Also on Labor Day weekend, I planted some trailing herbs in hanging wall planters (trailing rosemary, oregano, and lemon thyme) and some potted herbs (chives, flat-leaf parsley, cilantro, Italian basil, "spicy" basil, and mint.) For some color interspersed with the herbs, I put a yellow Gazania in one of my wall planters and an orange Gazania along with some trailing purple verbena in another wall planter. Actually the Gazania I put in with the verbena is from three cuttings off the mother orange Gazania I planted with a red Gerber daisy. Here's the weird setup I rigged up to get the cuttings to root before hanging it on the wall in full sun:
You can learn how to take cuttings from a plant to propagate another one online. Here is everything I planted on Labor Day weekend:
The next weekend I wanted to try my hand at doing some more cuttings so I did some basil cuttings and a couple of mint cuttings. Here they are:
If you know me, you know I have to do things the *exact, exact, right, proper* way so these cuttings were planted in a mix of sterlized sand (I sterlized it myself by wetting and baking in oven at 220 degrees for 1 hr.) and soilless potting mix in a plastic planter that was sterlized with a 10% bleach solution. As is often recommended, I dipped the ends of the cuttings in rooting hormone to promote root growth before sticking them in their holes and covering them up to root. If I sound like I have acquired just enough gardening knowledge to be dangerous, we can thank Google and the internet for that!
Here's my cute-slash-expensive little cactus garden I put together about a year ago. Only $115 for all the plants and materials! When I start thinking I'm a thrifty person, reality smacks me in the face with the fact that thrifty people don't plant $115 cactus bowls. The barrel cactus only blooms once a year in late summer for a little while. A neat thing I've learned about cacti is that if you've got a chunk (big or small) that falls off the cactus for one reason or another (overwatering will cause leaves to get waterlogged and fall off), you leave it where it lies or just tuck the end into the soil a little and in about six months or so, you'll find that it's rooted and is growing itself into a new plant. Isn't that just amazing? Nature is so joyous and fascinating! You just can't keep nature down!
Here's my palm with Baby's Tears growing in the base, my polka-dot plant, and my fern. They love their lives on the porch. Thank heavens for my large, un-LosAngeles-like porch to give me some greenery and dirt in my life!
But, wait! Tune in for the next post when I talk about...COMPOST IN THE CITY!
9 comments:
Your graden is so beautiful! It must be a great place to go when you want to get away from almost it all (I know you can still hear the traffic on your porch). Good job!
Wow! You are fast becoming a one-woman show. I'm so glad you decided to blog when I think of all the times you've responded "nothing" when I asked "what's new?" Your life is full of interesting stuff!
I'm drooling over your garden! I have been wanting to plant a little herb garden for so long but we just can't seem to stay in one place for more then a year. I purchased some little pots from ikea yesterday to grow some various herbs. My version of planting herbs is not so intricate. By the seeds the soil the pot stick them in and see them grow.
Kristin, the funny thing is, your version of gardening will probably work better than mine in the end. Yes, so far it's nice to have the herbs because I have been cooking with them. When you buy those little herb packets in the store, they cost $2.99 apiece so it saves me money, too. Maybe.
You remind me of Camila. All she talks about these days is plants. She bought gardening for dummies and a bunch of other books and is always talking to me about them. Oh, and your composter, she really wants one!
Mike, the Naturemill people have a friend referral thing going where I can get discounts for others who buy their product. But she might not need this composter since you have a backyard. You might could use a cheaper option and do just as well, if you just turn and tend the compost yourself.
Your Garden looks beautiful! I'm jealous! I need to start some pots at my new place! :o)
Love, love, love string of pearls! They look beautiful in your cactus pot. And your herbs -- oh my. I'm not going to show you mine. They look so sad. And yours look award winning. Beautiful pictures, as always. That salad looks delicious, and I think you need to either make it for us the next time I visit you, or you need to bring some lemon basil to Utah :)
Sorry for not keeping up on the blogging and blog reading. Thanks for posting, though. I'm really glad you're posting.
ooops...this is amy, btw, not kim....didn't know she'd logged in.
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