Gordon's Gardens

Exploring California's tended and untended landscapes


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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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How do you make a water treatment plant pretty? Turn it into a Japanese garden!

Bird's eye view

The City of Los Angeles figured out an interesting way to beautify an ugly industrial plant and re-use wastewater.  Adjacent to the Tillman Water Reclamation Plant in Van Nuys, California is a impeccably manicured 6.5 acre Japanese garden.  It is fittingly called Suiho-en, which means “Garden of Water and Fragrance.”  I was in LA last weekend to attend the wedding of two of my best friends from high school and had some time to spare before my flight home, so I got to experience this water and fragrance first hand.

Prunus serrulata 'kwanzan'

The fragrance was especially strong nearest the processing plant over by the blooming Japanese flowering cherry trees (Prunus serrulata ’kwanzan’).  They were all in full bloom, but the fragrance I could smell was coming over the fence from where the reclaimed water was actually being treated before going into the lakes and streams of the garden, nearby Balboa Lake, and the Los Angeles River.  According to the pamphlet we received when entering the garden, no solids are treated here at this particular plant, but it sure didn’t smell that way.

But really, that fragrance was rather minor compared to the overall beauty of the entire garden.  There were a few other areas that didn’t smell as fresh and crisp as I would have expected, but it was rather warm that day in LA.  All joking aside, growing a garden with reclaimed water is a great and very eco-friendly thing to do.  Water has always been a limited resource in LA, as it now is in so many areas across the US from our rather dry winter this year.  Suiho-en shows that you still can have a beautiful garden with reclaimed water – and it’s been showing this for the last 25 years.  For more information, check out their website at www.thejapanesegarden.com

I was quite impressed with Suiho-en.  I visited several amazing gardens when I was in Japan two summers ago and this Southern California version was very reminiscent of what I saw there, although with definite California twist (such as the California redwoods – Sequoia sempervirens – instead of the traditional Japanese redwood - Cryptomeria japonica).

The balance of Yin and Yang was apparent.  My few hours there with family was quite rejuvenating – exactly what I needed after all the stress of work, school, and traveling.

Here are some shots I took during my visit:

Waterfall with a Great Egret in the center

Shallow pond

View from the entrance

Close up with cormorant

Zen rock garden

Bamboo grove

Sad redwoods....they're coastal trees and don't do so well in the heat of the San Fernando Valley.

Bamboo fountain

View with treatment plant in the background. The building looked like something out of a 1970s dystopian movie...Logan's Run maybe?

The Kasuga Lantern

Ginkgo biloba - already leafed out!

 

Bamboo-lined walkway

Shade loving Clivia miniata - beautiful!

What a view!


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Agapanthus orientalis, more commonly known as Lily of the Nile or Gas Station Lily

Agapanthus

Agapanthus orientalis inflorescence

Some people might be shocked, and perhaps will even write me off, because I am devoting my first plant post to Lily of the Nile (Agapanthus orientalis), AKA agapanthus. This plant is commonly used in designed California landscapes because of it’s beauty and how easy it is to grow in our climate. It is often found in pots at gas stations, planted in small islands amongst rows of cars in strip mall parking lots, and at one point was often seen along California highway onramps when the state had money to invest in “freeway beautification.” Of course, when there becomes an influx of too many of one thing, that thing begins to lose value and favor in the eyes of some. Perhaps this “upturning of the nose” is more common in California because we’re fortunate enough to have agapanthuses blooming year round. Maybe if we lived on the East Coast some of us would appreciate them a bit more and not give them common names like “gas station lily,” “freeway lily,” or “obnoxioupanthus.”

Gas Station Lily

Agapanthus orientalis inflorescence and leaves

But I am not here to further promote the anti-agapanthus movement. While it isn’t my favorite plant on earth, it does stir up childhood memories for me of my Grandparents’ backyard in Los Angeles. As someone attuned to plants, a lot of my memories are strongly tied to the sights and smells of the flora I encounter (just wait until I write my posts on Artemisia tridentata, Pinus jeffreyi, and Ephedra californica!) When I think of childhood Easter egg hunts in Grandma and Grandpa’s backyard, I think of how my aunt used to purposely hide hard-boiled eggs amongst the snails living around the base of the agapanthus plant next to the giant grapefruit tree. I was one of the few grandkids who wasn’t disgusted by the sight of a slimy snail creeping along a poorly-died egg in the dirt. I wasn’t going to eat the shell anyway…..I let my brother do that instead.

white agapanthus

Agapanthus orientalis with white flowers, found growing in the St. Mary's Park neighborhood of San Francisco

If personal memories of mine or of your own aren’t enough to inspire appreciation of Agapanthus orientalis, perhaps it’s name will be of interest. Botanical names are all latinized and typically get their monikers in one of these ways: 1) after the person who first recorded the plants existence, 2) after specific characteristics of the plant, or 3) after the location where the plant was discovered. So “orientalis” should make you think “Orient,” and therefore coming from somewhere in Asia or nearby. But Agapanthus orientalis is from South Africa. How can this be? Is the Orient really just anywhere that’s not Europe? Well, it was for the explorers back in the day when various European monarchs were sending them off to find places to conquer and colonize. There wasn’t much a difference to the first people who brought Agapanthus orientalis to Europe whether they picked the plant up in Africa, Indonesia, or what is now known as Florida. It was all the Orient to them. So we who talk poorly about this plant nowadays weren’t the first to disrespect it. How many other ways can we offend this plant? Eh, it doesn’t really matter. Look at how well they grow. It’s obvious they don’t care what we say about them or call them.

Plants like agapanthus serve many purposes: 1) They are relatively easy to grow, so even the garden novice can enjoy some horticultural success and be inspired to have faith in their green thumbs. 2) When grown in groups and not completely neglected, they grow large and make us feel like we are in a lush and perhaps even tropical environment. 3) Those spikes of large violet or dark blue or white inflorescences contrasting against the giant mounds of long, bright green leaves truly do inspire you to wish you were somewhere calm and peaceful – or maybe just confuse your mind into thinking you’re not really about to sit in what could be hours of traffic on the freeway.

So next time you see Agapanthus orientalis growing in that gas station planter or next to where you parked your car, think about their beauty, the memories they may inspire in you, or feel bad for how we humans have mistreated them over the centuries. This will take your mind off the fact that gas is almost $4.00 a gallon and the last thing you want to do after working all day is go grocery shopping.

Peter Pan

Agapanthus orientalis

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