Thursday, December 26, 2019

Xmas gifts!

On xmas morning Matt and I popped out to plant some plants. Merry holidays to everyone on P Hill! Here's what we put in:

3 Agave desmettiana variegata
3 Furcraea selloa
7 Agave parryi
37 Aloe nobilis - yes, thirty seven!

We made a new bed on the way to the composters with most of these, and planted about 8 plants opposite them. We have lots more plants to plant, so come to the next workday if you enjoy that type of thing :)

Matt brought along the chainsaw to cut down a tree stump but for whatever reason it would not start (unlike yesterday when it worked perfectly...) so we gave up on that.

Sunday, December 8, 2019

Rain means new plants

Aditi planting
Yesterday’s workday promised rain so Matt and I packed up some plants that needed to be put into the ground and assumed that nobody would show up to help plant them. Which is OK! Nobody likes working in the rain. Except us

However, we were wrong. Chris, Josh, and Aditi showed up to help us out. It's always so nice to see your friends show up to help! With our excellent core team we managed to get a good list of plants in the ground:

4 Nassella tenuissima
6 Salvia leucantha
2 Salvia canariensis
4 Furcraea selloa variegata
2 Cortaderia selloana “Silver Comet”

Oops!
Other jobs were taken care of too. Chris also moved an unknown agave (any ideas on the species?) and worked on revamping the bed behind the wrong way sign - his personal project. Josh planted pups in our pup farm, I picked trash, Aditi changed out the dog poop bags, and we all noticed tiny weed sprouts... everywhere...

Matt also felled the Agave americana flower spike by the arch - after a year of flowering and seeding, it was finally done.


Timber!
Despite my predictions, it didn't hit any cars or people when it came down (aaaahh!) and Matt got it all chopped up and put in bags for 311 to remove right away. We brought the dried up top home to use as a Christmas tree.

We only had one quick shower during the workday and it was great to see plants responding to the rain. Grow on!

Wednesday, December 4, 2019

Plant Profile: Dasylirion longissimum


Latin name: Dasylirion longissimum ("daz-ee-LEER-ee-on lon-JISS-ee-mum")
Common name: Mexican Grass Tree, Longleaf Sotol
Originally from: The Chihuahuan desert of northeastern Mexico
Blooms: A light yellow stalk of flowers grows 8-10' above the plant in summer.
Light: Full sun.
Water: No watering, just rain - don't let them get soggy or they will rot!
Height x width: 6-12' tall x 6-8' wide
Zones: 8b to 10b
Where to find in P. Garden: We have one up at the top of PG, and a clump of three small ones at PRG

You may have noticed our big new plant at the top of PG recently, and I blogged about how we got it from Craigslist and planted it too, which was a huge job. Why all the fuss? Well, for one it was hard work for the team and that deserves a mention, but it was worth it because this plant is unusual, and usually very expensive to get in a large size.

Long included in the Agave family (Agavaceae) this genus is now considered to be in the Nolinaceae family with Nolina and Beaucarnea. We have another in the same genus - D. wheeleri - in the garden too.

The name for the genus Dasylirion comes from the Greek words 'dasys', which means "dense" , "rough" or "shaggy" and 'lirion' meaning "lily" because of the long, rough leaves. However, D. longissimum doesn't have rough leaves. They're amazing - blue-green in color, 4-6' long, fairly stiff but not rigid, and smooth, with a point at the end. They radiate out from the core symmetrically, and the effect is like a giant koosh ball or a fiber optic lamp.

Show off that trunk!
Eventually (over decades) the plant will grow a woody trunk and the whole thing can get to 12' tall. In order to show off the trunk (and make it look longer) older, bottom leaves can be trimmed off to expose the trunk. Lots of ones for sale are trimmed so hard that no leaves are left on with an angle of less than about 60 degrees. It looks pretty unnatural but the plant appears older so probably commands more money.

The name for this plant in reference books has gone back and forth between Dasylirion longissimum and D. quadrangulatum. The reference books say D. longissimum is right, but other sources say it should be D. quadrangulatum. Either way, the name is as long as the leaves on this amazing plant!

We have a Dasylirion longissimum at PRG too, but this one was a much smaller plant when it arrived. Then it suffered damage by being crushed by someone, and I thought it would die. Nope, it grew back with multiple heads. It looks very scruffy, but perhaps one day it will recover fully and be as outstanding as the one at PG.

 
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