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homernoy

Some fall yard pics of unusual plants

homernoy
15 years ago

Grevillea victoriae




Hummingbirds really enjoy the flowers of Grevillea victoriae




Butia capitata bloomed for the fist time





Another Butia pic





Closeup of the immature seeds on Butia




Banksi marginata pushing 9ft tall, still no flowers





Eucalyptus perriniana. One of the hardiest in our area as well as being one of the most beautiful




Acacia dealbata grown from seed of local tree. Blooming this winter for the first time.




Dudleya cymosa. Suprisingly hummingbirds go crazy for this ones flowers in spring.




Cordyline banksii




Eucalyptus dalrympleana x viminalis is getting a little too big for my yard.






Abutilon 'Huntington Pink' virtually blooms all year long.





Yucca aloifolia blooming. Really looks a lot like gloriosa.






Sunday was spring like, and a beautiful day. I hope everyone had a nice weekend in the garden.



Comments (12)

  • buyorsell888
    15 years ago

    Very nice. I really love the abutilon. Yes, that second Euc is getting a bit big. LOL they do that.

    It was much too windy here on Sunday to work outside.

  • johnaberdeen
    15 years ago

    I am glad you decided to keep the place. I really enjoy seeing the progression of that Butia. The micro climate of that location is very good for growing some tender plants that other parts of Western Washington wouldn't be able to grow.

    I lost my Cordyline banksii a couple of years ago from a 12ºF freeze. My Butia I gave to my sister in law, who lives in Belfair, died last winter either from the weather or my Sister in laws brown thumb. And my Banksi marginata died back to the snow line in the winter of 06-07. So I think you have a great place to grow marginal plants.

    Thanks for sharing.

  • hostaguy
    15 years ago

    Beautiful pictures! Thanks for sharing. You have a really nice view amazing plants!

    I'm excited for my first Grevillea and what it might do this coming year. Just visited the San Francisco Botantical Garden and they had many beautiful Grevillea.

  • Embothrium
    15 years ago

    Yes: Waterfront locations can have high minimums due to salt water accumulating heat during the day and giving it off at night.

    Recently I noticed there's a Zonal Denial garden right next door to the fish hatchery in Issaquah. Lots of gums (eucalypts), probably these like what is likely to be some hotter days out there than in close to the sound. But then there will be those lower minimums...

  • johnaberdeen
    15 years ago

    bboy,

    That's my garden. You should have stopped in and said hi, either at my house or at the hatchery office, where I work.

    {{gwi:1092157}}

    {{gwi:1086053}}

    Sorry Brian for throwing in some of my pictures.

    I enjoy testing the limits of various plants and have been pleasantly surprised by the hardiness of many plants. I have also been disappointed. I have been growing eucalyptus since 1982 and know what to expect with them. A few that I planted back that early are still alive after the 1989 and 1990 freezes. And if they die, so what, they grow so fast that in a couple of years I will have a tree again.

    John

  • homernoy
    Original Author
    15 years ago

    Hi Ron. Ian Baclay thinks sandy well drained soil may contribute to some of the plants successes more than the effect of waterfront, but personally I don't know for sure. I have seen more gardens the last few years with things more tender than anything I grow anyway.

    Many of my semi-hardy plants do fine now, but as you know (even right on the water), after one of these winters there will be a lot of dead stuff I will have to dig out, or chop down. As the plants get bigger, the job of removal will of course be bigger after a severe arctic blast. Not looking foward to it one bit.

    Hi John. Don't be sorry, I always love looking at pictures. Fantastic Tetrapanax you have there. Is it 'Rex'? I have never tried one, but I have always thought they look very really cool. If I am ever up near the fish hatchery I will make sure to swing it and say hi, if you don't mind. Take care.

  • johnaberdeen
    15 years ago

    {{gwi:1086055}}

    Brian,

    You are more than welcomed to stop by, even if I am working, most of the time I can stop long enough to give a short tour of my collection. If you stop by, I have some Tetrapanax potted up that I could give you.

    The one in the first picture was from Plant Delight six years ago. It has never sent up root sprouts, but the plant in the above picture which I got at Steamboat Island Nursery, outside of Olympia, sends suckers up all the time. I don't know the reason, whether it is genetics or environmental that causes that. The PD plant is on the north, shady side of a tall P.n. 'Henon" bamboo grove planted in loam, while the S.I. plant is in full sun and sandy soil. Might be the difference. Also the PD plant has never froze back to the ground, while the SI plant has.

    I bought both plants as 'Steroidal Giant'. I know the British call a similiar looking plant 'Rex', but I can't tell the difference. If you know what the difference is, please explain it to me, I would like to know.

    thanks,
    John

  • Embothrium
    15 years ago

    We didn't go far past the corner of the hatchery building due to the Keep Out (or whatever) sign, but did look into your garden from over the fence etc. Maybe you were one of the workers who let us into the front of the building, which was locked by mistake.

    We also saw the native garden, Garry oak and stripebark maples.

    There used to be a champion-sized 'Dolgo' crabapple elsewhere in town but it appears to have been removed.

  • johnaberdeen
    15 years ago

    The hybrid crabapple was removed some time this fall. I was driving by that office a couple of weeks ago and noticed that it was gone. My girlfriend is a school teacher that works with the folks working at the office on the property that the tree was growing. I have asked her if her contact could tell why they cut it down. This summer it looked healthy to me. I enjoyed looking at that tree, and eating its fruit, which was tasty, so I will miss it.

    I remember letting some people into the locked lobby. If the person letting you in was a white haired guy with glasses it probably was me.

    As for the "No Trespassing" sign, it is there so the police can legally remove the people going behind the hatchery building to do drugs, sex, using the brush along the creek as a toilet, and other nasty things.

  • Embothrium
    15 years ago

    Listed by mistake by Van Pelt, Champion Trees of Washington State (Washington) as a Dawson crabapple, the hybrid between orchard and Oregon crabapples it was actually a 'Dolgo'.

  • greenelephant
    15 years ago

    Issafish,

    I'm looking for a start of the Tetrapanax. Any chance I could get one from you?

    Best Regards,
    Jim Eichner
    Woodinville

  • johnaberdeen
    15 years ago

    Jim,

    Come on down, I have two potted up. One in a one gallon pot and another in a three gallon pot. And there are a whole bunch of suckers in the ground. I plan on leaving them there until late winter - early spring before potting them up, since I don't have the room to over winter them indoors in pots. But if you want one of the suckers I could pot one up for you. My email is issaquahfish at msn.com. You can have one without a trade, but if you have anyone of the hardy Schefflera's I would be interested in a cutting or a start. They are very hard to find in North America. They sell them in Europe but for someone like me, it would be impossible to get. Crug Farms out of Scotland sell numerous species and about half of them they credit Dan Hinkley with introducing into the trade. It's too bad he wasn't able to do that here for whatever reason since he lives in Washington State.

    Next year I probably will be more aggressive in removing the suckers before they get any size since they are interfering with my collection of hardy and semi-hardy banannas.

    John