Showing posts with label Echium fastuosum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Echium fastuosum. Show all posts

Sunday, January 20, 2013

From the Freeze, Into the Fog

With seven straight days experiencing lows solidly in the low 20s (-5 to -6 C), this past week marked the coldest weather we've seen in two years.  The good news is I don't think anything important died.  Of course it is important to remember plants are precariously capable of playing dead when they are alive as well as playing alive when they are really dead.


This Tasmanian tree fern (Dicksonia antarctica) looks like it will survive just fine even though the newer fronds were killed by the frost.  The all-important superterranean rhizomatous trunk was well-protected.

Dicksonia antarctica
This Abutilon 'Tiger Eye' has a small amount leaf burn but is looking incredible given the fact that it's January.

Abutilon 'Tiger Eye'
I wish I would have taken a picture of this Arum italicum when it was 21 degrees outside.  The leaves were shriveled and lying so flat they looked as if they were painted on the ground.  I was sure I wouldn't be seeing this plant again until the spring.  But now that the frost has passed, the leaves have sprung back to life!

Arum italicum 'White Winter'
How many Echium fastuosums are in this picture?  There are - or at least were - two.  One is alive, the other is probably dead.  I put a canvas blanket over the echium on the right (not for the echium's sake, but for the sake of the agaves & palms next to it).  It's probably for the best - the dead one was going to take over the pathway anyway.

Echium fastuosum
Of the three species of hardy scheffleras that went through this week of frost (S. Taiwaniana, S. delavayi & S. brevipedunculata), none of them suffered even the slightest bit of damage.

Schefflera brevipedunculata
This pink jasmine vine (Jasminum polyanthum) shows absolutely no damage.  It was protected by an overhang but was also in a pot so I think those cancel each other out.

Jasminum polyanthum
Can't winter in Seattle be beautiful, in an ugly sort of way?

Tetrapanax papyrifer

Monday, January 7, 2013

Mingled With Grief

While the cold & wet winter weather might be completely miserable for us warm-blooded humans, there are plenty of plants that seem to take a real liking to the torment.  Even in the darkest and coldest of months, signs of life are everywhere.

Hellebore hybrid blooming on January 7th, 2013
Broccoli planted in late-July is now ready to start eating.  Come March, it will start producing delectably delicious new shoots which are about as exquisite as vegetables can get.

Broccoli
Raindrops on snowdrops...already!

Galanthus nivalis
Me and this Abutilon 'Tiger Eye' have been through a lot together.  I bought it as a tiny little fellow a couple of years ago.  Immediately after being planted it shot into rapid growth.  When I dug it up to transplant somewhere more appropriate, the whole thing split in half.  I essentially grafted it back together and found a nice spot for it under an empress tree.  The wound has now completely healed and it is starting to become almost tree-like.  While I'm not completely sure of its hardiness, I can say it sailed through a few freezing nights with lows down to 22 degrees and daytime highs not much above freezing.  Here is what the flowers look like when it is in bloom.

Abutilon 'Tiger Eye'
And finally, a word to the wise, never plant an echium right next to an agave.  The echium will eventually shade out the agave, and you're not going to have the heart to prune the echium or attempt to move the agave.

Agave parryi var. huachucensis being crowded out by Echium fastuosum