie and home cook, I concentrate on growing herbs. I finally found some Bay Leaf plants online and they arrived this week for their debut in my container garden.

Herbs

Herbs

Rosemary is a favorite of mine, so I have three plants, one creeping variety and two upright types. I think the creeping one has a stronger piney flavor and it lasted through the summer in a partial shade location, which is a good recommendation for a plant to grow in this area. The variety of Thyme I prefer for cooking is Lemon so I have two, I think the German varieties last longer here, but for flavor, I plant Lemon Thyme every winter and do with dried when the weather is too hot. Rounding out the herb container garden is Italian Parsley, Sweet Basil, Fernleaf Dill and Bay Leaf. Parsley and Dill are cool season only and will last until May or so. I consider fresh Sweet Basil a necessity of life and buy a new plant to replace a not so fresh one when needed (two or three times annually) For some reason Bay Leaf plants (sometimes called Sweet Bay Laurel) is difficult to buy around here, I had to resort to mail order to find it. I had a Bay Leaf plant for several years, but the tree surgeon smashed it; hopefully the new ones will last in a container garden.

Bromeliad Bowl

Bromeliad Bowl

Not all is edible in my container gardens; a little bit of the tropics celebrates our climate – so I use some Bromeliads in my other containers. I enjoy collecting Bromeliads and tend to move them around from the landscape beds to the containers. These are primarily Fireball Neoreglias that I have picked up as cuttings at garage sales – nearly indestructible and they reproduce like mad.

I am just happy to be back in the garden.

In a Vase on Monday

11/16 VaseNovember brings some unusual flora and some of the usual suspects to my vase. The unusual ones are the cream colored infill flowers and the Muhly Grass. The cream colored flower is an unknown plant to me – something I let go just to see what would happen. I may live to regret that decision, but part of gardening is the experimentation. The Muhly Grass is what Sweetgrass baskets are made from in the Lowcountry of the Southeastern US, I think of Muhly Grass as Roadsidia but I like its feathery presence in the back of the vase.

I am referring to the pink and red flowers and the foliage as usual suspects because they tend to come and go year round in South Florida. Coral Vine and Shrimp Plants are tender in areas with freezing temperatures. These plants include pink flowers from the Coral Vine, Antigonon leptopus and red ones are from the Red Shrimp Plant, Justicia brandegeana. Foliage from a Painted Fingernail Bromeliad and Boston Fern round out the composition.

In a Vase on Monday

Here is a taste of the tropics from my garden in South Florida, USA

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The orangey Large leaf in the back of the arrangement is a Aechmea Bromeliad “Blanchetiana’ – this particular Bromeliad is available in Lemon, Orange and Raspberry colors, the plant is about 5′ x 5′ with a flower comparable in size. The fern is Boston Fern which is native to my area and grows wild in my garden. The red flowers are Heliconia psittacorum – there are a numerous cultivars and this is an unnamed cross, I think! The white flowers are a branch of my Bridalveil Plumeria, Plumeria pudica, which is evergreen but not particularly scented.

Here is a closer view:
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Weirdness Wednesday – Agave americana flowers

More Tropic Florida weirdness. This looks like something from the Far Side cartoons to me. I posted a photo of the bud in mid August when this Agave americana started sending up a flower stalk:

American Agave bud

American Agave bud

Two and one half months later – the flower stalk is over seven feet tall and has these wonderful chartreuse flowers.

The Stalk

The Stalk

I am guessing these are florets? The flowers start out looking like rectangular budded broccoli and then bloom.

Agave Florets

Agave Florets

I am waiting to see what this plant might do next.

Happy Halloween

Pumpkin with Ears

Jack O Lantern

Here is my Jack O Lantern. I carve one every Halloween in honor of my father, a devoted pumpkin artist, who has been gone for thirteen years.

One of my favorite childhood memories is going with my father to pick the Halloween Pumpkin . I would rush home after school and wait for him to get home from work, then we would go to Matthews Market and pick the biggest one we could find. One year our pumpkin weighed 40 pounds. We would scoop out the insides, my mother would roast the seeds in butter and salt and he would carve the face on the Jack O Lantern with my input. My father had a bit of a peculiar sense of humor and always insisted on frowning pumpkins with ears that stuck out. He continued to carve pumpkins every Halloween until I was past forty years old.

I have kept up the tradition, but my pumpkins usually turn out looking sort like a demented Polynesian version The one this year is happy because he is in Florida for the winter – but he still has some ears that stick out.

Demented Polynesian Pumpkin

Demented Polynesian Pumpkin

Tortoise Thursday

Gopher Tortoise

Gopher Tortoise

Thursday is my day for reptile sightings. I was in my garage this afternoon and heard a strange scrabbling noise. I looked down to spy a Florida Gopher Tortoise trucking down my driveway, heading into my garage. I quickly closed the garage door, which makes a racket, the tortoise just watched it come down and kept going.

These are burrowing tortoises and share their burrows with more than 300 other species, including rattlesnakes. They are a protected species in Florida and permits must be procured to develop a site where there are Gopher Tortoises. There are some empty lots nearby and I am guessing that is home for this one.

I finally got him or her pointed in the right direction and he headed for home, I hope.