Gordon's Gardens

Exploring California's tended and untended landscapes


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A Kitchen Herb Garden – You Can Grow That!

If you have enough natural light in your kitchen, you can grow an herb garden.   Growing a variety of herbs you use on a semi-regular basis can be both easy and incredibly satisfying.  All you need to grow an indoor herb garden in your kitchen is good light.

In years past, I attempted growing rosemary in my kitchen, but being a city dweller, I rarely ever lived in a place that received enough daylight to keep it alive.  Our new house in the city has two skylights in the kitchen.  The previous owners remodeled and put the refrigerator under one of the skylights, which we at first thought created a rather odd space above, but it’s actually been quite beneficial for growing herbs (with a pothos and a cactus).  It’s a perfect platform for growing since it’s just the right distance from the skylight.

Parsley, mint, chives, rosemary……and a pothos and cactus, too!

But what if you don’t have a skylight?  If you have a bright window, you can always put a flower box on the inside or outside of the window and grow your herbs there.  Friends of ours have a kitchen with windows that open out into a light well (another anomaly of urban living) and they, too, are successfully able to grow basil and mint from the amount of sunlight peering overhead.

Fridge-top Garden

When selecting herbs for your own garden, keep in mind that they don’t all require the same light and water conditions.  Do a little research prior to going to the garden center so you have a better idea of what will do well in your kitchen conditions.  Also take note of the lifespan of each herb.  Is it an annual?  A biennial?  A perennial?  Plants such as parsley are biennials.  They’ll look great for two seasons, but as soon as you see it has produced a long spike then its days are limited.  Many people don’t realize that parsley is a biennial and then feel like they did something wrong when it dies.  Don’t worry!  You didn’t do anything wrong.

We’re growing chives, rosemary, parsley, and mint.  I wasn’t sure that a woody rosemary plant would be able to grow well under the same conditions of the herbaceous herbs, but it’s doing well.  Soon after we brought home the mint, I saw that there were little red spots under the leaf.  Yes, mint rust.  I figured it was only a matter of time before it was a gonner.  Well, a month later and there are no signs of rust and the plant is looking as healthy as ever.  I’ll continue to keep an eye on it, of course.

No rust, but there is some mark on one of the leaves. Other than that, it looks healthy again!

With a sunny enough spot, anyone can grow a great and useful herb garden in his or her kitchen.  When reading a recipe and you see it calls for one of the fresh herbs you are growing, nothing is more satisfying than knowing you have it and you grew it yourself!

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On the fourth day of each month, garden bloggers everywhere are coming together to post about what you can grow. Posts will be about anything from growing hops for your home brew to growing your own wedding bouquet. To see others, check out the You Can Grow That! Facebook Page.


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Pelargonium graveolens….who needs coffee?

So….I’m taking a plant identification class taught by a well-known San Francisco plant guru and today we learned about a type of geranium known as the rose geranium, or botanically as Pelargonium graveolens.  A geranium?  Really?  I used to pick caterpillars off them as a kid and put them in my bug farm.  They smelled bad, but were the best place in the neighborhood to find a caterpillar.  I’m not sure what kind of geraniums we had when I was young, but they were definitely not Rose geraniums.  These things smell wonderful.  I couldn’t take it away from my nose all throughout class.  Simply wonderful.

Pelargonium graveolens

Pelargonium graveolens (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Then we began discussing this geranium and it turns out that it can be somewhat of an anti-depressant.  What went through my head when I heard this: “You don’t say?  This is a week from hell for me…I’ll just sniff in some of it’s amazing fragrance all throughout class.”  So I did.  But our teacher also told us that in some people this plant can cause disrupted sleep patterns, excessive hyperactivity, and perhaps even heart palpitations.  Really?  This rather benign-looking geranium can really do all that?  But it smells so good!  (To be honest, I didn’t care too much for the smell the first time.  It reminded me of the scents they put in laundry detergents that that I don’t particularly care for.  But then I smelled it again and was hooked).

The beautiful scent alone is just part of the greatness of this plant.  It also has the power to reduce inflammation and control bleeding.  It’s oils are used in aroma therapy.  You can eat the flowers raw, make tea with the fresh leaves, or even use the leaves to add flavor to cakes and jams.

Pelargonium graveolens

Pelargonium graveolens (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I didn’t think just smelling a cut piece occasionally over the course of an hour could cause one to feel its effects, but it’s now almost 1 a.m. and I’m wide awake.  No heart palpitations, I’m not too hyper, but I know my sleep schedule will be very affected.  I have to be up at 6 to go on a 4-day field trip with my students – four non-stop days of activities.  I’ll be exhausted in the morning….that is, until I find my sample of Pelargonium graveolens from tonight’s class.  While I’m a big fan of native gardens, I now can’t imagine my yard not having this plant.  Oh well, it’s native to somewhere, right?  (S. Africa to be exact.)


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Plant-centric Bathroom Makeover Ideas

As with every project we have done at this old house of ours, what appears to be a quick and easy task often turns into a long, drawn-out mess.  Case-in-point: our 1940s Pepto-[Abysmal] pink tiled bathroom.  We’re saving the complete makeover for a later date when we have the resources to do a good job (meaning replace the worn out pink tiles with anything not pink).  In the mean time, we’re merely patching holes and repainting.  This shouldn’t take too long to do, but with all the other requirements in our daily lives, this project has already taken about a week.

What a great place for a ladder. The Anthurium andraeanum doesn't seem to mind it, though.

I imagine all will be finished by this weekend, but in the mean time my sun-loving plants that typically call the bright, sky-lighted bathroom home have been displaced to the dark spare bedroom.  They started their revolt on Monday by drooping their leaves or otherwise not looking too happy.  To rectify this situation, I moved them back to their bathroom home amidst the construction.  They are perking up already.

No medicine cabinet? No problem for this Euphorbia milii that loves getting all the sun from the skylight above it's new, temporary roost. (Don't worry, this plant will be removed before the medicine cabinet goes in.)

Moral of the story: don’t piss off your plants.  They have the ability to self-destruct and sometimes will within a short amount of time.  If they have to be moved from their preferred location, move them somewhere that has similar conditions to what they are accustomed to already.  The same goes for moving plants from the green house to the open air, or from the conditions of the retail nursery center to your home – they need to be conditioned by slowly introducing them to any new environment that will be drastically different than where they were living prior.  And even then, not all environments will be suitable (Read: don’t try to slowly adjust your favorite cactus to a water garden, obviously).

Well, my plant crisis is averted.  Not only that, but these plants do perk up the otherwise hellacious construction zone now that they’re back.  Who knows, if this project takes any longer I may have to grow a vine on the ladder in the bathtub.  I can also fill up the bathtub with some dirt to grow a tropical garden….or better yet, fill it with water, plant some water lettuce or water lilies in there, and throw in a few gold fish!  No one will notice the horrid pink tiles once they see that lush water garden.

Victoria regia or Victoria amazonica in natura...

Imagine this, but in your bathtub! (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Don’t worry, the shower is a separate stall next to the bathtub….which would be a great place for shade-loving ferns and mosses (No, that’s not “mildew” between the tiles…it’s Funaria hygrometrica)!  We could always resort to using the backyard garden hose for our daily showers.

Funaria hygrometrica Русский: Фунария гигромет...

Funaria hygrometrica (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


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Family Bonds…You can grow that!

I have many childhood memories.  Some of my strongest are associated with growing vegetables or otherwise enjoying the plants around me.  You, too, can grow family bonds and influential memories by growing and enjoying plants together.

State fruit - Tomato

Tomatoes (Photo from Wikipedia)

I remember following my Grandpa around the backyard with a salt shaker.  We’d pick ripe tomatoes off the vines and eat them like apples but with a few sprinkles of salt.

Pumpkin flower with incipient fruit, growing w...

Pumpkin flower with incipient fruit (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I remember my Grandpa picking off dying squash flowers so I could stomp on them.  Yeah, I’m not sure why now, but at the time it made sense.  They would pop!

A Striped Lawn

A well-mowed lawn (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I remember having to mow the lawn when I was a kid.  Several times I would have to do it twice, then my Dad would do it again.  Why?  I don’t know.  I did a great job the first time.  (Maybe this is why I hate lawns now?)

Low hanging branches of an Apricot tree full o...

Apricot tree

I remember picking apricots, figs, grapefruit, and loquats in my other Grandparents’ backyard.  They were all delicious.  Growing up in Southern California had its benefits.

A large mature east side Jeffrey Pine growing ...

A large mature east side Jeffrey Pine growing on volcanic table lands south of Mono Lake, Ca. Photo taken approximately one mile east north east of Deadman’s Pass, off of US HWY 395. The stand is composed of pure Jeffrey Pine with different age classes found through out. The large tree is approximately 27-30m tall, and 90cm in diameter at breast height.

I remember going to the Sierras with family every summer.  The butterscotch and vanilla smells of the Jeffrey Pines (pinus jeffreyi) in the Mammoth Lakes area reminds me of camping trips, card games (they taught us young), early morning hiking, fishing, and laughing over inappropriate jokes Grandma would make.

Artemisia tridentata in Red Rock Canyon, Sprin...

Artemisia tridentata (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I always tell people I don’t have a great sense of smell.  It’s true.  I don’t.  But I can identify the remarkable smells of the jeffrey pine and big sage brush (Artemisia tridentata) immediately.  I recently bought a young Artemisia tridentata from Bay Natives in San Francisco to plant in my backyard as part of my “weeds to wonderful” backyard makeover.  It might be a rather wild or boring looking plant to many, but my experiences with it over the years makes it one of my favorites.

Stacked rockmelons (cantaloupe) in a fruit and...

Cantaloupe AKA Muskmelon

Currently, my friend and co-worker Maureen is growing cantaloupe with her junior high students.  They’re on a trip, so I’m minding them for the time being (seeds, if you’re reading this, please sprout!!!).  She’s continuing an age-old tradition teaching the young to enjoy and respect nature.  It’s an amazing thing how plants affect our lives.  Whether the cantaloupe seeds sprout or not, these kids will always remember this project just like I will always remember the memories I’m sharing with you here.

Beer at the bottom of a glass.

Beer!

P.S. If you’re ever in the Mammoth Lakes area, go to Mammoth Brewing Company and try their IPA 395.  Named after the central highway that runs through the Eastern Sierras, IPA 395 is made with mountain sage and juniper.  What’s the best thing ever?  Turning my childhood memories into beer.  Try it if you can!  It’s amazing whether you share my love of Eastern Sierra plants or not.

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On the fourth day of each month, garden bloggers everywhere are coming together to post about what you can grow. Posts will be about anything from growing hops for your home brew to growing your own wedding bouquet. To see others, check out the You Can Grow That! Facebook Page.

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