This blog is for gardeners above, beyond, and below the surface. For those interested in botanical names, inventories, collection and else.

Not recommended for gardeners depending only on nurseries for the practice.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

CHAYAMANSA EXITS....

I usually post about vegetation joining the collection, but some leave the premises for different reasons. Cnidoscolus chayamansa a small tree,  was unable to grow in such a manner that would enhance the collection.  I know the leaves have medicinal uses that you will certainly find out, but it was  not enough.

In this  life departing department, I had to execute tens of caterpillars of the Plumeria and Allamanda  persuassion with my secret hot sauce pest control. Forgive me lord because I have sinned. It is not a nice sensation but this time the victim is looking too good, without any rust. Otherwise, other would have been them caterpillars(Tethrio Sphinx Moth) destiny.  In addition, I got rid of a couple of leaves with around fifty eggs.


In the caterpillar department another adventure developed. For the first time in five years I got the chance to watch some 
munching  Jathropha gossipifolia  leaves, an endemic kind.  I allowed them to live since none seem to move when you stare. On the other hand, this small tree is self seeding. If you pay attention, you could hear the seeds popping like fire crackers, flying away naturally, but more so when irrigated after a hot day. Barleria repens, Dipteracanthus prostratus are other two with similar habits..

 Let the record show this type is not the Jathropha planted in millions of acres of Indonesia, Costa Rica and other places for bio fuel...A certainly foolish and destructive  agro bussiness.

Finally for show, the seed pod of Datura stramoniun. One of those rare medieval weapon looking creatures of nature. As you know this relative of Brugmansias, is not sold. I collected it 36 months ago. Once one survives, you will have it forever, thanks to the amount of seeds and incredible survival rates.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

A HISTORICAL URBAN GARDEN INVENTORY IN CAGUAS

 DELIA SOLA APONTE AND CECILIO DIAZ
BOTANICAL INVENTORY


Citrus paradisi
Citrus sinensis
Coccos nucifera
Hyllanthus acidus
Melicoceus bijugatus
Persea americana (3)
Psidium guajaba (2)
Punica granatum
Passiflora edulis
Capsicum annuum/florescens
Coriandrum sativum
Cucurbita
Eryngium foetidum L.
Nasturtium officinale
Origanum marjorana/vulgare
Portulaca olaracea


Asparagus
Allamanda cathartica
Bauhinia
Begonia aconitifolia
Bixa orellana
Catharanthus roseus
Caesalpina pulcherrima
Croton
Cajanus cajan
Daylilly
Euphorbia pulcherrima
Gardenia augusta
Hibiscus

Heliconias
Ixora
Jasminum multiflorum
Jathropha gossipifolia
Malpighia glabra
Murraya paniculata
Nephrolepsis
Orchids
Plumeria
Plumbago
Roses
Scadoxus
Sanseveria
Strelitzia reginae
Zingiber officinalis
Zephirantes

EDITORS NOTE

Environmentalists from the monitor should start doing research and inventories about the vegetation in their residences and communities, that is the only way to preserve the landscape and environment. Taking the intelligent required measures to propagate healthy specimens. Cleaning your butt with recycled paper, turning the light/water faucet off is just a trivial useless gesture.

If you are interested in people and their contribution to our flora and fauna read the information below.

  ONE OF THE RELEVANT 
aspects writting
a blog  about horticulture/gardening with a botanical focus is keeping a  trace in  historical terms regarding what/when people planted during the last hundred years. The residential property in this late urban garden, 1921-2011, next door to Notre Dame Catholic school, is in Manuel Soto Aponte street in Caguas.

Delia Sola Aponte,  whose  family  I met during my high school, sharing fun times of  music and gastronomy was Yldefonso Sola Morales, sister. One of the  founders of the Popular Democratic Party, mayor of Caguas, senator and   public servant during his life. Mr. Morales is one of those figures ignored in the web. Researching his life will be useless....except plenty of information about the baseball stadium  with his name, next door to my childhood residence in Savarona.

Where the hell is Juan David Hernandez, el historiador de Caguas? No relevant information about this public servant is available for researchers.

The husband Cecilio Diaz, whose job as a line warden allowed  him to travel  around the Caguas Contry region, is an important part of this unique garden and collection, since he brought home plants noticed during his trips. I must add that Mary Ann Jackowski one of 6 children at home, is the most important living landscape painter in Puerto Rico, according to your humble servant.

Finally, I declare that I have never had the chance to meet a warmer warm, witty, friendly, musical family. They all sang in tune, some played strings and light percussion instruments with a serious, yet fun music wise attitude and lots of humor. The way it should be. 

This family still  owns the property after ninety years. The space facing west, is probably between 3 and 4 hundred square feet, with little or no concrete around it. While researching information for this post to find  botanical names, I am still surprised at this unusual and wide collection in the urban context. The possibilities of good soil with no irrigation system, a variety of edibles, herbs, fragrance, fruits and ornamentals. Me garden  gets a little short in the edible/fruit/herbs department when compared to that masterpiece, gone for the last 15 years.

Delia Sola Aponte and Cecilio Diaz family respect and interest in our flora/fauna shows that concerned, educated people with a sense of aesthetics and pragmatics could/can save money  cultivating food crops to expand and improve their diet and gastronomical interests, enhancing their environment for themselves and other living creatures.In addition to the joy and pleasure of the gardening activities as a family.


I reiterate that horticultural/garden installations in Puerto Rico, nowadays stink in general. People have lost interest in cultivating with the aggravating situation of silly cookie mold plant varieties species sold in useless nurseries in most of the isle with the murdering of aesthetics, death of creativity.

In the past, people had to use their imagination, requiring more propagating skills. Now, they drop by Home Depot and that is that. All the above is true in the asphalt/concrete urban context and beyond, in many instances.



Thanks to Maria Luisa Diaz, daughter. Without her assistance, this post would not be around. Thanks to her family for the times shared and surviving memories.

INVENTORY
DELIA SOLA APONTE
MANUEL SOTO APONTE  STREET
RESIDENTIAL URBAN GARDEN IN CAGUAS

Friday, May 13, 2011

ENTERS...CAJANUS CAJAN + ONE

YOU ARE RIGHT.  The similarity between last names is  not accidental. It is fifty percent me nome de plume. My first name derivates from one of the most interesting vines in the wild in Puerto Rico, originally from Mexico. Curious? Write me first name and you will find out.

Getting back to our new inductee, let the record show that it is part of our gastronomy. It is also a favorite in other places in the Caribbean.  In Puerto Rico, is an iconic dish with rice, even though one can create many concoctions with these beans of intense and peculiar color and fragrance.

I got the seeds from the abandoned next door house.. Only one was planted to avoid rumors  about the theoretical allelopathy from this small bush.

The plus one in the tittle is the Spathiphyllum, a present, an totally inadequate plant for Santurce or any hot, dry and flat topography, not far from the Atlantic.  This silly looking plant requires cool and humid environments.  By the guai, the two behind it, are Pseuderantemun carruthersii, interesting and not abused bushes.


Spathifhyllum are abused in too many instances. Not long ago, in one of my other blogs, I used the expression common place plants, since they are in every other backyard in Puerto Rico, and a couple of lame bloggers from Florida felt insulted. This plant, like others in template countries may be a big deal for some one track mind gardeners, but who cares. A garden is a whole, not divided parts.


Thanks to Amanda Abella...... for her kind review. A compliment to yours truly for  this blog:
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/7741396/5_gardening_blogs_should_read.html?cat+32 and check the  other recommended blogs...if you may...

that is that.
apagad e iros.