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jeffreyeric

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So far jeffreyeric has created 151 blog entries.
23 01, 2025

Ericas for Mild-Winter Summer-Dry Climates

2025-01-23T10:45:58-08:00Categories: Blog|Garden Plants>shrubs|Climate|Nora Harlow|Tags: |

So, your summers are reliably dry, warm to hot, and sometimes, if only briefly, scorching. Your winters are usually wet and chilly but sometimes, briefly, icy cold. Years of drought and winter downpours both are common. Your soil is partly or mostly clay. Can you grow ericas? The short answer is maybe. Ericas from South Africa in the Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens, Mendocino County, California Ericas are native to a long but fairly narrow band from Norway south to Portugal, Spain, and northern Morocco, east to Turkey and Lebanon, and south to the southernmost tip of Africa.

23 01, 2025

x Chiranthomontodendron lenzii: What’s in a Name?

2025-01-23T10:44:25-08:00Categories: Blog|Garden Plants>trees|Garden Plants>shrubs|Nora Harlow|Tags: |

It’s a mouthful. x Chiranthomontodendron lenzii, the hybrid monkey hand tree, is the result of an intergeneric cross between the Mexican monkey hand tree, Chiranthodendron pentadactylon, native to Guatemala and adjacent parts of Mexico, and the flannelbush cultivar Fremontodendron ‘Pacific Sunset’. The latter is itself a cross between F. californicum, native primarily to California, and F. mexicanum, native to northern Baja California and adjacent parts of San Diego County. Distinctive flowers and leaves of x Chiranthomontodendron lenzii, hybrid monkey hand tree As are its parents, the hybrid monkey hand tree is best known for its distinctive flowers,

23 01, 2025

Ceanothus ‘Valley Violet’

2025-01-23T10:44:25-08:00Categories: Blog|Garden Plants>groundcovers|Garden Plants>California Native|Nora Harlow|Tags: |

If you are looking for a groundcover that blooms reliably and profusely in early spring, looks good year-round with no cutting back, needs little or no supplemental water, is dense enough to keep down weeds, and is generally ignored by deer, you can hardly do better than Ceanothus ‘Valley Violet’. Its only requirements seem to be good drainage and just the right amount of sun. Ceanothus maritimus ‘Valley Violet’ at the University of California, Davis, Arboretum This is a selection of Ceanothus maritimus, which is endemic to coastal hills and bluffs in San Luis Obispo County, California. The

23 01, 2025

Salvia x ‘Bee’s Bliss’

2025-01-23T10:44:25-08:00Categories: Blog|Garden Plants>groundcovers|Nora Harlow|subshrubs|Tags: |

The groundcover salvia known as ‘Bee’s Bliss’ has been popular with gardeners and nursery professionals almost since its introduction in 1989 -- and for good reason. With so many excellent salvias in the trade today, there are others that are more powerfully scented or more conspicuously floriferous but few are as accommodating, reliable, and inherently useful in the mostly summer-dry garden. Salvia 'Bee's Bliss' This cultivar was discovered at the University of California Botanical Garden in Berkeley and is believed to be a hybrid of Salvia leucophylla and S. sonomensis (or possibly S. clevelandii). ‘Bee’s Bliss’ stays

23 01, 2025

Hummingbird Sage

2025-01-23T10:44:25-08:00Categories: Blog|Garden Plants>perennials|Garden Plants>California Native|Nora Harlow|Tags: |

Blooming from early spring well into summer, hummingbird sage (Salvia spathacea) is an easy and adaptable plant for summer-dry climates. This low, slowly spreading sage accepts sun or shade, almost any reasonably drained soil, and moderate, occasional, or no summer watering. It is an especially good candidate for dry shade. Salvia spathacea in flower in the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden Hummingbird sage is endemic to central and southern California, commonly found in sunny or shaded spots among oak woodland, chaparral, and coastal sage scrub in foothills and valleys not far from the coast. Summer-dormant if grown dry,

23 01, 2025

Roses for Summer-Dry Climates

2025-01-23T10:44:25-08:00Categories: Blog|Water|Nora Harlow|roses|Tags: |

My grandmother, the wife of a southern California orange rancher, grew dozens of roses on a sizable plot set aside solely for this purpose and planted in grid formation like an orchard. I don’t know how much water she gave them, but in good water years, when the sluice gates were open for the citrus trees, I imagine she had access to plenty. In dry years, with the cash crop at risk, the roses likely received little or none. 'Madame Isaac Pereire', a fragrant, repeat-blooming, 19th century Bourbon rose Experienced gardeners know that many old roses can

23 01, 2025

The Chilean Puyas

2025-01-23T10:44:25-08:00Categories: Blog|Climate|Nora Harlow|Tags: |

Puyas (Puya species) typically are described as native to the Andes Mountains of South America and for the most part this is true. Almost all of the 200-plus species of spiny-leaved, rosette-forming puyas are found in moist to dry habitats at mid- to high elevations of the South American Andes. Puyas blend well with the textures and colors of many other summer-dry plants. Two puyas are native to the wet mountains of Costa Rica and the distribution of several others extends eastward into the rainforests of Brazil. Seven puyas are native primarily to low elevations of central

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