viernes, 4 de agosto de 2023

Propagation: What Your Succulents Want You to Know Amazing tips

In my new video I show and explain how your succulents want to propagate, if you help them or not...and whether you like it or not! When propagation happens, you may be delighted or dismayed. Delighted, because you get free plants; dismayed because you get too many.

It all comes down to observation. Succulents are good at telling you what’s important to them. You'll soon discover how yours want to reproduce in your garden or pots. See examples from the video below.

Note: I use the terms "offsets," "plantlets" and "pups" interchangeably to refer to baby plants that grow from the parent via a sort of botanical umbilical cord. Depending on the type of succulent, this pipeline of nutrients might be above or below the soil.

When leaves pop off easily

Succulents with leaves that pop off easily (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Succulents with leaves that detach easily

You know that little snap when a plump leaf falls off? Leaves of sedums, graptopetalums, pachyphytums, and pachyverias tend to fall off if you merely brush against them. This is infuriating, but do consider the plants’ perspective: They’re simply trying to clone themselves...and you can help. Tuck the fallen leaf where it’ll produce its own little leaves and roots atop the soil beneath the mother plant.

When stems work best for propagation

Jade cutting with roots (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Jade cutting with roots

Succulents with stems propagate readily from cuttings, and jade is one that drops stems for that very purpose. If this fallen jade stem could talk, it would say, “Plant me please.” Notice how drying out a bit has made it curl. It's all set to go, with roots that point downward and leaves that go upward. Both form from meristem (growth) tissue.

What cacti want you to know

Ceroid cactus with offsets (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Ceroid cactus with offsets

If you wonder why cacti tend to fall over or break apart easily, consider how doing so helps them propagate. Columnar species tend to be shallow-rooted and top-heavy. By falling over, they're able to launch a family.

What aerial roots are all about

Aeonium with aerial roots (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Aeonium with aerial roots

Stems that are still on plants may send roots into thin air, like this aeonium. Aerial roots are almost always about propagation. This succulent is saying, "I'm SO ready to leave home!"

What pups are trying to tell you

Agave americana 'Marginata' and pups (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Agave americana 'Marginata' and pups

Pups grow from underground roots that run parallel to the surface of the soil. These are white until they break through. When exposed to the sun, root tips form leaves that turn green and photosynthesize.

You may think pups look cool, like the Agave americana “Marginata’ above with feral plantlets poking out of gaps in a terrace. No! They’re baby alligators, cute until they get huge.

When baby plants form on leaves or flower stems

Haworthia fasciata offset (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Haworthia fasciata offset

Haworthias are efficient at creating offsets from their roots, but every so often a plant will produce one or more plantlets on a flower spike. As the baby plant grows, it gets heavier. Gravity lowers it to the ground where it takes root---hence the long stem. Other succulents that do this include Crassula multicava and bryophyllums.

When tissue damage produces baby plants

Barrel cactus with offsets (c) Debra Lee Balwin

Barrel cactus with offsets caused by tissue damage

Cacti, agaves, mangaves and other succulents may produce offsets as a result of tissue damage. Above, a gopher ate the root of this barrel cactus up into its core, which stimulated the plant’s meristem tissue. Damaging the meristem is a method professional growers and collectors use to propagate succulents. They may, for example, cut out the cores of agaves, then remove the little clones that result.

What yuccas want you to know

Yucca aloifolia (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Yucca aloifolia started from cuttings

Because a yucca’s lower trunk is a water tank, it can get by on rainfall alone once established. Don’t plant a yucca near your home’s foundation, pipes or anything that an ever-expanding, bulbous base might encroach upon. I prune my yuccas to make them fuller and more shrublike. And if I want more yuccas, the cuttings root readily.

When succulents need your help

Echeveria in need of beheading (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Echeveria in need of beheading

Leggy aeoniums and echeverias that have ever-smaller rosettes atop naked stems can use your help with propagation. Cut off the top along with enough stem to anchor the rosette, set it aside until roots form, then plant in good soil.


The above is merely an overview of the 18-min video. Types of succulents in the video include sedums, agaves (large and small), echeverias, aeoniums, crassulas, graptoveria, graptosedum, cacti (paddle, columnar, spherical), kalanchoes (bryophyllums), sempervivums, aloes, euphorbia, haworthias, stapeliads and yuccas.

Have you had an interesting or potentially helpful experience propagating your succulents? Please share it in the Comments below! 

Related Info On This Site

How to Propagate Succulents

How to Propagate Succulents Learn the many ways to make more succulents from existing plants Recognize growth-producing tissue Most succulents can be propagated vegetatively—via stem cuttings, pulling apart offsets, or rooting leaves. The key is to locate the growth tissue that grows roots. This meristematic tissue is at… bands on stems where leaves once were attached the base…

Succulent Basics, Must-Do’s, FAQs, and Essentials for Success

Below are succulent basics, must-do’s and answers to FAQs—the essentials for growing succulents successfully. If all this is new to you, you’ll want to refer to this page often. And even if you’re experienced, you’ll find it a great resource!

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jueves, 20 de julio de 2023

I’m in Architectural Digest! Sadly… Amazing tips

I'm in Architectural Digest!  Sadly, they didn't interview me about design...which is a little disappointing because I wrote Designing with Succulents and was a regular contributor to Better Homes & Gardens and Sunset. That said, being in AD is a huge honor. Plus they used my photos (example above).

The topic: How to propagate succulents

In the article I explain how to start succulents from cuttings, pups, offsets and leaves. Does that sort of thing interest you? You'll find plenty of good info here on my site and on my YouTube channel. And of course, if you like, you can read the AD article.

Btw, I gave those links to the writer and also explained how to start succulents from cuttings, pups, offsets and leaves. We talked for over an hour with email follow-ups. Even so, the article has several misconceptions and at least one egregious error. If you spot them, kudos to you! Do share them (or if you think I'm overreacting) in the Comments below.

I was in The New Yorker recently, too.

That article also is not about design, but nevertheless is an honor (many thanks to Jeanne and Barry Meadow for bringing it to my attention). It references a book I wrote pre-succulents: Taco Titan, The Glen Bell Story.

What? You never heard of it?

Well, after I profiled Mr. Bell for the San Diego Union-Tribune, Bell Enterprises and Taco Bell Corp. wanted me to do his biography. I'm proud of the book; it's a good read. After it came out, KFC asked, but I declined doing one about The Colonel. If I hadn't, what do you suppose I'd be doing today? Speculations welcome in the comments below.

Related Info:

How to Propagate Succulents

How to Propagate Succulents Learn the many ways to make more succulents from existing plants Recognize growth-producing tissue Most succulents can be propagated vegetatively—via stem cuttings, pulling apart offsets, or rooting leaves. The key is to locate the growth tissue that grows roots. This meristematic tissue is at… bands on stems where leaves once were attached the base…

TV, Radio and Media

TV, Radio and Media Features, interviews and articles Here you’ll find excerpts and links to a few of many media articles and interviews in which Debra Lee Baldwin is featured and quoted as an expert on succulents and their design uses. Included are book reviews, radio, podcasts, TV news, Wall St. Journal, Washington Post, KPBS,…

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sábado, 8 de julio de 2023

Discover Stacked Crassulas Amazing tips

My love affair with stacked crassulas began three decades ago. On a garden tour I saw a succulent with leaves stacked like pancakes along pendant stems. I took photos and finally tracked down the plant (Crassula perforata) several years later. Today stacked crassulas are much easier to come by, and desirable varieties number in the dozens.

Crassula perforata in Mark Rafter pot (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Crassula perforata in a Mark Rafter pot

What's a stacked crassula?

"Stacked crassula" describes those species and cultivars in the genus Crassula with stems that go through the middle of the leaves. This creates what looks like stacks of bagels, beads on a necklace, minarets, pagodas, alternating plus-signs, rounded stars, rattler tails, pinwheels and more.

Crassula deceptor (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Crassula deceptor

Leaves vary from chunky (Crassula 'Moonglow') to dainty (Crassula 'Petite Bicolor'). Colors range from silvery white (Crassula deceptor) through shades of blue, green, brown and maroon. Flowers are tiny and clustering---similar to those of jade plants (one reason they're in the same genus). Stems vary from green "watch chains" (Crassula muscosa) to caterpillars (Crassula 'Baby's Necklace'). Go to the Crassula Gallery.

Stacked Crassula video

I'm so proud of my comprehensive, eye-candy video and eager for you to see 20+ collectible, easy-care and endearing varieties. Each has its own form, color and personality. In the video, you'll learn names, how to care for them, see them showcased in pots, and find out how to take cuttings. Yes, it's possible to propagate succulents with leaves so tight they conceal the stems! And---spoiler alert---it's easy.

Because names vary...

I've painstakingly researched plant names, which tend to be confusing or inaccurate online. I suspect this has to do with the same variety looking different depending on sun exposure, and vendors trying to ID plants from photos. Also to assist my viewers, I tracked down the parentage of crosses and cultivars, and (with glee I hope you share...or at least are patient with), I translate intimidating-yet-insightful Latin names.

Crassula pellucida 'Petite Bicolor' (Little Missy) (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Crassula pellucida 'Petite Bicolor' (Little Missy) is among the more delicate stacked crassulas 

Where and how to grow them

Stacked crassulas are too small to grow in the open garden---at least in mine, where they'd soon be engulfed or forgotten. Where I live in the foothills northeast of San Diego (Zone 9b), I grow stacked crassulas in pots in sheltered outdoor areas. Like shrub crassulas (jade plants), stacked species are frost-tender.

Growing indoors shouldn't be a problem; most are suited to windowsill pots. Thicker-leaved varieties want less water than thin-leaved ones, and are more likely to rot if overwatered. All want as much sun as possible, short of burning. They do fine in dappled shade, but will reward you by reddening and flowering in greater sun. A few hours of full sun in the morning or late afternoon should do it.

See My Gallery of Varieties

Go to my Crassula page for care-and-cultivation info and a comprehensive gallery of plants, all ID'd.

Shop for Stacked Crassulas

An online source with a consistent inventory and good selection is Mountain Crest Gardens. Not to mention their nomenclature is reliable (yay!). Also look for rarities at Cactus & Succulent Society shows and succulent specialty nurseries. Oasis Water Efficient Gardens in San Diego's North County consistently offers the more common varieties. If you can recommend other sources, do mention them in the comments.

Related Videos and Links

Crassula 'Tricolor' (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Crassula (Jade and More): Details, Photos and Varieties

Crassulas are among the easiest, most trouble-free succulents to grow, with one caveat: With few exceptions, they’re frost-tender (tend to be damaged when temperatures drop below 32 degrees F). Shrub varieties are very easy to start from cuttings, and stacked jades will send forth whiskery roots from between their tight leaves—simply snip off the stem and bury in potting soil so that roots are covered (it’s OK to bury a few leaves too). Crassulas, like aloes, also stress beautifully to shades of red, yellow and orange. Give variegated varieties adequate sun or they’ll revert to solid green.

Kalanchoe luciae (paddle plant) stressed before-and-after (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Are Your Succulents Well Stressed? 50 Before-and-Afters

Are your succulents well stressed? Given the right conditions, certain varieties turn from green or blue to brilliant reds, oranges and yellows. See 50 before-and-afters. How much a succulent “colors up” depends on…

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martes, 6 de junio de 2023

See Hannah’s Award-Winning County Fair Garden Amazing tips

Hannah Eubanks, 25, of Design for Serenity (she's Laura Eubanks’ daughter and protégé), undertook a herculean task: creating a 1,750-square-foot succulent display for the Del Mar Fair Flower Show. Hannah transformed ten motor-home-sized parking places (two adjoining exhibit spaces) into an immense, eye-catching, award-winning garden.

Del Mar fair exhibit: Before

Before: This parking area was what Hannah tackled less than a week before opening day. Shade cloth had yet to conceal buildings at right or be installed overhead. Yep, that's it.

Where's the exhibit LOCATED?

When you enter the Fairgrounds go left to enter the Flower Show. Find Hannah's exhibit on the west side facing the east end of the Bing Crosby Hall, adjacent to the SW corner of O'Brien Hall. The Del Mar Fair website gives hours, admission, parking info and more. San Diego County's summer Fair, which averages 1.5 million visitors annually, runs through July 4.

"So many awards!"

The energy at this year's Flower Show award ceremony was palpable as Hannah, her sister Alex and friends awaited results. Over the course of the evening, Hannah, on behalf of exhibit sponsor Grangetto's, won five awards! Fellow designers---now like family---gave a delighted Hannah hugs, high-fives and happy whoops. Parents Laura and Greg Eubanks, away in Northern CA, watched proudly via Alex's texts.

Debra Lee Baldwin and Hannah Eubanks

Hannah shows an award the exhibit received from the American Horticultural Society.

What Hannah accomplished

To understand and appreciate the scope of what San Diego's youngest and brightest succulent designer managed to pull off, consider that Hannah…

  • did it all on her own during six 10-hour days
  • had only occasional hand’s-on help
  • moved boulders (ten tons worth, some bathtub-sized) with a rock dolly
  • moved dozens of barrel cacti, many weighing more than she does
  • coordinated all materials---much of it donated---with nurseries and suppliers
  • was given free reign by sponsor Kevin Grangetto of Grangetto’s Farm and Garden Supply
  • was invariably cheerful, bubbly, friendly, hardworking and professional (but that’s Hannah).
Driftwood in Del Mar Fair Succulent Display (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Bleached and twisted driftwood sourced at Waterwise Botanicals suggests a desert tree's skeleton. From a design standpoint it's in scale with the space, offers contrast of form and a sense of motion, and draws the eye upward.

Links and credits: Who did what

When you support these outstanding businesses, it's a win-win for both you and them.

Details of the display

Don't miss hearing Hannah explain how she handled all this. It's astonishing.

    • Square footage: 1,750
    • Boulders: 10 tons
    • Gravel topdressing: 6 yards
    • Soil: 10 yards
Hannah Eubanks' succulent display for the 2023 Del Mar Fair Flower Show (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Raised beds (upper right) are among garden accessories sold at Grangetto's. Pots and a Talavera orb are from Planter Paradise in El Cajon. Crushed rock topdressing from KRC is "chamois beige."

About the sponsor: Grangetto's Farm & Garden Supply

The aim of Grangetto's first-ever Del Mar Flower Show exhibit is to make homeowners more aware that the company welcomes and serves residential customers. “Seventy percent of our business is now retail,” says owner Kevin Grangetto. When his father founded it in 1952, the business was primarily an agricultural supplier.

Hannah Eubanks, Kevin Grangetto on KUSI News

Hannah Eubanks and Kevin Grangetto appeared on KUSI News the day the Fair opened.

A name long respected in San Diego's farm and gardening communities, Grangetto's has locations in Encinitas, Escondido, Valley Center and Fallbrook. I can attest that the staff is friendly and helpful. For over 30 years, I've asked questions and bought supplies at Grangetto’s, just as my dad did long ago for the avocado ranch I grew up on.

After the award ceremony, Kevin told a reporter with KUSI-TV News that Grangetto's offers “everything you need to grow plants: irrigation, fertilizer, tools and more. Everything but the plants, literally." Not surprisingly, Grangetto's has a symbiotic relationship with nurseries, which---as Kevin noted--- "Hannah sourced to create a beautiful display.”

 Watch Kevin and Hannah's KUSI interview.

Related Info on This Site

How Succulent Designer Laura Eubanks Does It

Succulent designer Laura Eubanks of Design for Serenity is no stranger to crises. The challenges she’s had to overcome—including a horrific childhood—have given her wisdom, compassion and a keen desire to mentor and inspire others. Due to an unfortunate turn of events, she’s now the one in need of help..

Hannah Eubanks succulent reef garden (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Hannah’s Stunning Succulent Reef

Hannah Eubanks, 24, shows us a stunning succulent reef garden she created for a client in Vista, CA. The youngest of three daughters of celebrity landscaper Laura Eubanks, Hannah expedited the project start-to-finish. “My mom was totally hand’s-off,” she says proudly.

Succulent Landscape Rocks

Succulent Landscapes

Succulent Landscapes Design ideas and must-dos for your yard’s transformation Want to transform your yard into a low-maintenance, low-water succulent garden? This page guides you to helpful info on this site and on my YouTube channel. Before you purchase plants or pick up a shovel, do obtain my book Designing with Succulents (2nd ed). It’s mainly about…

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sábado, 3 de junio de 2023

Should You Water Aeoniums in Summer? Amazing tips

Conventional seasonal care advice for aeoniums is to "withhold summer water," info I've routinely passed along. But it's always bothered me. My own experience and observations indicate otherwise.
For over 20 years, I've cultivated a dozen or more types of Aeonium in my garden NE of San Diego. It's Zone 9b---dry inland foothills with a slight maritime influence. Summer rainfall is seldom and temps soar into the triple digits from late-August through mid-September.

Above: Aeoniums thrive in dappled shade in my garden. Center: A. urbicum. In back: A. 'Sunburst'. Far right: dark A. 'Zwartkop' and below it, A. 'Kiwi'.  Variegates can be susceptible to sunburn. Darker aeoniums fare best; more pigment = better sun protection. Learn more on my Aeonium page.

 

The genus Aeonium is native to the Canary Islands off northwestern Africa, where the climate is among the best in the world. Temps are mild year-round and days sunny. Rain is minimal and falls December through February. If that sounds familiar, it should: It's similar to coastal CA from the Bay Area south.

It seems counterintuitive, but...

Aeoniums don’t do well in other "ideal" US climates like Hawaii and Florida. The reason is those regions' heavy summer rains and humidity. If aeoniums sit in soaked soil and and stay damp, stems and roots rot---especially if the plants are dormant.
However in CA, where rain falls mainly in winter and humidity is low, rot is unlikely even after drenching winter rains.

When you should do something

Succulent cuttings (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Did you lose your aeoniums to rot? Need to refresh existing specimens? See how to take cuttings from firm, healthy top growth and start them in my video "How to Plant or Redo an Overgrown Succulent Garden." 

I lazily leave aeoniums alone unless I want to snip cuttings or to redo an overgrown bed (every 3-4 years).

What does kill aeoniums

Seems the only thing that kills these super-easy succulents is flowering. After individual rosettes elongate into bloom, they'll die (i.e. they're “monocarpic.”)
Aeoniums in bloom

Not all rosettes in a colony bloom at once, and it takes years for most aeonium rosettes to flower. Enjoy the show, then cut the stalks where they join the trunk.

True, aeoniums that get no water look like they're at death’s door by September…which is when my neighbors’ gardener yanks theirs. Oh, if he'd only wait! Aeoniums that appear moribund will bounce back in a few months!

The bottom line

The conclusion I've come to is that if you're in CA, you can choose whether or not to water your aeoniums. Those of mine that get irrigated along with everything else look fine all summer. I don't water those that have gone dormant.

But how to tell if an aeonium is dormant?

If you're wondering how to tell if an aeonium has gone dormant, because you're worried you'll overwater it, no worries. It's a non-issue. Growth does slow after the spring spurt, but you can safely assume that aeoniums that are getting regular water and look healthy are perfectly fine.
As for my no-water ones---those beyond the irrigation system---they begin losing their sheen in July. By end-August, leaves have shriveled, and rosettes resemble closed purses. This smart, moisture-saving tactic reveals naked stems, which make plants look truly sad.
Aeonium haworthii before rain (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

My Aeonium haworthii in September, after six months with no water.

Aeonium haworthii after rain (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

The same aeonium in the spring, after winter storms. This drought-then-flourish cycle happens every year, and the plant keeps getting bigger.

What if you do water them?

So, should you water ratty, sleeping aeoniums in summer? Sure, if you want to. They might not look better afterwards, but it could help keep small, heat-stressed specimens alive---especially those out in the open that are baking in dry, shallow soil. In any case, if they don't sit in water for days, it won't harm them.
And if you don't? Roots may desiccate, but if they still anchor the plant, it'll regenerate new roots during winter rains.
Neglected aeoniums (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

If the roots of a neglected aeonium like this one haven't dried completely, some summer watering will likely hydrate them. But please don't stress over how to tell. It's fine to let sleeping aeoniums lie. 

Debra's Seasonal summary for Aeoniums

Note that these changes don't happen overnight. They're so subtle, you may not notice until they're well underway.
In Southern and Coastal CA:
  • SUMMER: July-September. Aeoniums begin going dormant as the weather warms. Those that receive no summer irrigation are completely (and clearly) dormant by late-summer heat waves.
  • FALL: October-December. Aeoniums begin to awaken as days shorten, temperatures drop and rains return. Now into mid-winter is the best time to take and start cuttings.
  • WINTER: December-February. Growing season; aeoniums look better and better. Roots in rain-soaked spread in preparation for fueling spring top growth. Cuttings started in fall root quickly.
  • SPRING: March-June. Few succulents are so lush and lovely as rain-revived aeoniums. Spring is when they flower, so do enjoy the show. Deadhead spent blooms to keep the plants tidy.
Green aeonium spiral (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Aeonium Uses, Photos, IDs, Varieties

Aeonium Uses, Photos and Varieties Native to the Canary Islands and Morocco, aeoniums thrive outdoors in zone 9 (and higher if in dappled shade). Prune and replant in autumn. See All Succulent Types Aeonium Agaves Aloes Cactus Crassula Echeveria Euphorbias Ice Plants Kalanchoe Portulacaria Senecio About Aeoniums Aeonium rosettes resemble big, fleshy-petalled daisies. Colors include green,…

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miércoles, 24 de mayo de 2023

How to Pick Succulents for Special Pots Amazing tips

 

You know you've created an effective plant-pot pairing if every time you look at it, it delights you. Ideally, it exceeds the sum of its parts. But how to make that happen? You're about to find out: In my new video you'll learn basic design principles that people find pleasing, and that professional designers use routinely.

I learned to identify and describe these early in my career as a garden writer on assignment for Sunset and Better Homes & Gardens publications. In published articles and later in my books on succulents, I explained what made certain gardens or plant combos "work," and how readers could achieve something similar.

If you don’t have much space (who does?), pairing succulents with art pots is a great way to display both, lend sophistication to outdoor living spaces, and eliminate clutter. Succulent plant-pot pairing---an art form in itself---is the topic of my latest video.

Key design factors

Succulents tend to look best in pots that are earth tones and shades of red, orange, yellow, teal, gray-blue and lavender. Colors harder to pair are those seldom seen in the plants, such as black and certain blues (navy, royal, cobalt).
Aloe castilloneae @potterybypatrice

This pairing does everything right: Green leaves of Aloe castilloniae contrast with rust-red in the glaze (the complementary color). Reddish-brown dashes on leaves contrast texturally with the pot's smooth surface while repeating its speckles (as does the crushed rock topdressing). As for scale and proportion, the plant is the perfect size for the pot.

Plant Pairing at Oasis

Orange County ceramic artist and horticulturist Pat Roach and I met several years ago as a result of our mutual interest in succulents and our enjoyment in pairing them with one-of-a-kind, artist-designed pots.

Pat Roach @potterybypatrice evaluates golden sedum for a golden-tan pot she made.

Occasionally Pat and I do pairing at Oasis Water Efficient Gardens in Escondido, California. She lives 90 minutes north, so it’s a real treat when Pat visits and brings pots she’s made.
We may have a succulent in mind for a particular pot, but we don’t know for certain what will look best until we try it on, or rather in, the pot. Sometimes the best selection is unexpected, which is part of the fun.
We walk up and down the aisles with each pot, holding it alongside likely candidates, and bring the best back to a makeshift pairing area. In the video, I explain our thought processes, and why we eliminated (or went with) the plants we did.
Which pairings do you like best? Did you agree with our selections? Please tell us in the comments!

Helpful Links

On this particular topic, I've written thousands of words, taken loads of photos, and filmed well over a dozen YouTube videos. Here's a short list of must-see's:
Succulent Container Garden (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Succulent Container Design

Succulent Container Design Design ideas and must-dos for beautiful, easy-care potted succulents Here you’ll find info on succulent container design in articles and videos. Scroll down to see what interests you and best meets your needs. Click to see my gallery of 150+ floral-style arrangements! Succulent Container Gardens, How-To Welcome to the most comprehensive info…

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viernes, 5 de mayo de 2023

To Tree or Not to Tree? Ask Your Succulents Amazing tips

Do consider the need for shade when installing a succulent garden, especially if you---like me---live in a hot, dry region of the Southwest where winter frost is also a concern. Tree canopies moderate temperature extremes and create the dappled sunshine succulents love.

Debra Lee Baldwin's garden (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Dappled shade enhances my garden's succulent sitting area

Of course, not all succulents are the same. Twenty or more miles inland from the ocean, graptopetalums, echeverias, kalanchoes, small aloes, and aeoniums do best as understory plants. Same goes for succulents that are crested or variegated. Others---especially those native to the Americas (cacti, dasylirions, beaucarneas, yuccas, and agaves)---are usually fine out in the open.

Debra Lee Baldwin's garden (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Aeoniums thrive beneath Texas privets trimmed to show their branching structure

You and your family, guests and pets benefit from dappled shade, too. Trees create a sense of sanctuary, make sitting areas inviting, and frame views. Because they take years to mature, it's smart to get trees in the ground ASAP.

Can't plant trees or don't want to wait?

Alternatives include sun sails, patio umbrellas, pergolas and other free-standing shade structures. (Affiliate links). Also keep in mind that trees that you can see from your yard serve as "borrowed landscape." They provide greenery and focal points that can beautifully extend your garden beyond its boundaries.

Unfortunately no tree is perfect

All trees have pros and cons. Consider: every leaf and flower eventually dies and falls to the ground. The plus side is mulch; the downside, mess and maintenance. Mature trees need trimming every three to six years to remove dead, crossed or downward limbs; to enhance air circulation; and to show off their branching structure. This last is "lacing."

Debra Lee Baldwin's garden (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Those shadows! At upper right is a recently laced Acacia baileyana. The oak at center is borrowed landscaping.

"Topping" a tree---a quick way to gain a view---is unnatural and (ironically) can cause denser regrowth. It makes me crazy how, in a matter of seconds, a chainsaw-wielding chimpanzee can transform a tree from overgrown to awful. But really, isn't it we homeowners who should know better?

Your personal park

One joy of getting older is that trees you planted decades ago now tower overhead. During the past year, I had the largest ones on my half-acre professionally pruned: two acacias, two oaks and a podocarpus.

Debra Lee Baldwin's garden (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

View from the deck: coast live oak on right, podocarpus on right. The oak was about a third that size when we moved here 33 years ago. It had survived a wildfire, and had a large scar that slowly healed over the ensuing decade. 

Pleased with how the garden looks, I took the photos above to show you. Compare them to others of my garden here on my site and on my YouTube channel, and I think you'll agree the difference is striking. Trees lend a sense of grandeur and lots of green. Having a personal park makes me wonder: Exactly why do I need succulents? (Don't quote me.)

My "tree guy"

Tree trimming specialist Jesus Leon

Tree trimming specialist Jesus Leon

If you live in San Diego's North County, do call Leon Tree Service. I've known the family for decades. When he was 7, I asked Jesus Jr. (above) to climb my live oak to retrieve a toy airplane...and look...now he climbs trees for a living! (Should I take credit?) Jesus ("Hay-soos") laces like an artist, keeping trees' health and potential in mind. He doesn't trim if the time of year isn't right, and he knows how a pruned tree will look months---even years---afterwards. No disclaimer needed; I'm not compensated for this. It simply makes me happy to share Jesus with you.

Considering queen palms? Uh...

In my recent video about Arizona gardens, I mention that palms are good around pools and water features. I should have known better than to recommend trees I don't grow myself and have only a passing acquaintance with. A Phoenix viewer set me straight:

>I am no palm expert, but I can tell you from sad experience that Queen Palms are "low litter" only when properly maintained (that is, trimmed annually to remove the seed pods before they open and flower).  If they are not properly managed, they will DUMP flowers (which the wind carries everywhere!), tiny baby seeds (that get into your mulch, top dressing and potted plants and are a right pain in the behind to pick out!)  hard, green, grape-sized older seeds (that smart when they fall and hit you on the head, grr!), and ripe orange "berries"(which draw rats, ick!) all over the place.  If you don't stay on top of sweeping or vacuuming them up promptly, they will burrow into the soil (even through a lawn!) and sprout!  Seriously, if you can't keep up with the annual maintenance, I do NOT recommend planting these anywhere near a water feature, or anyplace else you want to keep clean and tidy!<<

My reply:

>Hi Janet -- Thank you for your valuable perspective. It goes to show, any plant---especially a tree---is potentially a nuisance in the wrong spot. It's also my observation, having lived for 3+ decades with over a dozen different kinds of trees---ranging from edible (citrus) to native (oaks) to ornamental (acacias, palo verdes, yuccas)---that each has benefits and drawbacks. Sometimes so much so that removal is the best option. Btw, I don't have queen palms, but I'm grateful for neighbors who do, because orioles that nest in the tall palms frequent my feeders. I placed pots of yellow jade nearby, and the color repetition is breathtaking. (I digress.)>>

What do you think?

Do you have a favorite landscape tree, or one you wish you'd never planted? Please tell us in the Comments!

 

RELATED INFO ON THIS SITE

Debra Lee Baldwin garden (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

See Debra’s Idea-Filled Garden

Welcome to my site’s “Debra’s Garden” page. This is where you’ll find photos of plants in my half-acre succulent garden, as shown in my recently released, 15-min. video:” See My Idea-Filled Succulent Spring Garden.” The video came about as a result of my garden looking amazingly beautiful after a rainy April here

The post To Tree or Not to Tree? Ask Your Succulents appeared first on Debra Lee Baldwin. Copyright © Debra Lee Baldwin.



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