Blue Eyed Grass, and other wildflowers
...
It's planting season in Northern California.
Despite the fact that I was still feeling achy and crummy, I went to two different native plant sales today.
The first plant sale I attended was hosted by the Landscape Horticulture department of Merritt College.
They also offered tours of their gardens. I particularly enjoyed seeing their mushroom growing operations, which are located on a beautiful ridge in the Oakland hills, under oak and manzanita trees. Somehow, they connected with a nursery who gets their ceramic pots wrapped in excelsior (incredibly long, thin, spaghetti-like shavings of oak), instead of packing peanuts. The mushroom growers at Merritt College cover their "crops" with donated excelsior, which makes so much sense, since many mushrooms have a growing-relationship with oak.
The other plant sale was hosted by the Friends of Sausal Creek. I'm interested in the work that this group is doing to preserve an important Bay Area watershed.
I've been buying native plants that will provide food for insects and birds, or that will be easy to grow, and cheerful. I bought several gallon-sized pots of blue-eyed grass, which, as you can see from all my photographs, is a plant I'm very fond of. It's in the iris family, and always makes me smile.
Even when I'm feeling really ill, I still enjoy working with plants. Sure beats laying in bed and being miserable.
It's planting season in Northern California.
Despite the fact that I was still feeling achy and crummy, I went to two different native plant sales today.
The first plant sale I attended was hosted by the Landscape Horticulture department of Merritt College.
They also offered tours of their gardens. I particularly enjoyed seeing their mushroom growing operations, which are located on a beautiful ridge in the Oakland hills, under oak and manzanita trees. Somehow, they connected with a nursery who gets their ceramic pots wrapped in excelsior (incredibly long, thin, spaghetti-like shavings of oak), instead of packing peanuts. The mushroom growers at Merritt College cover their "crops" with donated excelsior, which makes so much sense, since many mushrooms have a growing-relationship with oak.
The other plant sale was hosted by the Friends of Sausal Creek. I'm interested in the work that this group is doing to preserve an important Bay Area watershed.
I've been buying native plants that will provide food for insects and birds, or that will be easy to grow, and cheerful. I bought several gallon-sized pots of blue-eyed grass, which, as you can see from all my photographs, is a plant I'm very fond of. It's in the iris family, and always makes me smile.
Even when I'm feeling really ill, I still enjoy working with plants. Sure beats laying in bed and being miserable.
Comments
Hopefully the fall rain will help revive my meager garden.
--greg
We composted on St. Paul St, and I won't lie to you: I saw rats doing in and out of our bin. My neighbors HATED us, but they also spent all their free time yelling at each other, so they were pretty riled up to begin with.
There's plenty of info on composting online. You need to augment the kitchen scraps with yard trimmings, or else you'll just create rotting garbage, which isn't exactly the same as compost.
http://forums2.gardenweb.com/forums/soil/
It is one of my favorites-my father calls it blue grass.
It is open in the mornings, and the buds close once the day get hot. It is a wildflower (aka weed) here in Massachusetts. It would think it would grow in Baltimore in the early spring.
For your friend who wants to compost but is concerned about the rats in Baltimore (once we found a healthy-looking but very dead rat in our alley/backyard across from the Walters Art Gallery...it measured OVER 2 feet in length, tail included... gack) It is possible to take whatever you WANT to compost and to run it thru a blender, then to pour the product onto the base of the plant. The only problem is that rats may chew at the plant itself. I never had a rat problem when I put down elephant poop I got for free from the circus, or for a fee from Baltimore's spectatcular Zoo-Doo program. I also used to put compost and water (compost tea) in a big plastic bucket I got from construction sites, let it sit (1 month) and THEN use it as compost on the plants. That worked alright in the city.
I would consider putting in berries Lisa, our raspberries did fabo in 2 years- I was going to plant more but am now glad I didnt. They spread like crazy, and make a great fence between you and the neighbors. Also, they love lots of water.
Next year I want to plant climbing wisteria to climb over our barn. Too bad they take 7 years to make flowers! You know, even if I had 100 acres, I don't think I would have enough land to grow all the stuf I want!
Annalisa
Good question, though!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tradescantia
If I remember corectly, it always has three petals, which strikes me as unusual. Also, the blooms only last for one day, and (again, if I remember this correctly) auto-digest themselves.