Tuesday, August 26, 2014

Rest In Peace


Weather: Rain Friday night.

What’s blooming in the area: Hybrid roses, silver lace vine, trumpet creeper, rose of Sharon, datura, rose purple morning glory, bouncing Bess, purple garden phlox, sweet pea, Russian sage, zinnia, cultivated sunflowers.

Beyond the walls and fences: Velvetweed, buffalo gourd, yellow evening primrose, purple mat flower, pink and white bindweed, Queen Anne’s lace, goat’s head, leatherleaf globemallow, pigweed, horseweed, wild lettuce, Hopi tea, golden rod, plains paper flowers, áñil del muerto, tahoka daisy, golden hairy asters, black grama grass.

In my yard, looking east: Black locust, large-flowered soapwort, garlic chives, Jupiter’s beard, winecup mallow, pink evening primrose, Maximilian sunflowers, cut leaf coneflower. Hollyhocks are so tall they can be seen from inside the house.

Looking south: Betty Prior, Fairy, rugosa and miniature roses.

Looking west: Caryopteris, Johnson’s Blue geranium, catmint, calamintha, David phlox, ladybells, Mönch aster, purple coneflower.

Looking north: Yellow potentilla, golden spur columbine, Mexican hat, black-eyed Susan, chocolate flower, blanket flower, anthemis, coreopsis.

In the open, along the drive: Buddleia, white yarrow.

Bedding plants: Snapdragon, sweet alyssum, blue salvia, moss rose, French marigold, gazania.

Seeds: Heavenly Blue morning glories, larkspur, reseeded Sensation cosmos from last year’s plants, yellow cosmos, bachelor buttons.

Animal sightings: Rabbit, geckos, small birds, bees, grasshoppers, large and small black ants.


Weekly update: One of my neighbors died this week, the one who built the berm that protects my place from flooding.

I only talked with Joe once, soon after I moved here. But even before, I knew something about him.

He had a large mound in front of his house where he raised dahlias. There also were yellow iris, which he said he took from a cemetery, and a tall shade tree.


We sometimes would speak when he was heading to the prairie for a walk. A few times we talked about plants, perhaps because I was working in the yard when we met this way.

I remember one time, probably 1995. The grasshoppers were especially bad. He said the only things they hadn’t eaten in his garden were the tomatoes and cucumbers.

I thought maybe the fact tomatoes were members of the nightshade family not only made them invulnerable but repellant. I immediately went into town and bought whatever plants remained in the local hardware stores to plant around the edges of my garden.

It didn’t work, of course, and the tomatoes never prospered. However, for years I planted them out of a superstitious hope.


Another time his wife was walking out to the prairie. It must have been 2008, the only year my peach bore fruit. She wondered what I was going to go with all the peaches.

Soon after hornets moved in and closed the path by the tree. I picked all the green fruit and threw it out. I’m sure she’d have found a better use if it had been allowed to ripen.

At the time she said their tree had been killed by gophers. Years later when I walked the prairie behind their house, I noticed the remains of a large tree. I wondered if it had been the peach, though it seemed too large.


A small callery pear grew in its stead. It, at least, would never overshadow the house.

The tree in front was a catalpa, which Joe cut back severely. He also kept his apricots topped off.


I lost touch with his garden after he surrounded his land with a fence. I’m told the bark board came from a sawmill run by this daughter-in-law’s brother. A few years back, they added solar lights to the fence.

The last time I saw the mound, it was bare dirt with some planters at the top nurturing marigolds.


It isn’t simply a perverse tunnel vision that limits my memories to his plants. The on-line obituary only mentioned his survivors. The only biographical detail it gave was his birth place in 1940.

He came from El Llano, a small settlement near the boundary between the Santa Cruz and San Juan land grants. The houses were clustered around a small church, all close to the Llano ditch that snaked along the base of the Santa Cruz badlands.

The obituary didn’t mention military service. He would have been 18 in 1958, before Vietnam. In those years, young men who didn’t go to college often enlisted to avoid being drafted.

The first thing I remember he said was that he worked for the ranch that once included the land where I lived. With the owner’s permission, he put his trailer on the edge of the ranch near an abandoned road bed.

It began as a simply double wide, but over the years the structure was hidden behind a brick façade.

He later drove a gravel hauler for the local quarry. Joe told me, he always said he would walk to Chimayó when he paid off his rig, which he did. He drove until his eyes got bad, then quit.

A life lived with family and plants, and a few animals. They protected the quail and fed hummingbirds. Their apricot is the only tree in the area to have nests.


He was buried yesterday by his church.

Photographs:
1. Joe’s apricot last spring, 30 March 2013.

2. Joe’s apricot, 7 November 2010. My intermediate neighbor built his own fence of the same bark board, which is in front of the tree in this view.

3. Joe’s front yard, early 1990s. The enclosed brown area under the tree is the mound garden.

4. Cherry tomatoes growing with Florence bachelor buttons in my yard, 1997. I planted the tomatoes because of Joe.

5. Callery pear behind Joe’s house with remains of larger tree, 28 March 2012. The berm is in front and at an angle to deflect water.

6. Catalpa in front of Joe’s house, 7 June 2012.

7. Marigolds in Joe’s mound bed, 17 August 2008.

8. Nests in Joe’s apricot, 5 December 2010.


9. Solar lights on Joe’s fence, 24 August 2014; shadows of the catalpa and an apricot are just visible in the shadows.

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Late Locusts


Weather: Cloudy afternoons, sometimes windy; last rain 8/1.

What’s blooming in the area: Hybrid roses, silver lace vine, trumpet creeper, rose of Sharon, datura, rose purple morning glory, bouncing Bess, purple garden phlox, sweet pea, Russian sage, zinnia, cultivated sunflowers.

Those who carefully prune their shrubs were working this past week on forsythia and snowballs.

Beyond the walls and fences: Velvetweed, buffalo gourd, yellow evening primrose, purple mat flower, pink and white bindweed, Queen Anne’s lace, goat’s head, leatherleaf globemallow, pigweed, horseweed, wild lettuce, Hopi tea, golden rod, plains paper flowers, áñil del muerto, tahoka daisy, golden hairy asters, black grama grass.

In my yard, looking east: Large-flowered soapwort, garlic chives, Jupiter’s beard, hollyhocks, winecup mallow, pink evening primrose.

Looking south: Betty Prior, Fairy and miniature roses.

Looking west: Caryopteris, Johnson’s Blue geranium, catmint, calamintha, David phlox, ladybells, sea lavender, Mönch aster, purple coneflower.

Looking north: Yellow potentilla, golden spur columbine, Mexican hat, black-eyed Susan, chocolate flower, blanket flower.

In the open, along the drive: Buddleia, white yarrow.

Bedding plants: Snapdragon, sweet alyssum, blue salvia, moss rose, French marigold, gazania.

Seeds: Larkspur, reseeded Sensation cosmos from last year’s plants, yellow cosmos, bachelor buttons.

Animal sightings: Rabbit, geckos, small birds, bees, grasshoppers, large and small black ants.


Weekly update: The early, wet monsoons have brought lushness. I’ve seen velvetweeds reaching the middle of traffic signs and pigweeds rising above five foot walls.

Bright green marks new growth on my black locust. Down the road, a copse of new sprouts has formed near the base of a towering tree near the road.


At the post office, new growth on the purple-flowered locust shrubs are pushing up in cracks where the pavement meets the curb.


Those Robinia neomexicana didn’t bloom this year. Last year they had flowers from the middle to the end of May. This year, we were still in drought conditions exacerbated by high winds. Now that conditions and sun angles have changed, some of those dormant buds are opening.


My Robinia pseudoacacia is undergoing its annual locust borer cycle. When the winds came in July one trunk collapsed onto another one. The heavy rains weighted them down until both reached into my drive.


In the past I’ve called someone to remove the trunk before the next generation of goldenrod-fed adults laid new eggs. The first year the company passed the job onto one of their employees who did a good job. I called him the next year. He showed up Saturday morning with no tools.

The following year I called a man who cut away the locust and a fallen branch on the cottonwood. However, he only cut the part that was in the drive, leaving the broken branches in the tree.

Last year I tried another company who finished trimming the cottonwood, or at least part of it, and removed the fallen locust. I believe they are also the ones who introduced the aphids which attacked the peach and flower bed in other areas where they worked.

This is northern New Mexico. I’ve run out of names in the phone book. I’m waiting until winter to call someone who can’t do too much damage.

Meantime, the two trees reach into the drive. The one started putting out white flowers this week.


More interesting, the trunk that lost all its leaves is reviving. It must still be connected to part of the vital cambium where the xylem and phloem flow. Most of its new buds aren’t leaves, but flower clusters.


I don’t know if the roots have redirected its efforts to producing seed or if it was this branch’s turn to be the one covered with flowers. Not every branch blooms every spring. This year, none bloomed in late May.

I’m not sure if it does any good to remove the diseased wood before it infects another trunk. I’m not convinced the locust borers even bother to leave the copse to feed before they lay their eggs and die.

All I’ve learned is, that despite the annual cost of a tree cutter and the constant need to remove thorny suckers, these legumes are worth the trouble. They can adapt.


Photographs:
1. Black locust flower on live trunk in my drive, 17 August 2014.
2. New Mexico locust flower at post office, 17 August 2014.
3. Black locust copse down the road, 17 August 2014.
4. New Mexico locust sucker at post office, 17 August 2014.
5. New Mexico locust at post office, 17 August 2014.
6. Two downed black locust trunks in my drive, 20 July 2014.
7. Black locust flower in my drive, 16 August 2014.
8. New growth on downed black locust trunk, 16 August 2014.
9. More of the black locust copse down the road, 17 August 2014.


10. Flower cluster of downed black locust in my drive, 16 August 2014.

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Natural Selection


Weather: Cloudy afternoons, last rain 8/1; the rivers are still running brown.

What’s blooming in the area: Hybrid roses, silver lace vine, trumpet creeper, rose of Sharon, datura, bouncing Bess, purple garden phlox, alfalfa, sweet pea, Russian sage, yellow yarrow, zinnia, cultivated sunflowers.

Beyond the walls and fences: Tamarix, velvetweed, buffalo gourd, yellow evening primrose, purple mat flower, pink and white bindweed, Queen Anne’s lace, goat’s head, leatherleaf globemallow, horseweed, wild lettuce, Hopi tea, plains paper flowers, tahoka daisy, golden hairy asters, black grama grass.

In my yard, looking east: Large-flowered soapwort, Jupiter’s beard, hollyhocks, winecup mallow, sidalcea, pink evening primrose.

Looking south: Betty Prior, Fairy and miniature roses.

Looking west: Caryopteris, Johnson’s Blue geranium, catmint, calamintha, David phlox, ladybells, sea lavender, Mönch daisy, purple coneflower.

Looking north: Yellow potentilla, golden spur columbine, Mexican hat, black-eyed Susan, chocolate flower, blanket flower, coreopsis, anthemis.

In the open, along the drive: Fernbush, buddleia, larkspur, white yarrow, yellow cosmos.

Bedding plants: Snapdragon, sweet alyssum, blue salvia, moss rose, French marigold, gazania.

Seeds: Reseeded Sensation cosmos from last year’s plants, bachelor buttons.

Animal sightings: Rabbit, geckos, small birds, bees, grasshoppers, large and small black ants.


Weekly update: This has not been a great year for seeds. There was no rain in the spring or early summer. It was difficult to keep seeds wet with surface watering.

Then, there were the grasshoppers and, in my yard, the rabbit. One day I would see some seedlings, the next they were gone.

The Cosmos Bipinnatus that are blooming now are seeds from last year’s plants that reseeded themselves. Ones for the Dazzler variety emerged the end of May.

The rabbit left them alone. Perhaps the stems were too developed by the time the animal was grazing my yard. Or, maybe they were mature enough to have some defensive trait that discouraged nibbling.


Natural selection works in wondrous ways. The original seeds for these plants were sown in 2012 and were blooming by late August.

Last year a few seedlings emerged which began producing flowers the first of August. By late September, the four foot stems were covered with dark red flowers. I left the seeds for the winter.

This year the seeds that came up were next to the walk where they get water trapped by the blocks.


Back on September 17 of 2006 I wrote about the years of breeding it took to shorten the gestation period for flowers from a native of the valley of México so they would appear in northern gardens before frost. Sensation cosmos was introduced in 1930.

In 2003, the Royal Horticultural Society tested seeds. They reported their "trial of Cosmos bipinnatus was very disappointing and showed poor maintenance by the various seed companies and therefore previous awards could not be confirmed."

"Poor maintenance" didn’t mean letting weeds and rabbits take over. It meant seed companies weren’t producing the same quality seed that had earlier.

When Mary Keen complained that year, seed companies implied it was her fault. Chiltern Seeds said they only had had two negative letters in ten years. Its spokesman "stressed that all seed is variable and advised anyone pricking out seedlings to select different heights for the best results."

She didn’t accept that. She’d had good yields before. She knew how to grow Dazzler cosmos.

When she talked to friends, she discovered no one she knew in England could grow cosmos. One thought problems with day length at reappeared.

Companies have been growing seeds in Africa and Latin America to exploit the longer growing season and cheaper production costs. Within a few seasons, the plants may have reverted to the tropical ways that had so carefully been bred out. Seeds from those warm environs didn’t behave like the ones grown in colder climes.

It’s hard to know when the changes were made. Pan American, the owner of Burpee, began using central American sites after World War II. Thompson and Morgan gets most of its seeds from Africa. A representative finally told Keen "there was a problem with selected forms of C. bipinnatus."

Selected doesn’t mean a random few. It means varieties like Dazzler that develop from selecting the best of each generation to encourage the best form. Such strains aren’t the same as hybrids which attempt more fundamental changes to the germ plasm.

Seed origin information on seed packets is deceptive. For a while in the late 1990s, most seed companies included country of origin. They stopped around 2004. I assume the inclusion of the information was a function of rules of the European Common Market, and the omission occurred when rules were changed.

The only seed company which may have been providing honest information was Stokes. They reported their zinnia and Calendula seeds came from Zimbabwe in 1999. Others probably defined origin to mean where they acquired seeds, not where they grew. Holland, Germany and France may have been either the location of growers or wholesale markets.

The seed I planted in 2012 was described as coming from Holland. The Dazzler seed submitted to the RHS trials came from a Dutch company, K. Sahin, Zaden B. V. that had been established in 1982 by Kees and Elisabeth Sahin. Takii Seeds of Tokyo bought them out in 2008.

In 2003, Keen was told the way to guarantee she had good cosmos the next year was to save seeds from those that bloomed in July or take cuttings from good plants and try to winter them over. I let nature do the work by not cutting away seed heads.

In bad times, genes tell. Those paying attention realize Darwin was correct when he reported the workings of natural selection.

My seeds probably came from Africa in 2012 where many may have reverted to tropical habits. The ones that appeared in 2013, by definition, were those that had successfully set seed the year before. The ones now growing again were those that set seeds that dropped or rolled to the protected area by the block.


Notes: To find the posting from 2006, click on "Cosmos Sensation" in the index at the right.

Keen, Mary. "A Disappointing Year for the Cosmos," The Telegraph, 8 November 2003.

Royal Horticultural Society. "Trial of Cosmos from seed 2003: An Invited RHS Trial."

Photographs:
1. Dazzler cosmos flower, 10 August 2010.

2. Santa Cruz river upstream from dam that diverts water to the local ditches, 8 August 2014.

3. Dazzler cosmos flower, with fewer disk florets, 10 August 2014.

4. Cosmos plants growing near block walk, 29 June 2014.

5. Debris from high waters caught on the local Santa Cruz dam, 8 August 2014.


6. Closer few of the dam, 8 August 2014.

Wednesday, August 06, 2014

Monsoon Plants


Weather: Rain Thursday and Friday nights, last rain 8/1.

What’s blooming in the area: Hybrid roses, yellow potentilla, silver lace vine, trumpet creeper, datura, bouncing Bess, purple garden phlox, alfalfa, sweet pea, Russian sage, yellow yarrow, zinnia.

Beyond the walls and fences: Tamarix, velvetweed, buffalo gourd, purple mat flower, pink and white bindweed, Queen Anne’s lace, goat’s head, leatherleaf globemallow, horseweed, wild lettuce, Hopi tea, plains paper flowers, tahoka daisy, strap leaf and golden hairy asters, black grama grass.

In my yard, looking east: Large-flowered soapwort, Jupiter’s beard, hollyhocks, winecup mallow, sidalcea, pink evening primrose.

Looking south: Betty Prior, Fairy and miniature roses.

Looking west: Caryopteris, Johnson’s Blue geranium, catmint, David phlox, ladybells, sea lavender, Mönch daisy, purple coneflower.

Looking north: Coral beard tongue, golden spur columbine, Mexican hat, black-eyed Susan, chocolate flower, blanket flower, coreopsis, anthemis.

In the open, along the drive: Dorothy Perkins rose, fernbush, buddleia, larkspur, white yarrow.

Bedding plants: Snapdragon, sweet alyssum, blue salvia, moss rose, French marigold.

Seeds: Reseeded Sensation cosmos from last year’s plants.

Animal sightings: Geckos, small birds, bees, grasshoppers, large and small black ants.


Weekly update: With the monsoons, come the late summer weeds.

Horseweed germinates in the fall or early spring in areas where moisture collects. The basal rosettes go dormant when the moisture dries.

There they stay in my driveway, too hard to remove without a shovel.


Within days of the first monsoon rain, Conyza canadensis bolts. Two to three foots stems shoot up, covered with tiny flowers that go to seed before the rains let up enough to remove them.


By then it’s too late to prevent next year’s crop from being seeded.


They can’t be ignored. The stems will turn woody and become hazardous to drive over.


Garden plants are better behaved. At least, most disguise their early summer dormancy with greenery.

Yellow Cosmos sulphureus is an exception. The seeds germinate then stagnate.


When the rains arrive they resume their blooming cycle, only they don’t always have enough time. When the frosts come, one surveys promises unfulfilled.


Water may not be the only factor. Some plants require water with warm temperatures; no matter what, they won’t grow in spring. Others may respond to sun angles, and only bloom when the sun’s rays aren’t as intense.

The differences between weeds and garden plants are more than aesthetics. The one is able to exploit our variable environment. The other is overwhelmed by it.


Photographs:
1. Yellow cosmos flower, 21 July 2013.
2. Partially opened horseweed flower and buds, 21 September 2013.
3. Horseweed rosette in gravel, 30 April 201.
4. Horseweed plants in gravel this week, 4 August 2014.
5. Empty horseweed seed head, 30 October 2014.
6. Dead horseweed stalk, 1 January 2013.
7. Yellow cosmos seedling, 28 May 2013.
8. Dead yellow cosmos plant, 23 October 2011.
9. Horseweed head with seeds gone, 11 September 2011.


10. Horseweed root, 28 June 2008.