Let's start with a few agaves, shall we?
I'm not going to pretend that my photos are as cool as Liz's, but I thought I'd share them nonetheless. (And, hey, not bad for iPhone photos, eh?) The Ruth Bancroft Garden is also featured, I just discovered, in a book that came out less than a year ago: Succulent Paradise. Let's start with a few agaves, shall we? Next, a few aloes. It's tough to capture the grandeur of the aloes here. There were really some amazing specimens, including huge aloe nobilis and aloe striata, of which I have no decent pictures. My favorite aloe, though, was the one immediately below this text, and to the right. As regular readers of this blog are already aware, I am a bit of a haworthia geek. I may or may not have squealed aloud with glee when I saw a whole bunch of gorgeous haworthia truncata of various types, shades, and sizes growing among the rocks in a shaded area. Observe: Although I wasn't always the world's biggest gasteria fan, I have to admit that they've grown on me more and more... particularly en masse and variegated! And sempervivums (doesn't it seem like it should be "semperviva?") abounded: Can we talk about terrestrial bromeliads for a moment? ...Actually, I don't have much to say about them; I just love the phrase "terrestrial bromeliad"--though these dyckia look extraterrestrial to me. I love the combinations of purples and greens. Onto echeverias. Like (nearly) everything else in the Ruth Bancroft Garden, most of the echeverias weren't labeled. Ruth Bancroft (who is alive and kicking at over 100 years old!) doesn't like the way labels can detract from plants in a garden, which I can understand. Last but not least... cacti! The RBG is home to dozens, maybe hundreds, of cacti varieties. It's a great time to visit the garden, because many of them are in bloom right now. A few favorites: Bottom line: if you're anywhere in Northern California, it's worth the drive to Walnut Creek to check out the Ruth Bancroft Garden! (Especially if you're meeting your awesome parents for sushi.) And be sure to check out their nursery, too--they had several hard-to-find plants at pretty reasonable prices. Ta ta for now, succ-ers!
My partner, Liz, and I spent Saturday celebrating Mothers' Day with my parents at the Ruth Bancroft Garden in Walnut Creek, CA. The RBG was even better than I expected, in part because they allow dogs AND have tables that make picnicking easy. My parents picked up sushi for the picnic 'cause that's how we roll. (Get it? Sushi? Roll? Hahaha.) We had a great time, enjoying the gardens and the nursery, where my mom and I each picked up a mangave bloodspot for $8. I need to cull through my own photos and will post those in a few days, but meanwhile I wanted to share Liz's, which I thought were absolutely amazing. Here's a tiny fraction of 'em: All in all, the RBG was more than worth the 90-minute drive from our house. And thanks to my parents' b-day present to me, I can get in for free all year as a member! Yay! Can't wait to go back. I'll share some of my own photography from the day (albeit inferior) soon.
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