The night before our visit to the
UC Santa Cruz Arboretum and Botanic Garden, we stayed at the Seacliff Inn, in Aptos, just 10 miles away (I want to say south, but the way the coast bends it actually ends up being east). Anyway, there were tree ferns...
I thought this meant I'd be seeing them at the UC Santa Cruz Botanic Garden. Nope. Not a single one. Dicksonia antarctica (which I think these are?) are from Australia, and there's an entire
Australian section at the garden. Curious.
Also at the hotel, mounted staghorns under a roof overhang in the outdoor dining area. At a distance I thought they looked fabulous.
Up close I realized they were fake.
To the garden now, and the area designated as the Succulent Garden...agaves, and aloes and yucca... oh my!
This area was very light on identification signage, which was fine. It was kind nice to just enjoy the plants without cataloguing their names.
A Dasylirion maybe? Perhaps D. wheeleri?
A gnarly old Kumara plicatilis (aka Aloe plicatilis).
Agave victoriae-reginae
Agave shawii
Agave macroacantha
From the Succulent Garden we could see the Future Garden exhibit. We didn't venture any closer since I wasn't sure this part of the garden was open, and I wanted to spend the time we had looking at plants, not worrying about the future.
Looking out at the ocean...
Blooming Mangave? Agave? Not sure.
Another Kumara plicatilis.
Venturing into the New Zealand Garden now...
Rhopalostylis sapida, I believe. The only palm native to mainland New Zealand.
Cordyline, with the remnants of a phormium bloom coming in from the right side.
Astelia! This was interesting, seeing them so overgrown and grass-like.
Interesting happenings off in the distance...
Suncatchers, by John Hylton (
more info here).
Colorful cordylines in the distance.
And I'm wrapping up this week-long series with another suncatcher, or maybe sunbather is a better term?
I've long wanted to visit the UC Santa Cruz Arboretum and Botanic Garden and I'm so happy to have finally had the opportunity.
The Bit at the EndEnjoy this delicious blog post (from Panayoti Kelaidis director of outreach at the Denver Botanic Garden) chronicling Jon Kaplan's Berkeley, CA, garden;
here. I have not been, but hope to visit sometime soon. If you've visited Dan Hinkley's Windcliff booth at Hortlandia the last couple of years then you may have met Jon, as he's driven up to help Dan sell plants.
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Ah, this is so nice. I love the sloping hill. Good point about tree ferns, wouldn't that be a great addition? I laughed at your phony baloney staghorns. Went from beautiful to dumb in 2 seconds! I'm off to read Prairiebreak's post.
ReplyDeleteReal tree ferns and fake staghorns, from fabulous to pathetic at the same place...
DeleteLove that photo of the beach! So many colorful plants. Love the tree ferns even if they weren’t the Australian Garden. The aloes, agaves, yuccas, costliness were amazing, and in January? Thanks for the tour!
ReplyDeleteJanuary in Santa Cruz is the place to be!
DeleteNo tree ferns at UCSCBG, wow, I had never noticed that before either. I wonder why?
ReplyDeleteThe succulent garden looks better than I remember. They must have been putting more work into it than in the past.
"Looking at plants, not worrying about the future," that cracked me up!
The succulent garden was fabulous, very well tended.
DeleteI got to briefly see Jon Kaplan's garden a couple years ago. I remember he had a flat of Oxalis palmifrons that I was smitten with. Sadly, we didn't get to see more, another casualty of the monomaniacal manzanita hunt that also ended up derailing my opportunity to see Marcia's place. Let that be a warning: don't be monomaniacal folks!
ReplyDeleteI can't imagine a brief visit to Jon's garden, I would definitely need time to soak it all up.
DeleteI just checked out Prairiebreak's post on Jon Kaplan. OMG! Jon propagates the Oxalis palmifrons! So much has already changed since I was there. Wow!
ReplyDeleteWeren't those Oxalis palmifrons sexy!?
DeleteI can't get over the tree-like cordyline or for that matter, the phormium bloom.
ReplyDeleteI keep thinking of phormiums all over Seattle barely surviving our cold and wet winters... what a life they would enjoy in So. Cal.
Love that gnarly old Kumara plicatilis!
Chavli
I've seen phormium blooms here in Portland, and at the beach... I bet there are some warm pockets with blooms up in the Seattle area. But ya, nothing like the ones in Southern California.
DeleteThanks so much for sharing your plant adventure!
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome!
DeleteWhat a lovely place to be! I love geodomes!
ReplyDeleteLovely indeed.
DeleteThe UCSC Arboretum is SO impressive! I can't believe I've never visited.
ReplyDelete