From yet another vining caudiciform, this time in the Afrfican Violet family.
Sinningia tubiflora
These are pretty easy to take care of, grow caudexes readily from stem cuttings (very rare in the caudiciform world), will root in water (very rare in the succulent world), and drop and grow new leaves with less or more water – a beginner’s caudiciform!
Spectacular white tubular flowers with flared petals.
The big event in Jackson takes place today, so get to the airport and fly in to Memphis and get over to Jackson before the day is over.
Memphis-area gardeners… flock to Summer Celebration at the University of Tennessee’s West Tennessee Research and Education Center to hear speakers, see tough plants that thrive in the heat and buy a few to take home.
Sedums can stand the heat, so they don’t have to get out of the kitchen. This unusual display, done with donated items, is a focal point of the event.
Carol Reese/Special to The Commercial Appeal
Those sedums sure do look delicious in muffin pans. But they’re not.
And if you click through to the article, you’ll also see some very large succulent planters – they used old satellite dishes as containers. That’s what we should have done when we moved in to the old satellite dish farm in Berkeley – planted them up!
From the St. Peter (MN) Press comes this tale of cactus in a northern climate.
These yellow-pear cactus plants, which is growing strong at the Steve and Natasha Pettis residence on the 200 block of West Elm Street, are thriving in the early-summer heat as they have displayed a full bloom of yellow flowers.
I love local newspapers. That baby doesn’t seem to be all that thrilled with the cactus patch.
I’ve avoided using any of the many fine recent quotes from Gov. Sanford of SC, and Gov. Palin of AK, until today.
“I think on a national level your department of law there in the White House would look at some of the things that we’ve been charged with and automatically throw them out,” (Palin) said.
GQ seems to think the way to impress a woman on a first date is to show off your knowledge of succulents. No, really, that’s what they say right here, in the UK edition:
Imagine my relief then this weekend to discover the perfect location for a first date…. If you’re stuck for somewhere to take her, I bid you, then take her here: the Chelsea Physic Gardens… it’s a surprisingly large secret garden hidden away at the back of the Kings Road. On a sunny day, you can… wander the hedged isles for an hour or two, impressing her with your knowledge of Mediterranean succulents and soil density.
That’s gotta be some of the strangest first date advice I’ve ever posted right here on cactus blog. But then, I’m working overtime here getting the best date advice for all our readers near Chelsea. I wonder if it’s too far for a first date if you’re from Willingham? What about if you live all the way out in Popshire?
Perennial caudiciform succulent, or as we like to say, a small caudex with finger-like branches and white blooms on the ends every one of those branches.
This one is particularly wild. Most are a bit more together than this.
Flippin Flapjacks (Kalanchoe thyrsiflora) are among the succulents in the Dr. Seuss Garden at the Marin County Fair. (Provided by Forest and Kim Starr)
Coreopsis gigantea a large treelike shrub whose clusters of large, yellow flower heads have been called ‘daisies on steroids.’ (Provided by Stan Stebs)
That’s a very strange photo of the coreopsis to use, what with the caption talking about the large daisy flowers and the picture showing all the dead blooms. Someone should deadhead them. But we do like us some C. gigantea, the California native version of the common midwestern perennial. It’s originally from the Channel Islands, but has spread along the Southern California coast. It’s a good choice for a “Dr. Seuss Garden” since everyone around here calls it the Dr. Seuss plant.
From Austin (TX), home of the Austin Jaspers semi-pro basketball team in the Texas Grass League, comes a nice concise set of instructions for growing cactus from seed.
I wonder if Hap will agree with their instructions?
It’s a good idea to process the fruit outdoors. Slit the top across but not completely off. Cut parallel incisions into the skin lengthwise, taking care not to cut into the flesh, then pry apart the skin and reach fingers in to pull out the fruit. Photo, 2001, by Catherine Yoshii
That picture is the key to the whole operation – it really explains it all. Now if they would just do an article about mangos.
Casa Tina in Dunedin, FL serves cactus, and the review from the Examiner is not good.
Ensalada de Nopalitos, the cactus salad, is supposed to be more characteristics of Mexico than any other salad. In this cactus salad, the ingredients were sacrificed. Dunedin, a town known for its Farmers’ Market, it was disappointing to see and taste canned cactus spears on my cactus salad. The flavors of the tin metal can were spread all through out the salad. Cactus paddles laid flat on unwashed leaf lettuce. They could have been crisp tender or even served tender and hot. I would not have even prepared that sort of low quality salad at home. It was valueless.
Oy, I haven’t read a review that bad since Bill O’Reilly read Senator Franken’s “Lies and the Lying Liars”.
There are a bunch of subspecies of this little yellow-flowered plant. I don’t know which one this is, but we’ve also had some with white spines.
So for the past few days I’ve been mentioning how natural variation is a good thing, and we don’t need to give all variants their own cultivar names. But in this case there are more differences, so one would use the subspecies designation. If I knew which one this was, I would use the ssp. name. That’s just common sense, in a botanical sort of way.
Succulents can help you avoid the inevitable late-summer garden battle
A garden of succulents is created in a strawberry jar from Valley View Farms in Hunt Valley. The plants are a good way of approaching the area’s long, hot summer. (Baltimore Sun photo: Susan Reimer / June 15, 2009)
I had no idea that was as true in Maryland as it is in the Bay Area. So you could learn a thing or two from the good people who bring you crab cakes, for instance:
1. Plan Ahead when gardening so that you don’t have a bunch of dead plants at the end of the summer.
2. Plant Pretty Succulents in strawberry pots for wonderful and beautiful effects that can be enjoyed indoor and outdoor year-round.
3. Did I mention that succulents can help you with items 1 and 2 above?
At the intersection of marijuana and cactus one can get hurt. Out of Florida comes the crime report.
An undocumented alien jumped out a window and escaped during a raid Tuesday night on a marijuana grow house in Levy County…. Task force members said Lopez was… in his bare feet when he was last seen… running across a field dotted with prickly pear cactus plants.
These small cacti can get as big as 2 to 3 inches! Totally amazing, if you ask me. Usually the flowers are more red than this, but as we know from our discussions over the past few days, I’m a big fan of….
Natural Variation! Yay!
Also, the contrast in the dark stems with the white spine color is very striking even when it’s not in bloom. You do have to look beyond the brightly colored flowers when they’re open to see the small cactus lurking behind it, though.
Did I mention that the genus was named after a 19th century French cactus dealer by the name of Pierre Rebut? Well, since it’s rebutia season, I thought you should know. Oddly, it was grouped and named by a German botanist, Karl Moritz Schumann from Görlitz.
Science!
Rebutias are very popular because not only are the flowers brightly colored and quite large compared to the tiny plant, but there are a lot of them all spring and summer long (depending on the species.)
They’ve planted some Opuntia fragilis in a parking strip up in Washington.
Volunteer Janet Mullen shows where a third cactus bloom is starting among the collection of Sequim cactus in the planter strip outside the Sequim-Dungeness Valley Chamber of Commerce Visitor Center, 1192 E. Washington St. Photos by Brian Gawley.
If you click through the link you’ll get to see a close-up of the cactus and the flower. I’ve never seen such a large patch of O. fragilis. Usually they’re tiny scraggly bits and pieces with dead spots and weeds; really just a horrible nasty mess. Although we do sell some wonderful little pots of the stuff at the nursery. Anyway, clearly that doesn’t apply to this patch. It appears to be lovingly tended.
From the Telegraph, an article that will set your hair on fire.
Aeonium ‘Zwartkop’ has rich, polished dark purple foliage and will tolerate near zero temperatures. Photo: Timber Press
You know, at first that didn’t make sense, since Aeoniums are from the Canary Islands and they really can’t get down as low as 0° F and then of course I realized they were talking C! And then all the advice is right after all! Yay!
On the other hand, this photo credit for the publishing company is rather limited in its generousness. I’ve looked through our Timber Press books and I can’t find the picture, so I can’t give you a better photo credit. If anyone knows the photographer, let them know we are borrowing their photo from the Telegraph without proper credit.
Here we have an attempt at a photographic study of the natural color variation of the flowers for the small cactus Echinopsis chamaecereus, also known as the peanut cactus. The stems also vary quite a bit, but that’s for another day.
I know a lot of cactus growers maintain stocks of named varieties of this plant and some call it other species entirely. But you know, I like this for its natural variation, and insist that it is all one plant.
On the other hand, the photographing of the shift from orange to red in these 3 photos was a tough order, so maybe you can’t even tell what I’m talking about. So on to the pictures!
I love these tiny cacti with the big sherbert flowers that hold off until the late afternoon heat. Rebutias in general are very small plants, and this is the smallest of them. No more than an inch or so. But then they are a variable species, so over the years they have been given many names.