Recently I was consulted regarding a very sick rose bush. So the plant doctor took off to investigate the rose in distress, which turned out to be growing in a pot, in a rather shady area. That was red flag number one, as roses really do best in a sunny location. And this also means it needs more water. And …
Read More »Gardening
The Cup-of-Gold Vine is Bloom
This is the perfect time of the year to slow down, no, stand still and smell the stunningly beautiful buttery yellow “Cup-of-Gold-Vine”, also known as “Golden Chalice Vine”, and in Hawaii called “Hawaiian Lily”. Its Latin name is Solandra maxima (named after the Swedish botanist Daniel C. Solander) and it belongs in the nightshade family, Solanaceae, which also tells us …
Read More »Follow That Flower
Northwest Baja, along with southern California, offer one of the best climates for growing many orchids outdoors, especially near the coast. According to the San Diego Orchid society (I used to be a member for many years) there are more than 150 different orchid species that can grow outdoors. Here is one of the easiest for our Baja weather: Cymbidiums …
Read More »Follow that Flower
Now that the holiday season is behind us and a new fresh year is almost upon us, there are many holiday ‘remnants’ still growing and blooming. I am thinking of the beautiful new Poinsettia varieties that we were treated to this season, as well as the Christmas cactus, cyclamen, azaleas, orchids, and mums. Usually at this time of the year, …
Read More »Follow that Flower
The San Pedro cactus (Echinopsis pachanoi, alsoknown as Trichocereus pachanoi), is a columnar, ornamental cactus, native to the Andes Mountains and found in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Mexico and Peru. It has been used for traditional and veterinary medicine, for healing as well as religious divination in the Andes Mountains region for over 3,000 years! Here in Baja, it seems …
Read More »Follow that Flower
I really need a bumper sticker on my car that says: “Warning! I brake for exotic tropical trees” and that is exactly what I did a few weeks ago while driving with my friend Sue (a fellow horticulturist) through southern Ensenada. And there she was, how could I miss her? I had to stop and take a photo: the African …
Read More »Tomatoes for Spiritual Growth
When I pause to think about it, it was tomatoes that did it to me, really. That first bite of a vine-ripened-fresh-from-the-plantright-outside-the-front-door-onto-the-plate-tomato –it hooked me, caught me, captured me and coaxed me into becoming a gardener myself. “You mean this is what a tomato really tastes like?” I remember saying out loud, to no one in particular. “I never knew.” …
Read More »Incredible Edible Flower Petals For Your Summer Picnic
An authentic Mexican pottery salad bowl full of fresh gourmet lettuce, garnished with colorful flower petals makes a stunning summer picnic offering. Several herbs and flowers can be used to dress up a variety of salads, drinks and other dishes for special occasions. The colorful petals of edible flowers will transform any ordinary salad into a feast for the palate …
Read More »Get to know this flower
One of the most visible vines in southern California and all over Baja is the gorgeous bougainvillea (Bougainvillea spectabilis or Bougainvillea brasiliensis). This flowering beauty is native to South America. Its name was given in honor of Louis Antoine de Bougainville, a French Naval admiral, who in 1768 began his long journey to the Pacific Ocean and discovered the vine …
Read More »