I had left over bean fern and rocks so the experimenting continued! You might remember the hanging terracotta container I tried planting up with moss and other epiphytes (post here). Well, over the summer it failed miserably (too dry, squirrels or birds picking at the moss and the plants) so I took it apart and found homes for the plants that were still alive and now it's another Lemmaphyllum microphyllum and rocks planter...
Instead of using potting mix I filled the voids with a rock/bark/clay orb substrate a friend uses to grow his tillandsia (I inherited some of it when he gave me a bunch of tillandsia). Since I'd already plugged the drain hole, it holds water, which slowly leaches out through the terracotta. I'm hoping long-term the surface will start to moss up.
The last of the Lemmaphyllum microphyllum (with a little bit of soil, and more moss) went into this hollow split bamboo segment I found on the beach.
I love this easy going fern so much!
The final project today involves tillandsia, one I already had and some that I got from that generous friend, and a piece of cryptanthus. Since all these plants are moving indoors for the next 6 or so months, I've been scheming on where to put them and decided to make a wall hanging to go above the bed. I love how it turned out, but Andrew declared it was creepy. Whatever.
I feel a little bad on the sunny days, that these plants are now indoor prisoners. But when the view out that window turns cold, wet, and windy they're happier inside.
If you're wondering about the low-light situation this group will move down to the brighter "basement garden" when I decorate for Christmas and the tinsel wreath goes up, so it's only temporary.
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I love moss, too. I lose my mind how it's everywhere when I visit Portland during winter months - how could I have taken that for granted? Lemmaphyllum microphyllum is really cute, the bamboo holder was a good idea! Creepy? Nah. Anyone who has a garden basement is a total winner in my book!
ReplyDeleteWell the garden basement is in full swing now...it's amazing even me how many plants I've brought in and socked away for the winter.
DeleteYour bean fern is so cute! I especially like it in the bamboo split. Did Andrew tell you what he feels makes the Tillandsia-Cryptanthus combination "creepy"? It seems quite stylish to me. Best wishes with the great migration.
ReplyDeleteHe didn't, I imagine there's some idea that it will come off the wall and he'll wake up with Tillandsia in his face...
DeleteIt would be so nice to fall asleep and to wake up to the Tillandsia wall hanging. Not at all creepy!
ReplyDeleteThank you!
DeleteI like the asymmetry of the air plant display. Like a rooster leaning down to take a drink from a stream passing below. And, a Lemmaphylum cannoli!
ReplyDeleteHa! I still have never had cannoli.
DeleteCreepy? If so, then it's perfect for Halloween!
ReplyDeleteThe lava rocks are a lovely gift, Tamara has a generous soul. I hope this works better than the nylon stocking experiment, the natural, porous elements bode well for retaining moisture.
Chavli
You are correct, she does. And yes, Halloween! That's how I should have framed it. It's Halloween decor!
DeleteI like what you did with the Tillandsia over the bed. It's an interesting piece of wall sculpture. The Lemmaphylum doesn't really look like a fern. Will look forward to updates on how they do in the tufa. There's a huge tufa seam close by to where I live. It's excellent for rock/alpine containers too.
ReplyDeleteI first read that as "tufa stream"... how interesting!
DeleteThat was my question with the low light. I love it. It looks like feathers to me. I am amazed that Lemmaphyllum microphyllum is a fern!
ReplyDeleteDid you see the fertile "fronds" (which are not very frondy) in the first hanging terracotta planter pic? That's really the only ferny thing about it in my eyes.
DeleteOh, yes! I went back and looked, and sure enough, the "fronds" are there. So interesting!
DeleteAndrew is wrong.
ReplyDeleteWouldn't be the first time...
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