Friday, June 15, 2012

Welcome to Grand Central Station

I remember feeling so guilty when I first started to pull out the old lawn, privet and ivy garden. I felt as though I were ripping away habitat for so many little critters. But now that the native garden has had time to grow in, it is busy, busy, busy with all sorts of creatures bustling around in it.
 
I sat watching a humming bird feed from the Cleveland Sage for ages from the air-conditioned comfort of my home-office.

A house finch with his cheery red head and breast has set up home in the eaves overlooking the garden with his partner, a dowdy brown bird, as is the feathered friend way.
 
Somehow I don't think his building is quite up to code yet!
I'm just happy to have them enjoy my native garden. Oh, did I say "my native garden?" Well judging by the stance of this little guy I reckon he thinks he owns the garden.

Equally ownership could be claimed by the gazillions of lizards, seen usually as a flash of movement out of the corner of your eye as you move through the garden. Cute and quick they may be but quiet they ain't - boy, can they make those leaves rattle and your ticker quicker!
The air is thick with the buzz of bees, busy visiting every blossom they find.

This bumblebee is completely wrapped up in his work with the desert willow.
And the Hookers evening primrose is a big hit with the honey bees.
 
 The coyote mint not only smells good but it looks great too.
 The rosy buckwheat is a gorgeous hue of dusky pink.
 The Scarlet Penstemon, another favorite of the hummingbird, is only just beginning to unfurl.
And clarkia that reseeded itself from last year is vibrant and bright.
The more delicate chaparral clematis has grown in leaps and bounds, covering my fence. 
Its pretty white flowers will be quite a show.
The blue flax is also quite delicate, green with a mist of blue flowers.
 
The mugwort is promising to bloom. I've not seen these blossoms yet - I'm curious...
 And perhaps this is what all the new inhabitants are really waiting for - the Rodgers red grapes!
I know I am! Hardly enough to make a bottle of wine though, but of course, that's why God made Costco!

Byddi Lee

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

The life and loves of a lucky lemon tree

When we first moved into our house (and garden) in 2009 we inherited a lemon tree. Thanks to years of Mr Mow&Blow it looked more like a manicured privet.
In fairness, maintained at this size it did not obscure the view.
But the weekly shearing meant that it would never produce fruit. This was in dire need of a good pruning. After attending a Master Gardener talk on pruning, I took my lopers and got to work. It wasn't easy as there are two inch thorns on this baby. Quite literally, the tree fought back. By the end of it I wasn't sure who'd won.

My mother, who was visiting at the time was horrified at how I'd reduced the bush to four or five branches. Karla and Al, from next door, said, "Good job!" I wondered were they secretly thinking, "Good Lord what has she done!"
But nature prevailed and it began to leaf out. It even survived some of the devastating winter storms we regularly suffer here. (Snigger)
But the following year it produced so much new growth that it became a little top heavy. Then it was ravaged by another of our infamous winter blusters.
About a third of the tree was lost as a substantial branch split off.
Not so much to snigger about now, eh?

By last summer the tops of the branches were one story high. No view, no fruit. And a list of ailments. The leaves were being chewed by an assortment of beasties, aided and abetted by ants.

This leaf shows a brown scale infestation.

This one has leaf miner damage.
First we used tangle foot to stop the ants from getting into the tree. This was no easy task. The branches were only about a foot off the ground and the thorns were in full attack mode. It's easy to hate a tree with two inch thorns that stab you even when you are trying to help it. I was threatening to hack the damn thing down and be done with it - plus we'd get our full view back.
We had to control the ants because they feed of the aphids and scale and protect them form the gardeners arsenal of good guys. Here they are harassing a ladybug.
Then it was just a case of sitting back and letting the good guys do their job. The mealy bug destroyers moved in.
 
Their extremely cute white "fluffy" larvae equally as good at eating up the bad guys as mama.
And just as I was threatening the tree with the chop if it didn't produce any fruit this year we noticed a green swelling.
My Husband was so excited you'd have thought that he was personally responsible for it! Well seeing it was usually me nursing the war wounds from working with the vicious citrus! 
But I decided that we would keep the tree. It produced enormous fruit and I felt that I had won that round, despite the scars!
But the tree had the last laugh - these were Limoncello lemons, and as such, not very juicy and sour, sour, sour! 

So today I decided that this tree will be a shade tree. I will prune it so that it has a bare trunk. I'll let it get tall enough so that we view the hills past its trunk, beneath its canopy. The garden gets so much sun that  a shade tree would be great. I'm hoping it will grow tall enough. (If it doesn't I'll be turning on the chainsaw!)

The pruning today was more painful for me than the tree, but I trimmed of all branches less than 3/4 inch thick below the three foot mark. The cuttings pile looked alarming big.
The tree looked great.
I'm looking forward to sitting beneath it in a hammock some day. But knowing that tree, it's apt to drop one of those giant lemons on my head!

Byddi Lee