guildfordcycads

Cycas lindstromii: Lindstrom’s Cycad

🌿 Discover the Perfect Plants for Your Space! 🌿 Explore our handpicked collection of cycads, aloes, seeds, and more to transform your garden or landscape. Shop Now Description Cycas lindstromii, a newly described species of cycad, stands out amongst Vietnamese cycads with its unique characteristics. Its trunk, often subterranean or only slightly emergent, gives it

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Encephalartos laurentianus: Laurent’s Cycad

🌿 Discover the Perfect Plants for Your Space! 🌿 Explore our handpicked collection of cycads, aloes, seeds, and more to transform your garden or landscape. Shop Now Description Encephalartos laurentianus, one of the most striking of the DRC cycads, commands attention with its sheer size. It’s truly a giant species among cycads, boasting an enormous

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Aloe lineata: The Striped Aloe – Distinctive Leaf Patterns

🌿 Discover the Perfect Plants for Your Space! 🌿 Explore our handpicked collection of cycads, aloes, seeds, and more to transform your garden or landscape. Shop Now Identifying Aloe Lineata The Aloe lineata, a striking member of the succulent family, stands out with its bold architectural presence. Often mistaken for its close relative, Aloe striatula,

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Encephalartos longifolius: The Long-leaved Cycad

🌿 Discover the Perfect Plants for Your Space! 🌿 Explore our handpicked collection of cycads, aloes, seeds, and more to transform your garden or landscape. Shop Now Description and Morphology Encephalartos longifolius, a true spectacle among South African cycads, commands attention with its imposing stature and vibrant foliage. The name itself, longifolius, hints at its

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Diverse diets of civets in Borneo rainforest allow them to live in same geographical area

Typically, closely related animal species have difficulty coexisting because they are competing for similar resources. Despite eating the same figs, binturong, small-toothed palm, masked palm, and common palm civets do coexist together. To understand how they coexist, a new study explores their degree of faunivory.

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Back to California, briefly

Monday’s post—a California garden visit from 2023—was spurred by the fact we were headed back to the Los Angeles area, and I needed to finish writing about last year’s fun, before sharing what I got up to this year. An embarrassment of riches for sure. 

Last Wednesday, Nov 13th, Andrew and I flew down to Burbank, CA, arriving in time to crash for the night. Thursday we visited the Huntington Library & Gardens—it was heaven! I have a few hundred photos from that visit to share, eventually. Friday was a family day, then on Saturday I headed out to visit a few nurseries; , , and . There will be proper posts about those stops, but today I’m sharing the in-between. Like this quick stop at Mickey Hargitay Plants, because I was in the area with a few minutes to kill.
I was feeling a little cheeky so I went ahead and nudged the tillandsia clump on that tree. Just how attached was it? Quite. No moving it.
Down the street, near where I parked.

A blog reader recently shared a video of gardens around where he was staying in Oxnard, CA. The thirsty, dusty aeonium he saw looked almost like metal sculptures. These were on there way to that effect.

I saw pineappled agaves all over the city, most of them were in areas where they’d been cut back to keep people or cars from being poked. This one was in an area where you’d have to really work to get close. Maybe it’s just the default for yard care crews?
But what the hell? Why not just put it out of it’s misery?
Happy hellstrip agave…
Sad hellstrip agave.
Even sadder hellstrip agave.
Two Agave attenuata and one???

Impressive fruit display whatever it is.
I liked this planting and how it worked with the building.
Well, that’s not something you see everyday.
Street Rap History?

So those photos were all taken walking to my car, but my travels also had me driving thru a few LA neighborhoods. I was on high alert scanning left and right, and saw many interesting plantings. I only stopped the car to photograph this one, those house-sized agaves seemed worthy.

I didn’t notice the sprinkler at first.

I mean that’s not what you expect to see, as much as it does explain the healthy plantings (employees I spoke to at the Huntington said they hadn’t had measurable rainfall since April).
I wonder why they haven’t pulled the palm out yet? It’s only going to get more difficult with time. Or maybe they have and it keeps coming back?
This was an interesting oddity. While logic says it’s simply a damaged agave with two different growth patterns, my eyes say someone planted an Agave ‘Royal Spine’ in the center of an Agave parryi.
So what did I buy on the trip? Well I couldn’t resist this double-sided, printed canvas bag at Rolling Greens. 
Even if those apostrophes are upside down! (it was only $5, maybe that’s why?) 
At Flora Grubb I really wanted a gorgeous gallon-sized Agave ‘Royal Spine’ but talked myself out of it, as there was no way to get it home. Instead I settled for a tiny (but oh so cute) Agave albopilosa. I have one that Gerhard gave me, but thought it would be nice to have another to play with.
I also bought this odd little terracotta hanging planter, as you can probably guess it’s the metal parts that spoke to me.
After leaving Flora Grubb, I drove back up to where we were staying via the Pacific Coast Highway from Santa Monica as far as Malibu. We were flying out the next day and I couldn’t leave without putting my eyes on the ocean, even if it was just from the car…

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All material © 2009-2024 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

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