Far Out Flora

Gardening in the Outerlands of San Francisco

Dead Heading the Echium wildpretii

July 6, 2011 by Matti | 14 Comments

Echium wildpretii

The Echium wildpretii, aka the Tower of Jewels, is one of the coolest plants we’ve grown in the garden. Can’t say for certain, but believe we planted it back in Jan 2010. You can see an old skool picture of it from a post a year and a half ago (1st pic, left hand side).

Echium wildpretii

Echium wildpretii is a biennial monocarpic plant native to the Canary Islands. We started ours from a four inch pot. During the first year it forms a short 2-3 foot stalk of leaves in a rosette pattern. Below is our baby with about a years worth of development.

Echium wildpretii

During its second season of spring growth, it starts to pop out one massive flower which can reach 3-9 feet tall. Our flower spike lurked out last March. The next couple of pics show its progress.

Echium wildpretii

April 2: the excitement builds and it bloomed in time for April’s Bloom Day.

Echium wildpretii

Three weeks later, a flush of flowers began filling in…and two more small flower spikes shot out from the bottom of the stem.

Echium wildpretii

Just a week later, the budding was nearly complete. I would have to call May 7 the day it peaked (see 1st pic).

Echium wildpretii

…3 more weeks and this puppy was about spent. Well, it’s monocarpic thus it’s not coming back so…it was time to dead head it.

Echium wildpretii

We are surprised how well it did in a container. We thought for certain that the roots would be bolting out the bottom of the wooden box it was planted it in. Turned out that everything was well contained inside the planter.

The balancing act

The balancing act

Oh, here’s a tip if you want to balance an Echium wildpretii on your head. The freshly cut stem was super slimy. So instead of resting it on your chin where it easily slips off…try balancing it on your lower set of teeth.

Final resting home

Final resting home

Today, he’s resting against the fence, pining for the fjords. There’s a ton of pin head sized seeds attached to the flower stalk. We’re gonna try collecting some seeds to see if we can get any of them to germinate. Any suggestions how long we need to let those seeds sit before trying to sow them?

– Far Out Flora

Ripping Out Spring

July 1, 2011 by Megan | 13 Comments

Papaver 'Drama Queen' alive

Word on the street is that it’s officially summer. Ummm, it rained a couple days ago. That shouldn’t happen this time of the year in our parts. So far the fog hasn’t been too bad, but it’s not August yet. Above is sweet innocent ‘Drama Queen’ maybe a day before I ripped it out. I think it knew it’s time was coming. It suddenly put on the best flower show ever in an effort to woo me from killing it.

Compost heaven

It didn’t work. Look, I’m not even sad about stuffing it in the compost bin. When I pulled it out not a lot of root action was going on.  There was a gopher attack on Papaver ‘Greek’ right next to it and I think that it hit her, too. That might explain the sudden floppiness. Next year I want to give Papaver hybridum ‘Black Swan’ a shot.

Bright light, bright light!

This is the sketchy super sunny “after” shot. I’m giving three dark leaved Dahlias a shot. Everyone told me they’ll get powdery mildew being in the foggiest part of town, but I want to see which of the three holds up best out here in the outerlands. So far so good. I probably planted them too close together, and now I’m a little worried it’s not sunny enough. We’ll see what happens. That sad looking guy in the pot is Dianthus superbus ssp. speciosus (it was getting smooshed by the queen). Oh yeah, those sticks are puppy plant guards. The neighbor’s dog likes to mess with newly planted plants.

The three test subjects are:
Dahlia coccinea‘Orange Hybrids’

Dahlia ‘Dark Side of the Sun’
Dahlia x hybrida ‘Bishop’s Children’

Here’s a shot before I ripped out ‘Barry Dare’. Can’t say this was the best sweet pea choice I’ve ever made. I now know that I like the smaller leaved, old school sorts like ‘Cupani’ (best sweet pea ever) more. Barry had powdery mildew issues, and it’s flowers were more of a deep hot pink than red. Keep an eye out for the coolest new sweet pea ever from Annie’s next spring (I forget it’s name, but it looks like a purpley blue watercolor and smells great).

Matti and the Tropaeolum tuberosum

Matti and I had our eye on this nasturtium vine thing at Flora Grubb a few weeks ago, and then like magic it turned up in the loser (free for Matti) plant pile! After a little clean up Matti planted in the sweet pea spot.

Tropaeolum tuberosum

It sounds like Tropaeolum tuberosum (Mashua) can go crazy and take over the world, but we’re willing to take the risk. It’s tuberous roots are edible, and have been shown to reduce testosterone levels in rats in tests. If we end up hating it, we can always dig it up and eat it. It’s native to the Andes. I’m excited to see it in flower.

New plant excitement!

A week ago I posted about wanting Salvia africana-lutea.  Matti brought one home for me! Hope everyone has an awesome 4th of July weekend! We’ve got all kinds of gardeny projects planned.