Larner Seeds Demonstration Garden |
It's been a very long time since I've updated our Garden Journal on our website, but the remarkable late summer bloom has inspired me. In bloom today: August 2, 2013.
It's
hard to believe how much is in bloom at the beginning of August in the coastal
Larner Seeds Demonstration Garden, but here goes:
Annual wildflowers are heavy on the clarkias, including Clarkia
rubicunda, Clarkia amoena 'The Real," Clarkia amoena 'The Unreal,' and Clarkia
unguiculata. Also, Trifolium wormskioldii, springbank clover, is responding to
a bit of extra moisture with a whole new round of flowers.
This interesting clover is one of the few native clovers
that are perennial, its roots are an important rootfood in the northwest, and it
lives up to its name of springbank clover by growing on banks with springs. We
also have Trifolium gracilentum in bloom, one of the tastiest native clovers.
This annual is available in 4" pots.
The perennial coastal form of the Ca poppy is colonizing bare
areas created by a construction project. I love its look when young and flat
against the ground, the beautiful contrast of the silver-gray foliage with the
large, rich yellow blossoms. It provides six months of bloom at least.
Harlequin lotus, which used to grow in our famous Bolinas sewer pond lands next
to California oatgrass, is blooming in containers, and we have seed available
again. We also have a magnificent container planting of the rare &
endangered showy Indian clover, Trifolium amoenum.
The blue elderberry is blooming late this
year, in full bloom right now, a few weeks later than usual. When I see its
large and luscious blossoms, I can never resist burying my face in them, to be
surrounded by their incredible addictive fragrance. Ceanothus 'Ray Hartman'
defies its usual twice a year bloom time and has barely been out of bloom for
months. We still have both Gilias, bird's eye gilia and globe gilia lighting up
the patio.
We took down a jay-planted oak this year to open up some area for
a native prairie, which is now jam-packed with native grasses and wildflowers.
In bloom now is hayfield tarweed, Hemizonia congesta ssp congesta, which, in the
rich soil left by the oak, looks like its on steroids, as does the nearby
elegant tarweed, Madia elegans, over six feet tall! I hope they'll calm down
and be more normal next year. It's also a happy sight to see showy Indian
clover blooming away in the prairie, thought once to be extinct. We have seed
available and will have plants as well this fall.
We still have mountain phlox, Linanthus grandiflorus, next to the threatened clarkia called winecup, Clarkia purpurea var purpurea.
We still have mountain phlox, Linanthus grandiflorus, next to the threatened clarkia called winecup, Clarkia purpurea var purpurea.
Also going to seed now is cobweb thistle, Cirsium
occidentale. This showy silvery biennial with large red blossoms is
beautiful for months, and I enjoy sending employees to collect the seed. Yes,
suffering can be part of this wonderful work. With each seed packet comes some
of our blood, pricked by the thistle thorns, bonus DNA.
My favorite edible plant, Kellogg's yampa, Perideridia kelloggii, is just starting to ripen seed. My intern,
Ildiko Polony, and I, with support from Kat Anderson, are doing an informal
Perideridia study group, and we are fascinated by all the different forms of
edible root this plant produces, from twisted together crowns to elongated or
pearl-like swellings all along the wiry stems. As well as edible leaves early
in spring, edible shoots a bit later, and edible seeds to use as an anise-y
seasoning.
Sadly, these plants are not as common as they used to be, when California Indians reported digging them by the bucketful from fields where they grew thick as grass. We've collected tubers from near Paradise and also from near Willits in Mendocino County, and we'd be thrilled to have any interested Perideridia lovers swap tubers with us. We have a solid ID on the Perideridia kelloggii, and we'd love to try Perideridia pringlei, P. parishii, or any others.
Sadly, these plants are not as common as they used to be, when California Indians reported digging them by the bucketful from fields where they grew thick as grass. We've collected tubers from near Paradise and also from near Willits in Mendocino County, and we'd be thrilled to have any interested Perideridia lovers swap tubers with us. We have a solid ID on the Perideridia kelloggii, and we'd love to try Perideridia pringlei, P. parishii, or any others.