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A Visit to Terra Sol Garden Center

10/15/2015

 
On my way back from a work trip this weekend, I decided to take 101 (yay!) instead of 5 (yawn!) from Southern to Northern California.  Not only was the traffic a little lighter, but--oh darn--it took me past some cool-looking nurseries I had never visited.

The best of these was Terra Sol Garden Center in Santa Barbara (don't be fooled by the unassuming website--these folks are pros), which had at least a dozen plants I hadn't seen for sale anywhere else.  As the more seasoned succ-ers among you know, after a few years as a succulent devotee, this almost never happens anymore outside of plant society sales, so I was seriously stoked.  

Of course, I'd never leave you out in the cold, dear readers--I made sure to snap a few pics so you could spend money unwisely vicariously through me.  

First, they had a whole slew of Renny hybrids.  As many haworthia fans will know, Renny is a legend, and she offers some of the weirdest, most striking, and most richly variegated haworthias out there.  Usually I can't afford her plants unless they're wee seedlings--I've seen her stuff on eBay go for hundreds of dollars(!).  These particular hybrids were $29.99 each, which is far less than comparable plants would cost on eBay ($50-80).  True, there were no extra-special variegated maughaniis or anything, but it was still a cool selection.  Observe:
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Let's look at a couple of those a little more closely.  (Click on them for a larger image.)
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...Aaaand, let's look at the one I bought even more closely.  Because HOLY COW IS IT BEAUTIFUL.  When I got home, I just put it on the kitchen counter and basically forced my poor partner to examine it with me for 20 minutes.  She maintains that it looks like "all [my] other haworthias."  Which, actually, it does not.  It is totally unique and a thing of beauty.  But wonderful and indulgent woman that she is, she understood how much it thrills me and just sort of smiled and rolled her eyes.  
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Even though agave Joe Hoaks have been getting more and more popular, you still don't see them all that often (at least not up in Northern California).  But a mere agave Joe Hoak wouldn't be sufficient for the likes of Terra Sol.  Check out this ridiculously cool variegate:
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Next, lower left is a cool ant made of rusted metal and stones, sitting atop maybe the largest mound of abromeitiella brevifolia I've ever seen.  And how about the plant on the lower right?  Now that's what I call a caudex.
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The selection of agaves there was also terrific.  Two of my favorites are below: agave titanoa "white ice" to the left, and a variegated agave blue glow (sometimes called "agave snow glow") below to the right.  
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Next, the elusive aloe polyphylla (spiral aloe):
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On the lower left is an aloe rubroviolacea, which has been on my wish list for ages and ages, but I can never find a small one anywhere, and the big ones are far too expensive.  Unfortunately, this streak was unbroken at Terra Sol.  (If anyone knows where I can find a wee one, please share the info!)  On the lower right, check out this cool tylecodon bonsai.  I'm not sure what species this is--any guesses?
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And last but not least, a really lovely leuchtenbergia principis, in all its sun-stressed glory.  Fun fact about this plant: it's the sole species in its genus!
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A Succulent Drawer!

10/14/2015

 
My awesome partner bought me a little drawer a while back, figuring that I could do something succulent with it.  I love drawers with little compartments, and put a succulent in each, along with some nice varied top dressing.  As you can see, I went with quite a variety of plants: haworthias, crassulas, a sempervivum, a gasteria, an astroloba, a faucaria, and more.  I quite like how it turned out!  For now, I'm keeping it in my greenhouse under some shade cloth until I find a home for this particular project.      
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I am kind of obsessed with Instagram.

10/3/2015

 
I haven't posted in a while, and this is because I have been spending my succulent-related time (1) reading about succulents and (2) messing around on Instagram.  If you're not on Instagram yet, what are you waiting for?  Check out my Instagram account here.  Sure, the app makes it easy to oversaturate photos and Hipsterize your succulent pics into oblivion.  But it's also super fun, and a great way to check out other people's plant photos (especially photos from other countries).  Are all of you on Instagram already, or am I late to the party?
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Highlights from "5-day Photo Challenge" (or whatever it was called)

8/27/2015

 
On Facebook, something called the "Gardeners' Photo Challenge" has been making the rounds.  The idea was to post five plant photos per day from your garden, for five days in a row.  I thought I'd share some of my own favorite contributions here. 
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Crassula tomentosa. Believe it or not, this is actually from a cutting I took just two months ago. It's very well-rooted already. Why aren't tomentosas more popular in the US?
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Crassula pseudohemisphaerica. This is a rarity. I keep it under a shade structure during the summer. Extremely slow-growing and apparently not much of an offsetter.
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I love the feathery texture of this haworthia.
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Echinopsis cv. "Haku jo"
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Uebelmannia pectinifera, native to Brazil (and endangered).
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Variegated echeveria purpusorum. One of my very favorite plants; I almost never see these.
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A haworthia, but I can't remember what kind.
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Another haworthia, pupping out like a BOSS.
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As regular readers of this blog know, I am obsessed with rare crassulas. This crassula alstonii is one of my very favorites. I am constantly unsure whether I'm taking proper care of it, but it seems pretty happy in this clay pebbles/soil/perlite cocktail.
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Echeveria laui. Gorgeous, native to Oaxaca, Mexico, and virtually impossible (for me, anyway) to propagate from leaves.
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A beautifully variegated agave parryi v. truncata that I got at the Ruth Bancroft Garden. It thrives in full sun.
 

Digitized succulents for your artificial enjoyment

8/26/2015

 
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A few friends have posted on my Facebook page about a new video game, the purpose of which is to "take care of" fake electronic succulents.  You can check it out here.  (And lest you think you're off the hook, you can kill these digital plants by overwatering, too.)

Has anyone played this?  It's kind of like that tamagotchi phenomenon, where people take care of electronic pets.  I find this kind of thing half bizarre and half hilarious.  

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