Monday, October 31, 2011

A spiky (spooky) Halloween to you!

These cute little ghosts were hanging out on the spiky tips of my brother Darin's Agaves and Yuccas, I guess with 5 yr old in the house these things happen. I was quite surprised at all the Halloween ghosts and goblins I saw in front yards around Phoenix. I don’t know why, after all they aren’t as odd as the Santa, Snowmen and other assorted Christmas décor that I’ve seen all over town on visits in years past (Santa standing next to a Barrel Cactus and huge Agave is just a little odd...). A common story I heard whenever talking with a gardener or nurseryman on our trip was how horrible last winter was, cold temperatures lasting for days did a number on many plants in Arizona and New Mexico. My brother had suffered as well, loosing several of the plants he first put in the ground 11 years ago when he moved to Arizona. I was prepared for the worst when I finally got to see his garden, but was actually pleasantly surprised. It looked good! Here is an illustration of the frost damage, dead tissue, on the growing tips of this Cactus (I think it’s an Organ Pipe). However the plant has overcome adversity and pushed out all sorts of new growth and even some blooms. Notice the empty spot in the middle of this clump of Agave desmettiana? There was a large plant there, it froze and died last winter but managed to protect the pups all around its base, they've thrived in the summer heat. After the cold winter and several battles with the snout-nosed Agave weevil I feared his Agaves would be gone, but actually quite a few survived, although most of the larger ones were destroyed by the evil weevil. While you are looking at these pictures think about this…he hasn’t watered at all this summer. Zero, zilch. Of course there were monsoon rains in August but other than that this garden has weathered temperatures in the 100’s for days on end and looks this good. I should also mention his lack of watering isn’t to test (or stress) the plants but rather a lack of an irrigation system and no free time to water, and of course most of the plants are established. NO water isn’t ideal, but I thought it was impressive to think that it could look this good. To think this Dasylirion is so happy here and yet I have several in my garden who have received many times the water and not seen the heat that this one has, remarkable plant! I think this one is probably happier than mine. This palm was just a tiny seedling when he moved in, look at it now… And check out its teeth! These are as scary as the edges of any Agave leaf… Did you know that when you garden in the desert and buy a large established Saguaro they mark on the container which side of the plant has been facing south? That way it gets the same sun orientation when you plant it in your garden as it’s grown up with. My brother got the direction of this Saguaro just about right…it has a slight twist to it about half way up as it attempted to adjust to its new home. Such beautiful patterns! Darin is a Gumby fan from way back and when we were kids my parents owned a saw shop…hence his chain-saw carved Gumby. How many desert gardens feature chain saw art? Not many I’m guessing. Closer to what one would expect to see in Phoenix is this Saguaro skeleton. The clay piece on the left is a light fixture…at night the Geckos congregate above it. This is my brothers “plant maintenance facility” he dug these Agave pups ages ago and parked them under the grapefruit tree to plant them up later, here they sit… etiolated but alive. Try that with some wimpy garden plant! Agaves…tough. Their only enemy (besides the evil weevil)…too much water, not a problem here. Ending on a sad note…the grapefruit were not yet ready to be eaten. I have memories of past visits when I could stroll out into the back garden and pick my breakfast; I was hoping to be able to relive the moment. Ah well, maybe next time.

14 comments:

  1. You chose right time to be in Phoenix! We could use some sun here in the PNW now! Your brother has such an interesting garden with many beautiful plants. And those plants are strong! I love desert plants and always go for long walks to enjoy them when I am in Phoenix visiting my mother-in-law and sister-in-law. Have a great Halloween! I hope those cute ghosts put on some sunscreen!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Cool post - I also see some cacti, yuccas, etc done that way in Abq. Perhaps spiky plants runs in your family genetics? Hmmm...

    The scenes at his place or nearby are very nice. Their bougainvilleas...to have those here!

    ReplyDelete
  3. that is such a wonderful garden. Arizona really is a magical place! the saguaro cactus has such an awe inspiring presence. it is too bad about that grapefruit because fresh citrus from the tree is the best!!!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sooo...flirting with danger runs in the family. I usually hate cutesy decorations on stately plants, but from a distance the little ghosts look like they are floating on air, as all good ghosts should. Happy Halloween!

    ReplyDelete
  5. I really like that Saguaro skeleton. I have never seen anything like that before, cool.

    The rest of the garden is the polar (excuse the pun) opposite of my green, soggy Scottish garden!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Your brother has a beautiful garden. The talent obviously runs in the family.

    Just occurred to me seeing the ghosts on the Yucca that pink yard flamingos need costumes, too. :)

    A spiky Halloween back at you!

    ReplyDelete
  7. Tatyana, hi! Great to hear from you. I had forgotten that you had relatives in Phoenix. It is such a beautiful exotic place. Hope your Halloween is suitably scary!

    DD, I wonder...so far my brother and I are the only ones. Maybe if we trace things back far enough will run into some early desert pioneers? All photos are his place...I too love the Bougainvilleas, so exotic!

    Louis, isn't it? And his grapefruit are magically sweet, not just sour.

    ricki, there were plenty of cutesy around town let me tell you. For a moment I was regretting not photographing more but then again I don't really like most of it so why should I? (hope you are doing something fun tonight).

    Adam, that skeleton is very cool huh? It's actually woody, I had no idea!

    Hoover, oh have fun with that! Hope to see pictures. Enjoy the night!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Oh, to be able to grow citrus!

    ReplyDelete
  9. The picture of the impaled ghosties on the yucca remind me of my neighbor. Every year about this time he goes out and trims the tips off of his yuccas so the trick or treaters to not get poked heading to his front door.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Hi Loree,
    Happy Halloween!
    I love the ghosts. I'm doing the ghost idea for my agaves and yuccas next year! LOL
    And the old wheel barrow filled with agaves...I should have done this long ago. I love it.
    BTW: That's the most Dangerous garden I've ever seen...the SPIKE O METER is off the charts. Could it have even more spikes than your Danger Garden?
    David/ :-)

    ReplyDelete
  11. Heather, I know!

    Les, seems like he's approaching it all backwards! A little Halloween spike in the backside would make a great scare I think.

    David, oh now you've gotten me wishing I would have counted his spikes! He definitely wins for in-the-ground spikes, but if I can count my containers then I think I would win.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Fun post, Loree. And interesting about the new-garden Saguaro positioning...who'd a thunk? So nice you have family members such in cool gardening locales and just think of the water they save (a lesson for Portland?) The lighting in all these photos has me wishing for a desert sojourn, too.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Your brother has a gorgeous collection of plants Loree! Looks like 'Danger' runs in the family :)

    ReplyDelete
  14. What an interesting post, and that saguaro skeleton against the turquoise door is WAY COOL. I want it!

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for taking the time to comment. Comment moderation is on (because you know: spam), I will approve and post your comment as soon as possible!