Tuesday, October 31, 2017

What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles?

There's a Lot of Color on the Central Coast in October


Over the weekend I walked to the mailbox a block away with my camera to see what was blooming in my neighborhood. I will share what I saw with you here.  I made sure to walk past the home of my favorite neighborhood gardener, and I wasn't disappointed. This bougainvillea's bright color immediately got my attention. At the very back you can almost see one of the pots containing a yellow pansy in bloom.

What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Bougainvillea in October, © B. Radisavljevic

I'm not familiar with the purple flowering shrub in the photo below. It's from the same yard. I do recognize the roses surrounding it and the white scabiosa (pincushion flower) in front of it. I'm also not sure of the red flowers next to the wall. Whatever their names, you have to admit this is a colorful arrangement of blooms at the end of October.


What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Part of my Neighbor's Flower Garden in Paso Robles


The next photo is just to the right of the photo above in the actual flowerbed. I can't make a positive identification of everything below. I believe most of the daisy-like flowers are gaillardias, asters, or African daisies. The flower hanging over the edge is a California poppy, which I was surprised to see in bloom. There is another rose bush on the extreme right.


What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
More of my Paso Robles Neighbor's Flower Garden


Are you convinced yet that one can have a colorful garden at the end of October? But there is more around the corner in the front flowerbed. That plant trying to take over is, I believe,  Lipstick Sage. Some sages will expand if given a chance. This appears to be one of them. It seems to be trying to smother the Jupiter's Beard to its right.

What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Lipstick Sage


Last but not least in this neighbor's side yard is this lavender-like sage plant. I'm not sure what variety it is.

What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Sage, variety unknown


Need Help Picking Seasonal Blooms


If you live in the West, there's no better all round gardening reference than this.


What's Blooming on the Rest of the Block


Shades of purple and yellow add a lot of color to fall gardens here. One of the light purple staples is society garlic, pictured below. It's not showy, but it's drought resistant and almost everyone who cares about that plants it. The small white sweet alyssum is a wonderful flowering ground cover to  fill in the bare places.

What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Sweet Alyssum and Society Garlic


Daylilies are a colorful addition to any garden. These are still blooming in my neighborhood. You see one tiny society garlic flower peeking out to the right.


What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Daylilies in October


Here's another garden with thriving roses. The roses usually keep blooming well into winter.

What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
A Neighbor's Rose Garden


Oleander is a favorite in my neighborhood. Several of us have it in our yards. One neighbor has several colors, including white, which I don't show here. We like it because it's drought resistant and blooms during from spring well into fall here. Read about oleander growth stages through the year.

All parts of the oleander plant are poisonous, but I've lived with it all my life and no one in any of the places I lived where this was in almost every yard ever died because they ate it. It doesn't seem to invite snacking. Parents tell their kids it's poison and for some reason they believe it about this plant.

What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Oleander


What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Oleander


Flowers Blooming in my Own Yard at the End of October


After seeing what my neighbors have, I have garden envy. My health hasn't enabled me to clear the leaves from the flowerbed that the gardener used to take care of. He quit for health reasons. About all I can do right now is photograph what's happening. I had hoped to put in some fall annuals, like pansies. First, though, I have to make space where the Lamb's Ears have taken over. I hope to be able to get back to the garden soon.

My roses in the back garden are still blooming. The red roses seem to be doing best. The yellow, coral, and white ones are also blooming. I think the roses aren't healthy, but I'm not an expert on roses and I'm not sure what to do about it. I didn't plant the garden. I usually only plant what I can take care of. The gardener kept it pruned in winter, but that's about all it gets but water.

What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Red Rose


Below are my scabiosa flowers. I begged for these when my neighbor was thinning her plants from the lovely garden I showed you first in this post. She gave me a couple she was uprooting, and they are thriving in my yard. This one is doing well at holding its own in the midst of the invading catmint and juniper around it.


What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Scabiosa (Pincushion Flower)


My gazanias seem to bloom faithfully every day we have sunshine. They close when there is not much light. They can handle drought well. The only thing that's ever killed them are gophers and a hard frost. But after the hard frost was over, they came back from the roots still in the ground. They spread as they grow, and can be an ideal ground cover.


What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Gazanias


Rosemary usually provides forage for the bees during winter. I see it blooming during almost every season, though it appears to be slowing down a bit now. It's strongest in winter through spring. If I don't keep it pruned back it will take over.

Almost everyone in this neighborhood grows some because it's a useful herb, the bees love it, and it needs no water once established. Some have made hedges of it.

It's not as tall as it looks here. It's really only about four feet high now, but the angle of the camera makes it look much higher. It's the only way I could get the small flowers to show.

What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Rosemary in Bloom in October


Ah, faithful calendula. It just keeps on blooming as long as it gets a bit of water sometimes. It's an annual, but keeps reseeding. I will post more about its virtues later. It seems to bloom in all seasons. It occasionally gets attacked by aphids, but the ladybugs usually control it. 


What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Calendula


Lastly, I present my wild watermelon sage. I planted it in 2013 and appreciate that it adds color, the bees like it, and it doesn't try to take over. Compared to my other sages, it has a small footprint and it's only about a yard high. It occasionally gets some water. Other than that, it fends for itself and I prune it if it appears I need to.


What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Wild Watermelon Sage


Here's one last tidbit from my neighbor's garden. She grows this morning glory in a pot with a support to climb on. She probably wants to confine it because it tends to be invasive. Delicate, isn't it?


What's in Bloom at the End of October in Paso Robles? Walk with me through my Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming.
Morning Glories


I hope you've enjoyed this informal garden tour of one block in a Paso Robles neighborhood to see what's blooming here in October.

What is your favorite autumn flower in your area?

***

Wednesday, October 11, 2017

Wordless Wednesday: Time to Schedule Garden Tasks for October

My Garden Is a Mess


Wordless Wednesday: Time to Schedule Garden Tasks for October
I need to finish pruning kale and thinning Lamb's Ears. © B. Radisavljevic


Decisions to Make about What to Keep


Thin or transplant new seedlings? Depends on whether they turn out to be borage, mullein, or clary sage.
© B. Radisavljevic

Where Shall I Start?


Prune herbs back, trim irises, or thin gazanias? Oh, my!  © B. Radisavljevic


I'd better see if any tree seedlings are lurking under these leaves. © B. Radisavljevic


Time to Schedule Garden Tasks for October - I'd rather look at this sunset.
I think I'd rather look at this than get to work. © B. Radisavljevic




Have You Started or Finished Your Autumn Garden Tasks Yet?

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

My Neglected Templeton Garden in June

June 19, 2017


What Happens When a Garden Takes Care of Itself


The Butterfly Bush


This is the same butterfly bush that fell in 2014. See this post for contrast photos.

My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Recovered Butterfly Bush Growing Upright Again, © B. Radisavljevic

My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Butterfly Bush in Context of Rest of Herb Garden,  © B. Radisavljevic
In the left background is an Italian CyrpeCypress tree. In the foreground is a combination of black sage and rosemary.  The orchard is in the background on the right. This is quite a contrast from my original herb garden when I planted it a couple of decades ago. This is what this section looked like in April, 2007.

My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Expanding Herb Garden in April, 2007, © B. Radisavljevic

Apples


I was happy to see our remaining apple tree is producing this year. 


My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Young Apples, June 19, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic

Walnuts on the Tree

 My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Walnut Tree with Immature Nuts, © B. Radisavljevic


June 20, 2017

Papa Quail 

 My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Papa Quail Watches Over Family, Which Is Hidden in Brush,  © B. Radisavljevic

My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Papa Quail in Context. Quail Family is Hidden in Brush, © B. Radisavljevic

It was too hot to stand still and wait for the quail family to come out of hiding so I could get a photo, but I often see the mother with her chicks running for cover in the brush as I go by. They live on the section of our land that is near the entrance. That's our oak tree in the background.


The Herbs on the Slope


I planted my first herbs in Templeton on the slope close to the front door. For years they've grown wild, and I discovered when I took these photos that a coyote brush plant had sneaked in under the  rosemary on the back edge and grown large enough to smoother whatever is under it. Probably my oregano and tricolor sage. Rosemary is still growing strong in back. But I'd like to concentrate on the flowers here. 

The lavender was among the first plants I placed on the slope. I got it from the now gone Sycamore Farms herb farm. The sage below was planted at the same time and came from the same place. The santolina (golden) was planted later. It probably also came from there. 

My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Bee Foraging on Lavender, © B. Radisavljevic

My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Santolina and Lavender Close Up, © B. Radisavljevic

My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Common Sage in Bloom, © B. Radisavljevic, 

 My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Thyme on the Slope, © B. Radisavljevic 

This last photo shows an overview of the slope. The taller yellow flowers are volunteer dusty miller plants that reseeded from some older transplants. The santolina and lavender are on its left. You see mostly rosemary and sage on the right, with thyme in the foreground. All these plants originally came from four-inch pots around 2006, so you can see how much they have grown. For the last three years they have had little attention. 

 My Neglected Templeton Garden in June
Overview of West Side of Slope, © B. Radisavljevic

I hope you've enjoyed seeing what can happen to a neglected garden. It's amazing so much of it survived the drought with almost no irrigation.

Do you grow herbs? What are your most memorable experiences with them? Which are your favorites to grow?


*****

Saturday, June 10, 2017

Clary and Tricolor Sage In June

June is When My Clary Sage Shows Off


My clary sage has been budding since May, and on June 1 I noticed it was in bloom again. All my clary sage here started from one plant in a pot. After the rains this year, many baby plants emerged far from the mother plant.  Theones in the photo below appeared in the side flower bed near the street. They are blooming. The clary sage is in the foreground at the center with large leaves and a large flower stalk. A black sage plant is in bloom behind it.

Clary and Tricolor Sage In June



Below is a different view that includes two other plant babies growing in the gazanias. They haven't matured enough to bloom yet.

Clary and Tricolor Sage In June


This is the mother plant, still in its pot, and fully in bloom.

Clary and Tricolor Sage In June



Here are a few more babies growing next to the walkway by the garage. They will be blooming soon. I see a bud. This section of my garden is all volunteer plants. The Lamb's Ears came from a mother plant across the sidewalk and has spread throughout this bed. It is also blooming now. I threw some iris bulbs I didn't have room for in the other flower beds into a cardboard box of shallow dirt in this back corner, and they decided to be happy there and bloom while I was waiting to find another spot for them. The pot contains mostly lemon balm.


Clary and Tricolor Sage In June


Tricolor Sage Blooms Between May and June


I was so busy this year, I almost missed it. That would have been a shame since I can't remember that it ever bloomed for me before, and I've had it for several years. I think it took all the rainfall we had this year to make it bloom. In the collage below, you can see how quickly the plant can bloom and fade.



What is your experience with sage varieties? Do you have a favorite?

***

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Wordless Wednesday: When Oak Trees are Weeds

Oak Trees Can Be Weeds if They Grow in Your Garden


When Oak Trees are Weeds
Oak Tree Seedling that Sprouted in Rose Garden, © B. Radisavljevic

If An Oak Grows in a Rose Garden, It's a Weed


When Oak Trees are Weeds
Oak Seedling Becomes a Weed in Rose Garden, © B. Radisavljevic

It looks like a squirrel missed an acorn it buried. It will be fun trying to dig this up. Anyone want a free oak tree?  

***

Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting

I Hate to Say Goodbye to My Irises

I have been enjoying irises in bloom since February, and I hate to see them go. Yet I can see more iris flowers dying each day. I'm glad there are still a few more buds that haven't bloomed yet. Below you can see what's left of a pale purple iris. The bending chard about to flower points to it. Above the chard a blooming Lamb's Ears plant reaches for the sky. 


Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Fading Iris, Bolting Chard, and Sages and Scabiosa in Background, © B. Radisavljevic

If you peak carefully behind that irsis, you can see the beginning of my tricolor sage starting to bloom. This is the first year it's bloomed for me. The large clary sage behind the iris shouldn't bloom until next month, but you never know. Learn more about clary sage and see it in bloom in my garden. Those blue flowers at the very back left are scabiosas, also known as pincushion flowers. I've often planted them in my gardens because they are perennial and seem to thrive.  

I took the photo below in a different flowerbed on the front corner of the lot. It shows the remaining light purple irises in all stages of development. You can also see the miniature roses that have started to bloom. They are later than my other roses. The yellow flowers are gazanias. They are closed today because it's overcast.

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Irises Budding, Blooming, and Fading, Next to Miniature Roses, © B. Radisavljevic

Lamb's Ears in Bloom

I'd like to show you how fast Lamb's Ears grow. The shot below was taken at the end of February. Notice how short it is compared to the irises on the right, the lilies of the Nile in back, and the star jasmine in the background. The entire bed will change by May.

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Lamb's Ears Next to Sidewalk, February, 2017. © B. Radisavljevic

In April I finally got around to thinning both the Lamb's Ears and the jasmine. They were smothering my Spanish sage and Sweet Williams. See Garden Tasks Finished before Storm.

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Lamb's Ears Next to Sidewalk, April 6, 2017. © B. Radisavljevic


Now it's May 10, same year. Look at how the plants have grown. It amazes me how fast the Lamb's Ears shoot up and start blooming. It seems they grow half an inch a day in April. The star jasmine is also beginning to bloom. The yellow calendula to the right of the Lamb's Ears blooms all year. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Lamb's Ears Next to Sidewalk, May 10, 2017. © B. Radisavljevic

I do love Lamb's Ears because it works well as a groundcover when I need it to smother weeds. It's also easy to pull when its fast growth becomes a problem. It looks like more will have to come out soon. All these Lamb's Ears plants have spread from other plants. I started with just one plant at this house. As it spread I planted a few of it's children in other beds. But many children also grow several feet from any I have planted. 

Lamb's Ears also have a certain graceful beauty. They lurk during the winter, but in spring they rise toward the sun and bloom. The bees use them for forage. Here's a close-up of the little flowers. Their gray leaves and fuzzy texture add contrast to the green of other plants to add interest to the garden all year round. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Lamb's Ears in Bloom, May, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic


Books to Help You Grow Great Chard and Kale



The Chard and Kale are Bolting


The kale was just starting to flower a month ago on April 6. Now many of those flowers are seedpods. I will try to collect some, though there's probably no need. I never planted this kale. It sprouted from a seed from the mother plant across the yard. By collecting the seeds I'm more likely to get the seedlings where I want them.

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Kale Flowers and Seedpods, May 10, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic


Here's a close-up of the flower. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Kale Flowers, May 10, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic


One branch of this kale plant had started leaning over the sidewalk. Couldn't resist snapping this photo of it. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Bolting Kale Branch Hanging Over Sidewalk, May 10, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic


Although the kale is already making seeds, the chard is just starting to flower. In the last couple of weeks the stalk has risen and you can see the flower buds on this chard plant forming. Just two months ago the main stalk and the leaves were red. (This is rhubarb chard.) As it begins to flower both have turned green, but you can still see a few traces of the red. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Budding Chard, May 10, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic


When I went to the backyard on the same day to take a photo of the chard by the rose garden, I discovered my might I have two micro-climates on this same property. The the chard in the photo above grows in front and gets afternoon sun because it faces west. The chard plant beside the rose garden gets morning sun from the southeast. It also has the shelter of the fence and the roses from the north side. In any case, small flowers are already starting to bloom on the plant by the rose garden. 

Irises Fading, Lamb's Ears Blooming, Chard and Kale Bolting
Flowering Chard beside Roses, May 10, 2017, © B. Radisavljevic

It's the same small yard and same variety of chard, but one plant flowers slightly ahead of the other. 

I will leave you with one last photo from the front flowerbed of the chard and a blooming Lamb's Ears plant side by side. You can see how red the chard started out on the bottom part. You can also see how high the Lamb's Ears got in comparison. 


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