In Bloom: April ’14

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Backyard, April 2014

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Front yard, April 2014

The Garden Tour has come and gone, but the floral display remains in full swing. In addition to the long-blooming monkeyflowers and alum roots, penstemons, sages, buckwheats, asters, and daisies have begun to display copious amounts of flowers. Yellows and purples predominate, but the whites of yarrow and the oranges of poppies and monkey flowers add some much needed contrast. The blooms on manzanitas, ceanothus and currants have subsided, but their ample new leafy growth looks nice juxtaposed with their colorful perrenial and annual neighbors. The rock wall inhabitants — dudleya, buckwheats and cliff maids — are all thriving, and should be flowering soon. Some peak performers:

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Dwarf Wooly Daisy (Eriophyllum lanatum ‘Siskiyou’)

 

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Seaside Daisy (Erigeron glaucus ‘Sea Breeze’)

 

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Foothill Penstemon (Penstemon heterophyllus ‘Catherine De La Mare’)

 

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Monkeyflower (Mimulus aurantiacus ‘Pt. Molate’)

For the full set of Spring photos: https://www.flickr.com/photos/8742964@N08/sets/72157643163691855/

 

In Bloom: March ’14 (Part 2)

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‘Canyon Snow’ iris

This is truly an exciting time in the garden. Daily visits reveal new blooms, singing birds and myriad insects busily darting about. These same visits also bring to light plentiful weeds, aphid infiltrations and half-eaten avocados littered underneath their parent tree. You’ve got to take the bad with the good, I suppose, but let’s focus on the positive. Here in late March, the coral bells and ceanothus continue to shine, but many other plants are beginning to awaken. Irises, monkeyflowers, sages, buckwheats, yarrow and others have begun to flower. The giant coreopsis, now in its second year, has sprouted its numerous yellow daisy-like flowers. Also, the island bush poppy, easily one of  my favorite natives, continues to flower profusely and to send beautiful large grey-green leaves skyward. I have included some photos below, but for a more comprehensive display of garden happenings, I invite you to visit my Flickr photo sets, which I hope to update regularly. https://www.flickr.com/photos/8742964@N08/sets/72157643163691855/

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Pacific Coast Hybrid iris

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‘Eleanor’ monkeyflower 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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red monkeyflower

 

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island bush poppy

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hummingbird sage

Monkey-flowering Around

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Mimulus bifidus ‘White,’ star performer in the garden

Shrubby monkeyflowers (genus Mimulus) are a common site in the Bay Area, especially in the coastal scrub plant communities where they grow happily alongside sagebrush, chamise, coffeeberry, and others. In the spring, the plentiful orange flowers of Mimulus aurantiacus add a welcome dash of color to the greens and grays that typically dominate the landscape. Leaves have a characteristic sticky feel and plants can have a gangly, disheveled appearance in the wild.

In the garden, monkeyflowers have become very popular because they come in a wide variety of colors (orange, red, yellow, white, purple, etc.) and they bloom for a relatively long time over the spring and early summer. Native monkelyflowers are also available at most Bay Area nurseries, including Home Depot, where I recently saw the ‘Jelly Bean Yellow’ and ‘Pink’ varieties.

I have experimented with many types of monkeyflowers with mixed results. My first attempt was with a central coast cultivar called Mimulus bifidus ‘Junipero Serra’ that I obtained from East Bay Wilds. Unfortunately, the branches are extremely brittle on this plant and it was trampled over time. This was a full sun site and I think they prefer partial shade.

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Mimulus bifidus ‘Junipero Serra’ in happier times, Spring 2012

Thankfully, I’ve had much more success with my Fall ’12 plantings. Most of these plants were purchased at Annie’s Annuals in Richmond, which, from my experience, has the healthiest, most robust young plants. The current crop of monkeyflowers began blooming in early April and seem to be peaking now in May. To the photos:

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Mimulus aurantiacus, common shrub monkeyflower found on local trails. These are from Mission Blue Nursery, which sources from San Bruno Mountain.

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M. puniceus, Red monkeyflower from Annies

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M. aurantiacus ‘Apricot’ from Annies

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M. ‘Eleanor’ from Half Moon Bay Nursery

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M. bifidus ‘Apricot’ on left and M. bifidus ‘White’ on right, both from Annies

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M. flemingii, a rare Channel islands variety

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M. ‘Jelly Bean Yellow’ from Yerba Buena