GARDENING SUCCS
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Banana slugs are less cute when they're on my crassulas.

8/18/2015

 
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In general, I like banana slugs (or at least, I like them a lot better than other slugs).  They remind me that I live in the redwoods, they provide UC Santa Cruz with a delightful mascot, and they add color to the backyard.  I never find them on my succulents...  until the other day, when I found not one, but two, of them conspiring to eat my crassula deceptor and my crassula columnella.  

While it was admittedly a little gross to pick them off, at least they were unsubtle in their advances.  I'll take these guys over mealy bugs any day of the week.

Cactus blooms!

8/12/2015

 
I took a few shots of some gorgeous blooms last time I went to the Stanford Arizona Garden.  I find something new every time I go there!
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This little guy called to mind Debra Lee Baldwin's most recent post!

Getting Succulents Used to Sun

7/30/2015

 
I've gotten the following question twice in the past week, once on Facebook and once in a nursery: "I want to plant this succulent in full sun, but I'm not sure it can handle it.  What do I do?"  While not all succulents love full sun, most can get used to it if (a) they are properly inured and (b) you don't live somewhere that gets 120º heat.  

I've used three main methods, and I'll list them here from most effective to least effective.  Unfortunately, that means I'm also listing them from most time-consuming to least time-consuming, since like many things in life, time investment and quality of outcome are directly correlated.
  1. GRADUAL EXPOSURE.  On day 1, put your succulent in direct sun for just one hour.  On day 2, put it in the sun for two hours.  On day 3, three hours.  You get the idea.  Most people don't have the time, patience, insanely flexible schedule, or OCD tendencies it takes to do this for 15–16 days in a row.  I've done it, and it works great. You might also try taking shortcuts or upping the sun exposure more quickly, but do so at your own (plant's) risk.
  2. SHADECLOTH.  This is my favorite method, because it hits the "sweet spot" of ease and functionality.  Take some shadecloth (this stuff is good, and screen works, too) and lay 3-4 layers of it over your plant.  Every 2-3 days, remove a layer.  Be extra careful the day you remove the last layer.  In fact, ideally the last two days or so, keep the single layer of shadecloth on the plant for half the day.
  3. BEING A SLACKER.  My most frequent and least effective method.  It involves putting a plant under a table where it will get shade for most of the day, and then every time I happen to think about it, moving the plant out from under the table an inch or two, until eventually, it's in full sun for the whole day.  With sensitive plants, this can sometimes result in striped burn patterns that show precisely where the shade ended.

The process of exposing a plant to more and more sun is known as "hardening" the plant.  It can be really effective for bringing out the beautiful, redder hues of everything from haworthias to crassulas to echeverias.  Just take it slowly, or you'll bring out the irreversible crispy brown hues instead.  But even if this happens, don't lose heart!  Burned leaves don't recover, but burned plants do.  And new baby leaves that start while a plant is in full sun are likely to be fine in full sun.  Case in point: two weeks ago, I inadvertently fried a gorgeous, double-headed echeveria dondo.  The center rosettes were toast.  I cleared out the brown yuckiness, and a week later, new rosettes had started to form in the center of the dead one.  So far, they're in tact!




Back at the Arizona Garden again--yay!

6/4/2015

 
I had the pleasure of introducing a friend to Stanford's Arizona Garden today.  No matter how many times I go there, I always see something new.  Here are a few photos I snapped!
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Finally, I checked on the huge agave blue glow that I've taken pics of before.  But this time, I noticed that there are pups growing out from the middle of the agave.  I've never seen this growth pattern in the absence of coring.  What's going on?  Other blue glows I've seen pup out (if at all) from the sides, not the middle.  
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Wish List III

5/25/2015

 
I've written a few posts in the past in which I've shared the plants on my wish list. Since then, I've acquired several of the plants I've been looking for--most notably (for me, at least), crassula barklyi and haworthia maughanii.  Here are the ones that are at the top of my list right now.
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via cactipedia.info
I first saw a uebelmannia pectinifera during my visit to the UC Davis Botanical Conservatory a few months ago.  Despite my cacti-caution (which I've since encouraged others to throw to the wind), I seem to find more and more cacti that interest me.  Uebelmannia pectinifera has gorgeous coloring--a really nice dark purple--and can get pretty darn big (though I've heard they're slow growers).
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via haworthia.cz
Haworthia marginatas look like someone has outlined them with a white colored pencil. They take a ton of different forms and look extra cool when they're exposed to the sun; the margins can get reddish.

As far as I can tell, these guys are a lot more common in Europe than in the US, but I don't know why--they're gorgeous!   
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via plantdelights.com
Though I've never ordered anything from Plant Delights Nursery (alas!), they have a habit of introducing the agaves and agave hybrids I find the most drool-worthy. Pictured at left is a mangave "Espresso," which is a hybrid between a mangave "Macho Mocha" and an agave. (A mangave itself is a hybrid between a manfreda and an agave.)  What do you think is next?  A mangave cappuccino, perhaps?  A manfreda latte?  I have a feeling that whatever it is will be gorgeous.
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via maughanii.com
How could you see a variegated haworthia truncata and then not want one?  You can't. It's impossible.  You'd have to be crazy.  The gem pictured at left is one of Renny Wong's many wonders.  Renny's got to be one of the most talented hybridizers in the world.  Her plants are absolutely breathtaking. Unfortunately, the vast majority are way out of my budget...  for now.  
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This lovely pelecyphora aselliformis, like the uebelmannia pectinifera, is a plant of which I first became aware during a visit to the UC Davis Botanical Conservatory.  I've been trying to get my plant-loving little meathooks on one for several months now, to no avail.  (Anyone who wants to gift me one should feel free.)  I love spineless cacti, and pelecyphora aselliformis has these weird little caterpillar-looking markings on them that are just so cool.
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"Sinocrassula" means "Chinese crassula," and indeed, these uncommon plants are native to southern China.  I believe tde one pictured is a sinocrassula yunnanensis, which seems to be the most common kind of sinocrassula.  I've never actually seen one in person, so I can only assume that the leaves feel as soft and felt-like as they look!  I love the green-to-purple fading from the inside of the rosette--it almost reminds me of a sempervivum.
Is there anything new on your wish list, my dear succ-ers?  Do tell...


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