Friday, July 22, 2005

Trip to Home Depot

Got some fun stuff at Home Depot yesterday... 5 1-gallon portulacas (a pink-blushed peach color), a couple 1-gallon bloodgrasses, a couple 4" Salvia greggii, several 4" million bells, a 4-pack of dragon's blood sedum and a 4-pack of baby's tears (for a pot). Oh, and some little lemon thymes. I redid some pots that were bursting with miscanthus sinensis 'Morning Light".

My "let's see how well Lithodora diffusa does in my clayey soil" experiment is complete. Conclusion: Not well. It died. I'm always trying to bring a little bit of Mendocino back to Sacramento. The echiums have done well, as have other plants, but lithodora was not meant to be for me. I do not live in a cool, coastal climate with fast-draining soil. I do not live in a cool, coastal climate with fast-draining soil. I do not live in a cool, coastal climate with fast-draining soil.

Basil's doing well, peppers and tomatoes were slow to take off this year, despite care and feeding. I didn't plant 'Sungold', but the seedling volunteers are giving me lots of tasty fruit while the tomatoes I planted are still growing and/or ripening. My 'Sungold' babies are bigger than their parent and slightly more red and tangy, but I'm not complaining. I like tomatoes of all shapes, colors and sizes.

There's a frenzy of bees and butterflies in the garden right now.

Sunday, July 17, 2005

Black Widows and Blazing Heat

# of black widows discovered out in the open while watering today = 2

Remember, black widows make these crazy looking webs. If you ever see an irregular looking web, keep an eye out for its creator.

Speaking of spiders, I videotaped a spider in my doorway the other night. It was beautifully backlit while wrapping its prey just before sucking the life out of it. I'll try to post the video clip soon.

I finally planted most of the plants I bought at P.O.W. before my trip to Mendo. Waking up early this morning made all the difference. At 7am, it's quite nice outside. It was so nice outside that I found myself thinking, "There's no way it's gonna be 106... 7... 8... 9 degrees today." Hah. Still, I'll take 109 and low humidity over 80 degrees and humid any day...

Recent garden bummer: turns out my irrigation controller was OFF the whole time I was out of town and a few days after I got back. I have no idea how or why it was turned off. I swear I didn't do it. We probably turned it off when repairing the spray heads my darling puppies gnawed off awhile back. Some parts of the yard look crispy, but I'm doing my best to rehydrate things.

Speaking of my cute canines, they're being really good lately but have managed to dig two small but very deep holes in the lawn. There's absolutely no sign of dirt where they've dug, but I know they did it. I caught them in the act a few times. God, I hope they didn't eat the dirt from the holes. Don't know why they wouldn't, though, since their palate is quite broad. Ants, cherry pits (toxic to dogs, by the way), cat poop, a several-day-old grilled cheese sandwich someone left in my van, garbage in general... all of it's haute cuisine for these dogs. Their expensive gourmet kibble from PetSmart, however, is always met with boredom and slight disdain.

On a positive note, one of my Mexican sunflowers (Tithonia) is huge and blooming right now! It's 6-7 feet tall and pretty wide. Love it. My cosmos it blooming up a storm too. It's so showy and cheery, I must plant more of it next year. Gloriosa daisies are, well, glorious. Pink sedum is just coming into bloom. Etc., etc.

Friday, July 15, 2005

One more reason to love Mendocino...


My version of camping... nonfat mocha (no whip) and broadband internet. The internet connection at the house is dial-up, and it's not even like regular dial-up where you wait a few seconds for a page to load. It just tries and tries and tries and either finally loads or simply times out. I started to get the no e-mail shakes and popped into Moody's Internet Cafe on the last day of my trip.
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More photos from Mendocino


Ingrid's Mendo Birds. It's a must for garden lovers!



The front of her shop... in the background is my really hot ride... my Toyota, um, minivan.



mosaic chair



wow, can you imagine trying to fill that vase with water? and how do you put flowers in it? i guess i should say how do you put flower in it? just kidding. always kidding.


front window of Ingrid's shop



how many clay people does it take to hold up some succulents?



penguin



bird in hand



more mendo birds



Ok, so we're on the road now. On expert advice, we decided to stop at the Navarro winery on the way home. The nice wine man recommended the 2001 Pinot Noir... I know... pinots are so trendy since Sideways... but he and my expert were right. It's lovely. No, I did not sample that day. I was driving.



The Navarro Winery



They have some covered picnic benches on the side and a small garden out front



and grapes... can't forget the grapes.
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hand-made hand rail



nasturtiums



Datura? Brugmansia? Datura? Brugmansia?



Alstroemeria



closer view



View from the inside the Bayview cafe. The town is setting up for the annual music festival.



Starting to get crowded... people are arriving for the festival. We're just leaving.



Lovely little arrangement outside a local shop.



hollyhocks



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Viola 'Etain' in Mendocino Village

Salpiglossis still doing it's wonderful thing in window boxes on Main Street.

Pink pelargoniums in front of a picket fence

totem on a local house ||
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Pics from Mendo... Enjoy.


View from the rental house every night...



Mendocino Coast Botanical Garden shop... and the only kind of bears I ever want to see up close... wooden ones.



Plants for sale at the Mendocino Bot. Gardens Nursery



The Perennial Garden near the entrance



I photographed plant tags of things I knew I probably wouldn't remember later... actual plant to follow.



See previous tag



See next pic for I.D.



See previous pic for more armeria alliacea. ;-)



Another view of perennial garden... See if you can see find the nursery employee in the photo. I'll call her "Waldo."



But of course, it's Monopsis lutea.



Picture does not do justice... that's the downfall of visiting the garden at mid-day (i.e. sleeping in).



Yellow flax(phormium).



Succulents growing on old dead log (driftwood?). Looks super cool.



I have one fairy wand (dierama). The garden has many. Life is not fair.



They're super tall (around 7 feet)!



Uh oh, can you read that? I'll try to zoom in on it when I have a chance.



How much more pink can a flower get?!



A really large, vivid Montbretia/Crocosmia (no tag).



Metal arch with what looks like a newly planted groundcover bench.



Close-up of the bench.



Dwarf conifers and colorful lobelia, etc.



Colors remain really vivid in Mendo.



bench



pink filipendula... looks like cotton candy.



chartreusy yellow against reddish purple... great color combo.



lots of contrasts in texture



burgundy foliage



ice cream sculpture outside Cowlick's homemade ice cream parlor at the garden. The taste is out of this world. I had a scoop of blueberry chip and vanilla. oh... ma... god.



a really pretty purple astilbe



another view of the garden



see next pic



It's pretty dwarf and the florets are huge.



see next pic



oops, rotate counterclockwise in your mind. ;-)



to the ocean



fuchsias



fern forest... my friend's little boy asked if we were in the tropical rainforest. awww...



the Pacific Ocean!



whale bone



are you packing your bags for Mendo yet?



dahlia



near the vegetable garden, almost back to the entrance



wow.



outside the veggie garden


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