Showing posts with label aloe striatula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aloe striatula. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Plants I'm growing: First Blooms--Aloe Striatula (2011)

First blooms this past Friday (May 27) on the Aloe striatula in the garden (below the kitchen window). This has been one of the most successful of the aloes I've planted here. It was growing nearby when we moved in, so I was pretty certain it would do well--and it has--but it tends to get a bit leggy. Cut back severely, it seems happy enough to sprout new growth, so the time has probably come to take cuttings.

Aloe striatula bloomed on May 17 in 2009 and on June 4 in 2010, calculating botanical years (from first bloom to first bloom) of 383 days and of 357 days.

Friday, June 4, 2010

Plants I'm growing: First Blooms--Aloe Striatula, Monardella Villosa, Mexican Sage (June 4, 2010)

First blooms today on a number of plants in the garden--the first day of what is now expected to be the start of the dry season, considerably later than usual. The good thing about all the rain this year is that most plants have remained lush and green. New leaves are soft, supple, and larger than normal, and flowers have also lasted longer than they usually do.

Aloe striatula, bloomed today. The flower stalks look like bunches of bananas, as they always do. These plants can survive the cold here in the winter (sometimes down to as low as about 23 degrees F) while also making it through the (usually) long, dry summers with no supplemental water at all--although they look much better with a little water from time to time. They tend to get leggy, but they are easy to cut back. They will regrow from the roots, and the cuttings can be rooted as well. This flower bloomed on May 19 last year. A year according to Aloe striatula was 381 days.

First blooms on Monardella villosa today, also known as "coyote mint," a sturdy, drought-tolerant, although sometimes finicky native that, when happy, is covered with lavender pom-poms. The foliage has a strong scent reminiscent of both mint and grapefruit rind. A favorite of the bees.

First blooms also on the Mexican sage, in the garden (Salvia leucantha)--which is rather bizarre; normally this plant does not bloom until late August or early September. Usually I take it as the first sign of autumn. The rain has tricked this one, I suspect. What is it thinking--that autumn (and our seasonal rains) has arrived early? Who knows?

The succulent with the upside down flowers has also bloomed today. As you may have guessed, I can't remember the name of this plant--but I like it. This plant is a favorite also of our Anna's hummingbirds.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Plants I'm growing: First Blooms--Aloe Striatula and Oleander



First blooms in 2009 on the large Aloe striatula under the kitchen window and on the large red oleander across from the deck. The flowers of the Aloe look rather like bunches of half-ripe bananas. 
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