scrubjayspeaks: macro photograph of ladybug climbing a blade of grass (garden)
[personal profile] scrubjayspeaks
Welcome to the December edition of Pandemic Garden Club! Growing good things in strange times!

Anyone is welcome to comment with what they're growing right now, things they would like to try, problems they're encountering, and questions they have. Share resources, answer questions, shout encouragement.

As for myself...


A closeup of a flowerhead made up on pink, tubular flowers. The ones at the bottom open to show many white and orange stamens.


It's aloe bloom season! Not to be confused with the whole rest of the summer and fall here, during which my aloes also obsessively bloomed. Now it is technically the right time for them to do it. And they are not sleeping on the job, let me tell you:

A large tangle of toothy green aloe leaves. Several flower stalks, deep red and conical at the top, curve up from the mess of it.

The big aloe there, aka the tentacle hedge, already bloomed once this year. A single flower stalk from a single head. Very pretty. Perfectly reasonable. If I needed any evidence that it is much, M U C H happier being in the ground now, I have it. I have it, specifically, in the form of about ten flower stalks, at least one on every major head of the plant and some with more than one. It is going bananas.

A whole collection of succulents, mostly in black plastic pots of varying sizes.

I succeeded in my November goal of repotting (almost) everything in the two cold frames for the first time in years. A lot of big pots that had been used as nurseries for assorted newly-obtained plants got broken down into smaller, variety-specific pots. This has the advantage of freeing up the few large pots I have and using up the many, many smaller pots instead.

Another collection of potted succulents, some of these larger, with smaller ones arranged on a three-level metal shelving unit.

It has the disadvantage of taking up slightly more space--an equivalent number of smaller pots with space between them not necessarily fitting into the same footprint as the larger pot they came from. So a few things got moved to the front of the house. That's okay, though, because all the stuff I put in the ground came from the front of the house, so I had room to spare. Also, we got a free-if-you'll-take-it-away metal rack that I can now use to accommodate ever more succulents! Yay!

Guys, I have so many goddamn plants???

A liquidambar tree, with palmate leaves that fade from deep burgundy at the top to yellow-green at the bottom.

In non-succulent news, we planted one of the three new trees we bought. This is a liquidambar, which is about as close to a maple as we're liable to keep alive in the heat up here. We had a bunch of them at our old house. I generally disliked them, because we had several right by the house and, as someone who goes barefoot often, their spiky gumballs were a huge annoyance. They're very pretty, though, and just one couldn't be that bad. What I didn't rememebr until we brought this one home was that they have a particular scent that intensely and immediately said "home" to me. So I have no regrets.

Also, all the gourds have been harvested. I've got 25 of them, mostly small-ish, round ones with a few tall teardrop ones. They're drying on the front steps. Along with the approximately eight thousand very small pumpkins we ended up with.
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