We’re covered in bees!

22 Jun
Box o' bees

Let us out! 3 lbs of bees in a box rounds out to about... errr... 10,000 bees?

Our bees arrived the day before our Biggest Event of the Year, but that wasn’t our trouble – our bees are docile sweeties and there was no chance the ladies would be interruptive to our big Spring fête – the trouble was that I forgot the marshmallow. The critical and all important marshmallow. And thus, dear readers, the Annie’s Annuals beekeeping adventure began with me making a mad dash in a funny white suit to the corner market, and inquiring of the clerk with some intensity where on the premises I could obtain a bag. The woman at the counter raised her eyebrows at me a little and pointed the way. There are no photos of this part of our installation process, so I’ll invite you to use your imagination. Lo, it was pretty hilarious.

GIVE US THE MARSHMALLOWS

I should have remembered the critically and all important marshmallow BEFORE the big install, but see, I was a bit busy being excited about the BEES, the many thousands of bees, that we (we being myself, Claire, and our accountant, Gina) were about to dislodge from their enmeshed box and let loose on the nursery.

Bee counter

Gina was eager for us to get the bee show on the road.

See, the packaged bees come with a queen, but the workers don’t know her – to allow for a gentle introduction, (and this is critical, because if they reject the queen you’re in trouble) you put her in a little cage, and this cage is corked. When you hustle the bees out of their package (by shaking them – with vigor!) into the empty waiting hive (and also into the surrounds – creating something of a bee-tornado) you also have to uncork your new queen, and stuff a marshmallow in the cavity of her little cage. Then you tuck her in between the frames and her workers set about chewing their way through to gain her freedom.

Her Highness!

Her majesty, all cooped up.

Insert marshmallow here

Insert marshmallow here.

Handoff

Ready.... Steady.....

Bee blizzard

PLONK!

Over the last several years there’s been a marked decline in the number and varieties of pollinators at the nursery – we encounter fewer in person (honeybees especially) and sadly we’ve also been having a hard time getting some of our cherished mother plants to set seed, so having a hive of honeybees on the grounds seems like an excellent investment! Honeybees aren’t going to pollinate everything (NOTHING will pollinate Lotus jacobaeus – SIGH) but you’d better believe they’ve been busy, and I expect that it’ll make a big difference!

Bees love a party too

"Baby Blue Eyes" and fuzzy friend

Eriogonum 'The Hub' and yellow pollen bee

All Eriogonums get 6 bee thumbs up.

Aquilegia 'Krystal' and honeybee

Loverly Aquilegia 'Krystal' gets a visitor

For the last few months, we’ve been noticed them getting busy on the Nemophilas, and now that the Echiums are going full tilt they’re really going to town. I saw one little working gal obsessing over our blooming crop of Salvia carduacea last week – her pollen sacs were a gorgeous orangey RED. And I’ve actually seen some of the ladies come home with turquoise green pollen in tow – AMAZING! I suspect the Gilias are at cause.

Green pollen bee

Pollen comes in some crazy colors!

Busy busy busy

Bees work FAST! After just a week we could see baby bees a' brewin, pollen, & honey.

Besides our selfish aims (MORE SEEDS, PLEASE!) we just plain old LOVE bees, and want to make a safe space for them in our gardens and in yours. We’re not in it for the honey, and frankly, I don’t really care if we even get to harvest from the hive at all – I just hope they stick around. To that effect, help us help them! We participate in the terrific “Yellow Dot Project” – all of our plants that are honeybee-magnetizing and delicious bear a cute little yellow dot with a smiling bee on the sign. Plant more “Yellow Dotted” plants everywhere, and the bees that *are* around will have a more diverse buffet to harvest from (eating one thing all the time? NOT FUN) and give them more habitat in our developed world.

Our gentle Carniolan came from the Marin Bee Company (who’s had a hand in hive installations at Google, the SF Chronicle and many other places – follow them on Twitter @marinbeecompany!) and are a really mild tempered bunch. I’ve peeked in on them many times without smoke or a veil and I’ve never been stung or felt like the bees were angling towards harm.

We still have a bunch of marshmallows left in the break room. They’re going a bit stale, now, because they’ve been sitting around for a few weeks, but SOMETIMES stale marshmallows hit the spot. No, seriously.

More honeybee adoration and adulation can be found in a SLIDESHOW from our visit to the Melissa Garden last year – Kate Frey’s marvelous Healdsburg honeybee sanctuary!

Claire

Check out ALL of our BEE magnet plants HERE!

Let’s Play Favorites!

15 Jun

I’m about to make a very strong statement – please don’t be alarmed. My statement will be concerning my favorite Salvia – the Salvia I would choose over all other Salvias (and there could be around 900 of them, and that’s species, not cultivars) which, as a gardener, is a pretty difficult decision, know what I mean?

By no means is this my favorite plant – don’t even go there!

Ok, ready? (is there a drumroll I can put here?)

Salvia pomifera

Salvia pomifera looking its best for Garden Bloggers Bloom Day.

Salvia pomifera. Yep – Salvia pomifera, I’m calling you out. You’re the one for me.

There are other honorable and distinguished and beautiful Salvias & I love a good number of them (shout outs to Salvia carduacea, clevelandii & semiatrata – I LOVE YOU GUYS) but Salvia pomifera is my lasting favorite & has been for many years. It’s preposterously gorgeous in flower, not monstrous in size, super tolerant of drought & it’s useful. Stir these fine qualities together and add whatever sentimental attachments I’ve made to the species, and you have the one Salvia. There’s some skill involved in growing it, but I’m going to tell you all of that here and now, so no big deal. By the time you leave this blog you will be a Salvia pomifera PRO and you can take one home without any anxiety over potentially killing The Salvia that Claire Would Choose Above All Others.

salvia_pomifera_mid

Somehow this dear sage is both handsome & frilly all at once.

No pressure. I’m a firm believer in pushing the envelope – if a plant grows like a weed that can be delightful, but there’s also a joy in taking on a plant with a little bit of challenge. It’s not always true that the effort expended is rewarded in kind, and my compost pile tells of many sad failures, but success can be sweet!! I believe that the key lies in the following three things.  Here goes:

1.       This plant can drown. Most plants can, but this one’s particularly sensitive to it. What that means is that you should water it carefully – watching that things aren’t overwatered particularly, and keeping the soil on the dry side – plant it on a mound, or at the edge of a bed, as increased drainage will help protect the plant against The Soggy Death. Got a slope? Well drained soil?

2.       Once it’s established, STOP WATERING. This should be after the first winter. You’ll know if the plant is failing to take because it will shrivel and die. Really, that’s the symptom. Once the plant gets to that rotten point, there’s a very good chance it won’t revive. Sorry. It’s true. It’s very similar to a lot of the woodier Mediterranean sages. Once the plant is established you can just let it run wild, with occasional deep watering *maybe* – but in these first few seasons, it helps to keep a careful eye.

3.       Grow it lean! Nutrient heavy soil is going to do you no favors, so don’t plant it in the vegetable bed. Overfeeding will cause weak growth and more breakage, and more breakage=unhappy plant.

Now you know!

Salvia pomifera

Say AAAAAAAHHH!!

In addition to huge purple blue glowy flowers, a long season of bloom, the showy bracts that stay on the plant well after bloom and keep things interesting, the silvery leaves, the LONG SEASON OF BLOOM (did I mention the long blooming?) and the plants resistance to drought & deer, there’s also this fascinating bit that I haven’t been able to appreciate in person: there’s a wasp that has a special relationship with this plant. The wasp isn’t here in CA, it’s back in Greece, Salvia pomifera’s original stomping grounds, but this wasp makes big wooly galls on the plant that are preserved in sugar and eaten as a delicacy. We’re not about to import the wasp to try to replicate this ourselves, but it sounds potentially delicious, and definitely curious. Not much is known about the herbal properties of the plant hereabouts, but it’s said to be similar to our common friend Salvia officinalis, but stronger. Hrmmmm.

I hope that some of you out there in the blogosphere take it upon yourselves to attempt this amazing sage! It’s been one of my favorite things (again – that word – “favorite” – but I do mean it!) that we’ve grown in the last few years, and I would be downright tickled to start seeing it out in the world more!

Claire Woods
Propagator 

As always, big ups to Carol at May Dreams Gardens for hosting Garden Bloggers Bloom Day! See what’s blooming on other folks’ gardens this June!

Show us your Echiums!

27 May

There’s just something about Echium wildprettii that makes people want to stand up and vogue! In fact, it’s the SEASON for Echium action shots, as “Tower of Jewels” everywhere reach for the sky and say “CHEESE.”

IMG_7505

These 8’ monsters in pink are in-spire-ational! (Photo courtesy Chuck B. http://back40feet.blogspot.com/)

We’ve been growing Echium wildpretii for over 15 years and consider it an old friend, but somehow this 6-8’ tall pyramid of flowers never ceases to drop our jaws. Even though it’s got a spectacularity rating of 10, it’s a 1 on the simple-to-grow scale. In its first year, plant it out in a sunny to partly shaded site (most soils except the soggiest are perfectly fine) and wait. Year one, it will make a pretty but understated rosette of leaves. After its first winter is when the plants will go up up up!

Our buddy Les and his best triffid Buddy in Berkeley, CA.

When we say that this plant can stop traffic, we mean it!! Bees and hummingbirds far and wide start circling in when it starts to bloom, but so do cars! If your Echium can be seen from the street, expect some curious visitors.

Carri from Sacramento looks a little bit dubious about getting snuggly.

Carri’s curbside Echiums have brought MANY people to her door. How many? Well, let’s just say that her husband is petitioning to install a sign out front to stop the friendly interruptions.

WHAT IS THIS THING?

Why, it’s an ECHIUM!

WHERE DID YOU FIND SUCH A THING?

Well, at Annie’s Annuals & Perennials, of course!

John from Downey, CA got this Echium for his birthday last year. Watch out for the hummingbirds - they don't like to share!

“Tower of Jewels” is the common name for E.wildprettii, but it could just as easily be called “Tower of Bees” or “Tower of Hummingbirds.” It does a magnificent job of advertising its wares and the payoff is HEE-UGE!

Alex - Queen of the Jungle! Everyone reach for the sky!

Echium wildpretii "Tower of Jewels"

Here's another cutie!

Rough soil? Harsh site? Full, baking sun? Echiums don’t care! See below: this gaggle seems perfectly at ease on a vacant lot.

Glenn Park posted this photo of E. wildprettii growing happily in an empty lot in Lompoc, CA.

Pots are also *generally* a no-no (a confined space makes Echiums suffer and sometimes go kaput) BUT we’ve now had a number of experimental gardeners prove to us that it *can* be pulled off. If you try it, a big container is prefereable.

Echium wildpretii "Tower of Jewels"

Megan and Matti from the Far Out Flora blog grew their Echium in a pot, and lo! It did just fine.

Megan from Far Out Flora suspects that their amazing specimen might be growing through the bottom of the pot, but even so, it seems like containers (BIG CONTAINERS) are worth a try – especially if it’s the ONLY way you zonal denial folks can make your Echium dreams come true.

Gardening

Master mugger Matti for scale.

After blooming, these towers of loveliness will pass on into the great garden in the sky BUT they almost always leave behind a few seedlings to carry on another day. If you must relocate the babies, do it quickly when they are still very small.

Eunice in San Francisco attributes her Echium's vim and vigor to a bucketful of mop water (no soap) every other week and plenty of sun.

echium wildpretii curve

Are your Echiums in action? Post it to our Facebook page! Special points for dressing it up in a baseball cap and sunglasses, giving it a moustache or maybe a Hawaaian shirt. We’d be all for that.  Echiums, away!!

Dwarf Madness!

20 May

What in the world has happened to garden center plants, people? Sunflowers and Asters in bloom at only  4” tall? Nicotianas with no scent and Dianthus that die a month or less after planting? Yes dear gardeners, this nasty trend which started more than 10 years ago is accelerating quicker than you can squash a bug. Last February, in front of my neighborhood supermarket, I felt super horrified as I noticed the African Marigolds on display by the front door. They were in full bloom (in 6 packs!) at no more than 5” tall. Gadzooks!

African Marigolds? Or tennis-balls-on-a-stick?

DOD MARIGOLD HABIT 55

Ahhh, that's better. Day of the Dead Marigolds growing to a proper 3' tall.

African Marigolds are supposed to be huge. To 3 or more feet tall and 3 feet across. If you’re a young gardener, you may not even remember them being so grand and fabulous with their bushy multi-branching form and loads of 4”-across, extra double, dense blooms fantastic for cutting. Here at the nursery we call them “Day of the Dead Marigolds” as they are still grown in Mexico and South America to create altars and stunning displays for the holiday.

How incredibly fabulous is this? The red flowers are Celosias! Many more gorgeous Marigold images at http://flavorsofthesun.blogspot.com/2010/11/images-from-day-of-dead.html

So you can imagine my chagrin to see what the nursery industry has done to them, all in the name of being able to serve the customer what they say we want – 6 packs and 4″ pots in full bloom. And for heaven’s sake it was February ! Umm … freezing! Obviously, they were greenhouse grown, so now you can watch them die in your yard from the cold which they are so not fond of.

I know that “each to his own” and I’m glad when anybody gets outside and digs their hands in the earth, but don’t you think it’s sad that taller varieties, with all their grace, lovely form and charm are being pushed out (and forgotten), only to be replaced with squat, charmless blobs of color? What can you do with them? Line them up like orange and yellow tennis balls just like at the gas station? Nice.

What can we say? We have no words.

More and more plants are being sold all dwarfed and squatty. Many of our seed sources are dropping the taller varieties across the board and it has become harder and harder to find original proper sized species.

Here’s another calamity :

Wait a minute, what's going on here?!

Photo courtesy Karen Cairone. http://lifeamongtheleaves.blogspot.com/

Okay, you gotta give the person who designed this carpet bedding some points here for being creative with what they had to work with. But wouldn’t you prefer your Ageratums to look like this?

Ageratum Blue horizon in pot   2

Ageratum houstonianum growing to its rightful height of 3 feet.

To 3’ tall and 30” across, Ageratum houstonianum ‘Blue Horizon’ has big, fluffy, butterfly enticing, sweetly scented flower clusters – great for cutting. That’s a 15 gallon pot you see here and those blooms lasted for months. When dead headed they go on blooming all summer! That’s another big problem with those boinky dwarf plants. The bloom time is very short, especially when they’ve been blooming at the growers and then at the garden center before someone comes along to buy them.

Okay, one last depressing example. Dianthus. Dianthus is one of my all time favorite, awesome and reliable perennial standbys. They’re in full bloom in my back yard and at the nursery right now and they are really, really showy. They totally make my gardens pop with their profuse bloom and romantic colors and fragrance.

dianthus pinkerton purpleton

Dianthus 'Pinkerton' blooming its heart out at the nursery.

Truthfully I don’t think you can even find them at many nurseries or garden centers any more. Because they’ve been replaced with this:

Boink-o-rama!

These are Dianthus sinensis. Squat, die-pretty-darn-fast, scentless and disappointing annuals (which are often sold as perennials!). They grow to 6” tall at best. You’ll never see them bloom like the one plant of Dianthus plumarius ‘Pinkerton.” Nowadays, I’m afraid a lot of folks think I’m delusional when I tell them how much I love my Dianthus. Our beloved “Pinks,” (Dianthus plumarius and D. gratianopolitanus) are one of the oldest of all cultivated perennial plants and they are in danger of becoming so obscure and hard to find that they may soon be banished to garden memory oblivion. It makes me sad that up and coming young gardeners may never discover how great they are.

Lastly, a great garden includes plants of varying heights, forms and textures, of course. But with these “box store” offerings, everything ends up being the same size! Well, that’s not very fun. And I don’t think it’s as aesthetically pleasing – or rewarding enough – to really draw folks into the wonders of gardening.

Mother’s Day Love Fest!

12 May

Watch a slideshow of our Mother’s Day Extravaganza!

Thank you everybody who came to our fabulous Mother’s Day Party last weekend! I always say Mother’s Day is my favorite party at the nursery and this year was no exception. Everyone is always in such a splendid mood and the gardens are at their showiest!

Glorious Spring!

Glorious Spring!

Fortuna & Lupinus GOOD
Fortuna dressed in her Mother’s Day floozie finest!

We are always so delighted and touched to see so much love and so many big happy smiles all around us.

Ava & Nancy

Mom and Daughter in law are all smiles.

upsidedown!

Everything looks better upsidedown!

Mom love!

Give your mama a squeeze and say cheese!

And, as always, we had so much fun with our big Queen for a Day winners and thrill-seeking Musical Chairs contestants!

Queens!

Saturday's Queens for a Day won 15 minutes of FREE shopping!

Another one bites the dust

The last gardener sitting wins a $100 gift certificate!

I felt like I won the grand prize when one of our visitors showed up in my ultimate dream car – a 1957 Plymouth Belvedere. Lovingly restored, it was turquoise inside and out with gold lame interior trim. Be still my beating heart! I even got to go for a spin around the parking lot!
Me in Plymouth
And then the day got even better when my eldest son surprised me by showing up at the nursery on Sunday. Without warning, he had driven up from LA, making me the happiest mom in the world!

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Me and my big boy!

Watch a slideshow of our Mother’s Day Extravaganza!

Spring at The Wave Garden

4 May
Great news! Kellee Adams of Dig-It Landscape Design and the plantswoman behind the Wave Garden is speaking at our Mother’s Day Party on Sunday, May 8 at 11 am! She’ll be sharing her fun and creative approach to “Plant Marriages” using “show-off” contrast combos, color and texture that you can bring to your own garden.  Don’t miss it!

Sweeping views of San Pablo Bay, wave-inspired peach-tinted concrete walls, hand-forged wrought iron metalwork and delightful sculptures wow visitors who step through the gates at the Wave Garden in Point Richmond, CA.

Entrance to the Wave Garden, Point Richmond

Entrance to the Wave Garden, Point Richmond

Entrance path

Winding paths and rich textures greet visitors

A frequent visitor to our nursery, designer Kellee Adams has created a wonder-filled refuge for birds, butterflies, bees and people. And good news – it’s open to the public!

Visiting with Kellee this week, we were inspired by her artful and sophisticated plant groupings featuring many South African and Canary Island favorites. With a background in graphic design, Kellee is a master at combining texture and contrast while still tantalizing the eye with plentiful blooms.

Leucospermum vert

Leucospermum 'Spider'

Cuphea llavea "Bat Face Cuphea" blooming its heart out last September

Low water and low maintenance, no view-blocking trees and lots of blooms were the only instructions from the owners, Jeanne and Vern Doellstedt, who bought the lot to prevent it from being developed into another house. They initially hired concrete artist Victor Amador to build paths, staircases and terraces around a beloved sculpture of a whale’s tail by artist Douglas Purdy. Wrought iron railings and gates by local blacksmith Bobby Sharpe added a grounded but whimsical touch.

Whale's tail

The garden was built around this bronze sculpture by artist Douglas Purdy.

Kellee was given the freedom to put her artistic talents to work. We very much like how she successfully incorporates bold succulents into her design, often softening them with smaller bloomers and more delicately foliaged plants.

Pelargonium and Aeonium

A study in contrast - cute little Pelargonium and bold Aeonium.

adorable pelargonium

Chondropetalum & Euphorbia Wave Garden

Chondropetalum and Euphorbia creating lighting drama!

Kellee explained to us how she enjoys juxtaposing contrasting plants that capture light and dark, bringing excitement and dimension to the senses. We’ll let Kellee explain it herself:

The Wave Garden is located at the end of Grandview Court in Point Richmond and parking is extremely limited. If you visit, please be respectful.

Watch a SLIDESHOW of our visit to the Wave Garden on Flickr!
Find out more about our Mother’s Day Extravaganza 2011!
Check out Kellee’s website for more information about her gardens and services!

It’s starting to happen!

28 Apr

Looks like the gardens will peak just in time for our Mother’s Day Party on May 7 & 8! Get all the deets HERE!

Everything is blooming about a month late because of the cold and the rain and the hail (and the rain an the hail and the cold). We didn’t know if this year’s gardens would end up a complete disaster after an unusually brutal Winter but once again, Mother Nature is delighting us with her magic.

lupinus_thomas_church_garden

Lupinus 'Thomas Church' and Aquilegia v. 'Blue Barlow' looking spiffy!

The California natives seem to be especially slow, with California poppies yet to bloom and Nemophila menziesii “Baby Blue Eyes” growing in slow motion. But, the Lupines are earlier than ever and thriving!

lupinus_thomas_church_spiking

Omphalodes linifolia provides a delightful white skirt to our boy 'Thomas.'

Layias were one of the CA natives not affected by the rain and it didn’t seem to mind the cold. Some of them did get a little beaten down by the hail, but they’re sure bringing their rays of sunshine to the beds right now.

LAYIA & PHYGELIUS CROP PRETTY ADJ  copy

Layia platyglossa "Tidy Tips" and Penstemon pseudospectabilis with Campanula glomerata.

layia_glandulosa_in_garden

Layia glandulosa makes the perfect partner to Nemophila menziesii "Baby Blue Eyes."

We’re LOVING the true form of Layia glandulosa. Everybody loves blues and whites in the Spring garden, but you need soft yellows to balance it out and bright pinks to make it pop. I’m so excited because this is the perfect soft yellow to go with all of our Spring bloomers!

Gladiolus carneus "Painted Lady" & Glaucium grandiflorum GOOD copy

Gladiolus carneus "Painted Lady" and Glaucium grandiflorum make odd bedfellows.

Every year is different and full of surprises. I’ve never seen these two plants bloom at the same time before, hence the unusual color combo! That’s Gladiolus carneus, a South African bulb, returning for another year and Glaucium grandiflorum (orange), blooming much earlier than it usually does for us. Both require no Summer water.

Just coming into bloom is Delphinium belladonna ‘Cliveden Beauty’, Sidalcea hendersonii and ultra-blue CA native Phacelia viscida. The Sidalcea is one of my favorite perennials, I use it everywhere because it blooms Spring thru Fall and is so very reliable, becoming bigger and bloomier every year.

Sidalcea hendersonii & Phacelia viscida Garden  copy

From left to right: Delphinium belladonna 'Cliveden Beauty,' Sidalcea hendersonii and Phacelia viscida.

Phacelia viscida

Bumblebee magnet Phacelia viscida how we love you!

Believe it or not, there are a whole lot more plants still to bloom in this garden. I think they should hit their peak just in time for our Mother’s Day Party on May 7 and 8. How cool is that? You should definitely come – bring your Mom AND your camera! MORE ABOUT THE PARTY HERE!

spring_garden

Carnival colors: Greek poppies (red), Layia platyglossa (yellow), Cheiranthus allionii (orange), Eschscholzia caespitosa (shortie yellow) and Aquilegia c. "Rocky Mountain Columbine" (light blue in background).

Our Favorite Tomatoes!

15 Apr
Though we work in relative harmony here at “Annie’s” there are some things we don’t always agree on. Most of the time, we can work through our differences, but when it comes to important topics like tomatoes, we square off. We’ve grown all of the tomatoes we offer and have selected the best ones for our cool-Summer climate. Here are our top picks! (My choice is the fourth one down – just skip the others and read it first since my tomato is CLEARLY the best!).
Currant tomatoes

Red Currant tomato. Photo courtesy Scott Ashkenaz on Flickr.

Tomato ‘Red Currant’
Annie Hayes “The Boss”

I grow these extraordinarily prolific wild cherry tomatoes in 2 half barrels in my driveway, so when I get home from work I’ve got an awesome snacky pick-me-up before i even hit the front door. Also, I eat a lot of salads and I love how I don’t have to slice these little guys – just toss ’em in. At never more than 1″, they’re just the right size! Unlike typical cherry tomatoes that are just simply sweet, ‘Red Currant’ bestows a real tomato flavor overlaid with a hint of sweetness – totally delicious! What’s more, I think they bear longer than any other tomato starting early and lasting through November. You’ll get zillions of them and even if you miss a few, you certainly won’t worry about it – they just keep coming and coming. You may even have to come up with new tomato recipes (cherry brownies maybe?) if you want to eat them all. Interestingly, they are a different sub-species from all the other different cherry tomatoes. Indeterminate, they’ll grow to 5′ so use a cage or stakes to hold up all those fruit-laden stems!

tomato_thessaloniki

Big juicy acidy tomatoes are attainable in our cool-Summer climate! (Heavens part, angels sing!)

Tomato ‘Thessaloniki’
Annie Hayes – “The Boss”

I remember way back in the early 60’s, on hot Summer afternoons, my mom serving us kids the most absolutely delicious sandwiches that we kids would eat out on the back porch. They were stuffed with large, fat slices of tomatoes that tasted like heaven. Up until a few years ago I never again tasted, grew, or bought a tomato that matched my memory of this “Holy Grail” true acidy “Summertime” flavor until I grew my first ‘Thessaloniki.’ And lo and behold it hails from the town my dad was born in! A huge, vigorous indeterminate variety, it bears a great number of beautiful large red fruits that take forever to rot or go mushy when left for a long time on the vine. No splitting either and it’s very resistant to blight. It does make a lot of dense foliage (to protect against the intense Greek sun and heat), so I just pull off leaves that block the sun from hitting the fruit here in Summer-foggy Richmond, CA. I do pinch out the suckers for bigger sized tomatoes. If you’re looking for a big, productive, easy to grow old-fashioned tasting tomato, I highly recommend this one and I’ll bet you grow it every year from now on!

BWPS (Big White Pink Stripe) is neither white nor striped. Go figure. Photo courtesy Kelly Kilpatrick

Tomato ‘Big White Pink Stripe’ or ‘BWPS’
Claire Woods – Production manager

The all around winner in my failure of a vegetable garden last year and not just because everything else tanked. Though this tomato is neither pink nor striped, it is by far the most interesting and delectable tomato I’ve tried. It’s sweet with dense flesh, good smooth texture and rich fruity flavor – if ever there was a dessert tomato, this is it! I’ve never had another tomato like it and my plant produced fruit when no other did in last year’s over-cool summer. Fruits are big – like the size of a juicy peach, but squat and irregular shaped. They’re roughly peach in color, too, with a wee bit of mottling on the skin that I guess someone decided was enough like stripes to add “Stripe” to the name. Like a lot of lighter colored tomatoes, it’s very low acid, which for me is perfection. Though Annie likes ‘em tart, she can have her ‘Thessaloniki!’ More ‘Big Pink White Stripe’ for meeee!

Sandwich seduction: Black and Brown Boar from Wild Boar Farms

Tomato ‘Black and Brown Boar’
Elayne Takemoto – Marketeer

No one loves tomatoes more than me, which somehow doesn’t match well with how notoriously lazy I am when it comes to taking care of my tomato plants. I don’t baby them, I don’t fertilize and half the time I end up planting them where there’s room – not where they’ll do best. Well, last year, my urge for the perfect BLT was strong – I was motivated. I cleared all of the plants out of the deep planter between my concrete driveway and a low brick wall – the warmest, sunniest spot on my foggy, cool property. The soil was nice and friable, I added compost and I watered on an every-other-week schedule until the fruit set. I kept weeds at bay, I doted, I waited. If you were around for last year’s notoriously cool “Summer,” then you’ll know that I waited well into August before I got my first tomato – but boy was it worth it! This luscious, juicy, slightly tart beauty was ‘Black and Brown Boar’ from Wild Boar Farms. It was a tomato that tasted like a TOMATO – all caps! I sliced up some fresh sourdough, grilled up some facon (fake bacon – highly recommended), gave it a generous swipe of mayo and dusting of salt and cracked pepper and voila! Pure heaven. You bet I’m growing it again. Indeterminate. 65-75 days.

Big, bold Pink Berkeley Tie Dye from Wild Boar Farms. Photo courtesy Kelly Kilpatrick.

Tomato ‘Pink Berkeley Tie Dye’
Kelly Kilpatrick of Floradora Garden Design

As a gardener living in a cool season locale, I always thought that big ol’ hunky tomatoes were unattainable, needing more heat to mature than I could provide. After growing lots of the cherry-sized varieties I decided to give ‘Pink Berkeley Tie-Dye’ a try. What ensued could only be described as a tomato love fest! A sturdy girl with surprisingly robust stems, she’s not one to be caged and quickly outgrows any boundaries, best grown up a tall stake or trellis. The hefty fruits have lovely pink flesh, the skin of which is a beautiful rose streaked with gold. Produces LOTS of tomatoes that are wonderful as thick slices on sandwiches or lightly sauteed with olive oil, garlic and basil for a true Summer of love.

tomato_stupice

Small to medium sized but Mighty in old-fashioned flavor: Stupice!

Tomato ‘Stupice’
Marti B. – Wholesale assistant extraordinaire

After too many disappointments trying to grow a tasty tomato in our foggy neighborhood, including the variety tauntingly named ‘San Francisco Fog’, I gave up and swore off tomato growing. Then one day at the nursery I saw we were growing  ‘Stupice’ and I remembered years ago a neighbor had given me a start for this plant. Even after over watering, planting too early and just about every other novice mistake I could make, it produced the most yummy, acidic and old fashioned tasting tomato I’d had in years. So I got back on the tomato wagon with ‘Stupice’ and my reward was an abundance of perfect tasting, completely non-mealy, tangerine sized tomatoes. In foggy zones, late planting (harvest will be late Summer) and brutally witholding water once fruit sets are the keys to the tastiest, non-mealy tomatoes.

CHECK OUT ALL OF THE DELICIOUS TOMATOES WE GROW!
They’re coming VERY SOON, add any variety to a WISH LIST to get an automatic email just as soon as the crop comes available. 

Our AMAAAZING Spring Party!

13 Apr

Donkeys and owls and dragons – OH MY!

Big, BIG thanks go out to all our gardening friends, who made this year’s Spring Party the biggest, best and funnest EVER!

And a beautiful day was had by all!

A beautiful day was had by all!

We were so lucky to have incredibly Springy weather with blue skies and big puffy clouds – a perfect setting for a weekend of fun, flowers and extreme silliness.

The day started out with our Cuckoo Mookoo Costume Contest and we have to say, the costumes this year were INCREDIBLE. Octavius Seymour the Owl, Snappy the Snap-Dragon and the beautiful Bachelor Buttoness to name just a few!

The Wild Bunch

Snappy the Snap-Dragon and Friends

The Owl and the Fairy

Octavius the Owl and the Spring Fairy

Costume Winner ! "Bachelor Button" dress made from crepe paper !

The Marquesa of Bachelor Buttons - in a handmade dress of crepe paper! Incredible!

How lucky were we to also have two outstanding speakers – Kate Frey and Amy Stewart. Both talks drew big crowds and were packed with so much good information on habitat gardens (Kate) and eeeeevil plants (Amy).

Pollinator Talk!

Pollinator crusader Kate Frey told us all how to bring more pollinators to our gardens.

Amy Stewart

Amy Stewart's talk about wicked plants had us itching to put on gloves and goggles before gardening.

And what’s a party without a few surprises? Cassie of Gardengirl Farms brought adoptable chickens and bunnies and Michael Layefsky, aerial photography enthusiast and gardener, showed up to take pictures of all the shenanigans with a camera attached to a 25-foot pole.

Look up & say CHEESE!

Aerial pole photography rig. Cool!

there we are!

Here we are! Photo courtesy Michael Layefsky.

Young and old were delighted when the cutest miniature donkey named Little Willow walked through the gate, all dressed in flowers for the costume contest.

costume Winner! Little Willow and Mama Willow.

Little Willow the Donkey with her mom Willow.

Unquestionably, the most fun happens at the games! First up was the Supermarket Sweep raffle – where two lucky people win 15 minutes of FREE SHOPPING! We like to see their little red carts piled as high as they can go!

Saturday sweepers with their haul

Saturday's Winners and their haul!

And where else can you become a Gardening Olympiad for how fast you can coil a hose or how accurately you can fling extremely lifelike pieces of cat-poo? Speed and teambuilding are tickets to success for winning the Snail-in-the-Spoon Relay Race.

Zoom!

A burst of speed from a Snail Relay contestant.

Wrastler

$#%&@#!!!!!

Cat Poo Toss - Fierce Competition

Intense concentration and focus during the Cat Poo Toss for Accuracy.

All in all it was a joyous day where everyone could let loose, laugh, play and celebrate another glorious Spring! Yay!

Spring Fairy!

 

See lots more funny photos in our AMAZING SPRING PARTY SLIDESHOW!


Beware the Mandrake!

5 Apr

In honor of Amy Stewart – author of “Wicked Plants” – and her free talk at the nursery on Sunday, April 10 at 11 am – we present you with the most terrifying plant in our arsenal: Mandragora.

Have you ever played Bloody Mary? I don’t mean the drink – I mean the “game” where you attempt to conjure up a ghost in the bathroom mirror. Turn around three times and say her name (BloodyMaryBloodyMaryBloodyMary) just to see if she appears? Well, Bloody Mary was certainly a well-worn part of my late-night slumber party experience as a kid and the result was consistently the same – we were never able to conjure the ghost, but we were certainly able to scare ourselves silly. For the first time in my adult life I’ve found myself in a similar predicament and this time, it’s with a plant.

A plant that can kill you. With its screams.

Mandragora autumnalis double page

Mandragora autumnalis watercolor by Caudetano on Flickr

From the ground up, a mandrake is a most unassuming plant. It makes a big, leafy green rosette with pretty purple flowers nestled close at the center. It’s what’s underground that’s so sought after and so perturbing. The roots, which can get a few feet long, are like a carrot grown in rocky soil – twisted and thick, and bear some resemblance to a wrinkled little man. The plant is used in magic and in ritual, and there are certain things you must do in order to harvest it correctly. During the Middle Ages, often the harvester would tie a dog to the plant and then leave and go very very far away, so that when the dog pulled it free and the plant’s deadly screams (YES SCREAMS) hit the air, the dog would be the only victim. Being a dog owner and animal lover, I sort of have a problem with this method, but I am also hoping that even if it’s true that people did this, no dogs were harmed in the process.

Mandragora - Male and Female

Regardless, the screaming has me nervous. I’m sort of relieved that my handling of the plant has been in its care and not in its transplanting. I did warn Jen, who transplanted them when it came time, of the risks involved. Jen’s okay, by the way. She transplanted the Mandrakes a few months ago and I just saw her today. She reports no ill effects.

Mandragora autumnalis blooming in the nursery

The humanoid appearance of the plant is part of what makes it so feared, but the contents of the plant are a different kind of scary – all parts are poisonous and contain potent compounds with hallucinogenic and depressive effects. This should go without saying, but I’ll say it anyways – our interest in the plant is as curiosity, not medicine. Ingesting any part of a plant as poisonous as this one is a dangerous and stupid idea. But as plant geeks? You bet we’re hooked. This is one symbolically heavy plant!

Mandrakes, male and female, from the Neapolitanus Dioscurides manuscript, Biblioteca Nazionale di Napoli, early seventh century.

So no one’s died yet – no dogs, no coworkers and not me, as I sit here writing this in the office, with a great distance between me and the spooky roots.

We have just a few plants for those brave enough to keep their company. They’re growing innocently in clay pots in the back of the nursery, and I am watching them carefully. Very, very carefully. The species we’re growing isn’t the infamous Mandragora officinarum, either. It’s the rare and endangered Mandragora turcomanica from Iran – READ ALL ABOUT IT HERE.

Perhaps we’ve been safe because we’re not growing THE Mandrake, we’re just growing A mandrake, but I’m going to guess that it might also be because we’re giving this fascinating plant the respect and reverence it deserves. If you’re keen on learning more about the mandrake and other plants with seriously wicked potential, then you MUST read Amy Stewart’s book Wicked Plants: The Weed That Killed Lincoln’s Mother and other Botanical Atrocities. And get thee to the nursery this weekend! Amy’s giving a talk on Sunday, April 10 at 11 am and it’s sure to be spooky stuff.

WATCH Amy’s amusingly sinister video for “Wicked Plants.”

Claire Woods
Propagator