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.

Saturday, January 28, 2012

GARDEN ON THE ROOF

   GARDENING,  my way or the highway, requires constant reviewing. This garden is different. Nature created the adequate  situation.  Initially, my only significant collaboration was discarding a stem of one  Alocasia, Xanthosoma or Caledium..

http://antigonumcajaneveningpost.blogspot.com/2011/11/aerial-garden-moss-and-agave.html

There are a couple of posts on the subject, maybe more.
On  1 November 2011,  Pimped Pavement Anthology Post, I dealt with the subject. 


It may require some research in  terms of concepts. There are green roofs. Steve Martino, in Arizona, on his blog, Weeds and Walls,   http://stevemartino.blogspot.com/2011/12/arizona-green-roof.html, approaches it installing one with cacti and irrigation system.  


There is a whole culture, ideas, concepts dealing with  green roofs,  mostly in template climate contexts. In the tropics, where I practice, that is not the case.  The one on this clip has no irrigation at all. So far, there are between 10/20 species, some of which you could identify.  But time will tell how many will survive the hot/dry season.


In brief, Nature sets the example, the way to go.  On this concrete roof garage, falling leaves accumulate, clogging the drainage.  The water helps them leaves to decompose with time, sun, heat and wind. creating humus.

That explains the huge size of the Elephant ears, giving the impression of being on steroids.  Compare the leaves on the roof, with those in land in the same side of the garden. The soil is 95% sand.   Their size is almost 3 times as big.


The end is near. Vertical gardening is another subject for discussion. There is Paul Blanc, a French known for this kind of installation. I have mentioned it previously. Most of the time aesthetics predominate over irrigation, nutrients and maintenance issues. What is vertical, what is a hanging garden?

It seems a simple issue. But it is not. I read about some future vertical forest recently, to be installed in balconies and roofs of high rise structures in Lebanon. The photo shop effect was nice, but the premise is totally absurd unless you also mention maintenance.  Will the trees in huge pots will be irrigated?


What about decay?  Trees have their way of getting rid of branches no longer useful to photosinthesize or transport nutrients. Maintenance gardeners will also need training in escalating and not afraid of heights to reach some of the branches .


I have 'planted'  quite a few on this roof. species. Planting implies digging or just spreading seeds. Here, they were placed on the concrete and covered with the available humus, leaves and organic matter. Most seeds are  Cosmos and other vines in the inventory.


The work is done. Now it is a matter of waiting patiently until the dry season arrives.  Then I propose to write a post on the surviving species, without irrigation.


One final note. To create a garden on a roof, not only you can not be afraid of heights. You need some stamina to carry the 15' ladder to perform your chores.


To complicate matters...let the record show...this garden is on an abandoned property next door to the most documented garden in the Caribbean..Therefore it also falls under the concept guerrilla gardening, or stretching it some what, pavement pimping,  since I requested no permit to do what I do best...dissent...my way.  Nature rules...one just have to keep them eyes opened. with a little understanding of the issues.

that is that





Friday, January 27, 2012

HANGING HABANEROS POST

THIS  plant was a present from one of me garden fans four buildings up the street.  It has been growing slowly, very slow. 

Capsicum chinense is the botanical.  Solanaceae, the family.  If you are wondering why they are hanging...take a wild guess...It is not for aesthetics, it is for health reasons.

It is one of the hottest among the Capsicums, but that is not important for yours truly.  As I get older and older, my tolerance to capsaicin decreases accordingly.


Every capsicum i have (there are two, frutescens the other) suffers from  pain in the arse sucking insects. I tried in vain to find the name, with no luck. Lets say it is similar to powdery mildew, under the leaves. A real pain, requiring constant monitoring since, either you watch what you do carefully,  (pest control has to be mild), or you will kill the plant.


For the record and as an experiment, weeks after I got the present, I propagated one stem with hormones. It is doing fine, but the pest is also around. Since both are hanging, 'I can see clearly now', as that old cool song, spraying with my secret capsicum/dish water soap formula as soon as they show up.

When you search in the web, I try to do it constantly to avoid dissidence and have arguments in either direction, you will notice that mine look like blue bonnets.. Do not ask me why. They look different that those in the web. What is important is not to confuse this with the sweet kind with so, so similar appearance.



The name Habanero requires some investigation on your part. In Puerto Rico we call chili, AJI (pronounced 'ahee'). There is no nahuatl term for this kind, therefore is not from Mexico.  The story is interesting, but I am not into that bag at the moment...You can go ahead. 


If you find the botanical name for the insect, and share it with your humble servant, thanks.  Besides, what is relevant is detecting the insect, to know type of damage,  if it chews or sucks.  The sucking, I remind you will kill whatever eventually, the constant chewing by beetles(Phyllophaga portorricensis), at least with my Coccoloba uvifera and Hibiscus, does not.

Words for thought previously shared...
Imagine what food would be like without salt...Condiments, besides all the legends and stories of muting the rotten taste of rotten meat when there was no refrigeration,  transform anything imaginable. 
 Mexico, China, Thailand and India have developed centuries old,
gastronomical schools known by their creative use
of capsicum and related condiments enhancing
what otherwise would be pretty much like 
boiled meat and potatoes. 
Gardeners with good sight
keep that in mind.

that is that

Friday, January 20, 2012

FAMILIES AND FLOWERS POST

I find very amusing, those scholarly written botanical papers, no matter what the theme/subject is, the reading is as fun as having an infected tooth pulled. Only the secret, initiated ones, can decipher the register.  I often wonder if they do any gardening at all...

In me country,  100/35, Enchanted Isle, Paradise and other ridiculous names, (noisy/concrete/asphalt isle is more accurate) there is a molecular biologist, who recently declared publicly his pride and ignorance regarding the botany and gardening I practice and write about.

HIS 'scholarly' post dealt about his young daughter and her passionate interest in some beautiful and glutton caterpillars (Pseudophinx tetrio) that once or twice a year arrive from nowhere munching on Plumeria or Allamanda leaves exclusively.  Find out by yourself. These caterpillars are black and green becoming huge moths once their life cycle is completed.

It is time to get to the tittle.  I have preached about the significance of knowing the botanical names of whatever is I plant.  Today will get into some families in my collection. But before that, let the record show that if you prefer to remain ignorant, that is also cool. With the web at hand, you could write the common name, in most cases, and find the botanical, if you want to have a pertinent inventory for people like yours truly.  However I still have difficulty  showing any kind of respect for those who do  not. Parque Donha Ines and Alberto Areces Mallea, Phd,  is one example. Check their site,
http://www.flmm.org. If you got the time, research, under Parque Donha Ines and Fundacion Luis Munhoz Marin with this spelling to get the nitty gritty on these sinister characters.  After ten years,  over 8 million USA dollars spent,  this white collar  artist/biologist,  son of a beach' with worthy constituents; LUIS MUNHOZ MARIN FOUNDATION; a popular democratic party cave of thieves,  does not have a botanical inventory or any relevant information available in the web after a decade,  for guys like me yet.. I write/say more, the bastards do not even have a humble blog,..or any photos, beside the ones I have published mocking and denouncing the scam, here and elsewhere.

                          

the familes
some not
all

LILIACEAE\
Asparagus 
I II III


TURNERACEAE
Diffusa
Ulmifolia
Subulata


PASSSIFLORACEAE
Palida
Foetida l.
Edulis


ACANTACEAE
Barleria repens
Asystacia gangetica
Thumbergia
Pseuderantemun reticulatum


SOLANACEAE
Brunfelsia pauciflora
Cestrum diurnum
Datura stramonium


AMARILLIDACEAE
Crinum amabile
Eucharis amazonica
Proiphys amboinensis
Scadoxus
Tulbaghia violaceae
Zephirantes


ARACEAE
Aglaonema
Alocasia
Caladium
Dieffenbachia
Syngonium
Anturium

BIXACEAE
Bixa orellana
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bixa_orellana

the juan and only
has no relatives, is
part and whole

Finally, some flowers arranged for 
a simple birthday present
  You can
figure them names by now...


that is that
PARQUE DONHA INES OPEN HOUSE
IS TOMORROW AT ONE PM.
if you live in Puerto Rico go on, visit Parque Donha Ines, Saturday
at 1PM.   Tell Alberto Aveces Marea and the Olmec wife, Antigonum, says hi!

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

BIXA ORELLANA ET GUAICUM OFFICINALE IN OLD SAN JUAN

IN 2012   I will go out once in a while to see what vegetation, in my collection or not,  I find worthy of posting.  In addition a series: Classical Pendejismo Paisajista in the private residential/commercial landscape scene in our concrete/asphalt isle.

Why these two?

 From my stiff view there is not much out there. 
Bixa orellana has an important place in our history, botanical and else.  Our, meaning American aboriginals in the Caribbean and the continent.


Bixa has other virtues, you could find them out yourself. One is significant, it has no relatives at all, is the juananonly...Individual and group, all in one.

Guaiacum officinale is similar...lots of history, incredibly hard wood, the architectural beauty of the crown/branches/ bark, medicinal uses. Find out.

What is pertinent is the rarity of finding them in any context. Even though I have visited the spots where they 
exist, I have never noticed the first one, before.  I have known these Guaicaums  as long as I  can remember.