Saturday, 5 January 2019

There you will find me...


... on my knees, in the garden, sprinkling handfuls of Marigold seeds in the moist soil.


It's summer and what could be more blissful than lovingly tending to your flock of flowers? Just like our children, they thrive on tender care and love.

Many of us have Marigold flowers (Tagetes) growing in our gardens, but did you know that marigold flowers have great healing abilities? It’s true, these beautiful golden flowers will heal your body in many different ways. Marigold flower tea has great antioxidants that help to prevent cardiovascular disease, strokes, and cancer.


To make tea or infuse the flowers, boil the water and then add 1 tablespoon of the flowers to the pot of tea and let it steep. Do not add the dried flowers to cold water and then let it boil. The tea purifies the blood, so drink this tea regularly.

Marigolds are also great insect repellents, mosquitoes hate them! By growing these flowers in your yard, you can be assured that mosquitoes will leave you alone and you’ll be helping out your local bees, too.

Tuesday, 1 January 2019

Plectranthus verticillatus

Plectranthus makes an ideal hanging basket subject
(Taken in my Tarlton, Gauteng, South Africa garden)

Common names: gossip spurflower, money plant, swedish ivy, skindersalie (Afr). Also called the money plant, legend has it that, if your Plectranthus should die, your money would dry up!

Plectranthus verticillatis - Image from Sanbi
Plectranthus verticillatus is a perennial semi-succulent ground cover native to woodland and forest margins in southeast Africa. It has long been a popular garden subject in many parts of the world, both for its attractive foliage as well as for its delicate white to pale mauve flowers.

The popular "Swedish Ivy" pot and basket hanging plectranthus is not P. verticillatus, as it is sometimes referred to overseas, but P. oertendahlii from the forested coastal river gorges of KwaZulu-Natal. The latter is characterized by variegated leaves with silvery markings.

Propagating a piece of Plectranthus given to me by a friend

This easy grower is not threatened in its natural habitat and is abundant in its native habitat in frost-free areas along forest margins, in woodland, kloof forest and scrub forest from Knysna through KwaZulu-Natal to Limpopo. It however does not tolerate frost, which is how I lost my plant in the hanging basket above. As the frost killed it, technically I do not regard is that my money will dry up! (Smile!)

Plectranthus verticillatus
.
My Plectranthus sharing a hanging basket with some Ivy (Hadera helix)

Mai (my pet Mynah) on my Plectranthus (money plant)

::

We are on the eve of a New Year - may your garden be filled with beauty and lovely surprises in 2019!
 

Monday, 31 December 2018

Hope is at the center of the gardener’s soul


Hope is at the center of the gardener’s soul. We hope the seeds will sprout. We hope the plant will bloom. We hope for tasty tomatoes. We hope for better weather. This coming year, plant dreams, pull weeds and grow a happy life!

Happy New Year!

Saturday, 29 December 2018

I miss my Marigolds...


I begged my garden for forgiveness…

… and she gave me marigolds!

Monday, 24 December 2018

A Merry gardening Christmas 2018!


There can be no other occupation like gardening in which, if you were to creep up behind someone at their work, you would find them smiling! 

Hope you have a wonderful gardening Christmas this 2018! And remember, don't wear perfume in the garden — unless you want to be pollinated by bees!

Tuesday, 18 September 2018

Strelitzia nicolai

(Camera Canon EOS 550D - Sheffield, Ballito, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa)

The Natal Wild Banana (Strelitzia nicolai) grows up to 12m high and 4m wide. It is an evergreen tree with multi-stems that form dense clumps.

Taken in my garden, Sheffield, Ballito, South Africa

The stem is woody and smooth in texture. It is light to dark grey and marked with old leaf scars. Attached to the stem by long, thick leaf stalks are the enormous, opposite leaves that are shiny and grey-green, with blades capable of reaching up to 2m in length. These tear in the wind and come to resemble giant feathers.

Camera Canon EOS 550D - Sheffield, Ballito, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa

The inflorescence is composed of a dark blue bract, white sepals and a bluish-purple "tongue". The entire flower can be as much as 18 cm (7.1 in) high by 45 cm (18 in) long and is typically held just above the point where the leaf fan emerges from the stem. Flowers are followed by triangular seed capsules.

Pic from Wikipedia

The flower of the Natal Wild Banana is a typical Crane Flower inflorescence, up to 500 mm long. The flowers of this tree have white sepals with blue petals and consist of 5 purplish blue, boat-shape sheaths.The whole flower resembles the head of the bird, with a white crest and purple beak. The tree flowers throughout the year with a peak in spring-summer. The inflorescence is compound (more than one flower).

The seeds are black in colour, with a tuft of a bright orange woolly aril on the lobe. They are produced mostly in autumn and winter, March to July. The easiest way to propagate this tree is from root suckers, but it will also grow from seed.

Restricted to evergreen coastal forest and thicket of eastern South Africa from the Great Fish River northwards to Richards Bay. It is also considered native to Mozambique, Botswana and Zimbabwe, and is reportedly naturalized in eastern Mexico.

Strelitzia Nicolai is among the few plants which have been verified to contain the pigment bilirubin, which is usually found in animals.

Monday, 10 September 2018

Lala palm (Hyphaene coriacea)

This is my first gardening post since moving to the North Coast, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa, almost 9 months ago and at last I am actually learning about some of the weird and wonderful fauna and flora that surrounds me here. I say weird (and wonderful), because it is SO unlike the Gauteng Savannah landscapes of browns, yellows and oranges. Here everything is tropical, very green, and grows in such abundance that, if you close your eyes for too long, you will immediately be overgrown!

Lala palm (Hyphaene coriacea)

This is the beautiful indigenous Lala palm (Hyphaene coriacea) which is a very slow-growing, ascending or prostrate, evergreen palm tree eventually reaching a height of 6 meters or more. I have always admired these awesome indigenous, very KwaZulu-Natal palms. There are some beautiful specimens all over Ballito, but this one is inside the estate or gated community where I live, and the grey fans contrast beautifully against the rest of the lush green surrounds.

The plants flower from November to February, so that is something I still have to look forward to! The fruit takes two years to ripen and this can stay on the palm for a further two years, before falling. Elephants and baboons eat this fruit (luckily we do not have ANY elephants or baboons inside the estate! but we do have Vervet monkeys, and I'm wondering if they also eat the fruit...?), and therefore disperse it to various regions. Apparently, in this manner, the fruit can take only a month to germinate. Birds like to nest in these Lala Palms, because it is quite spiny, so detracting the predators. There is a big craft market, that the fibre of this Palm supports, such as, baskets, mats, etc. A palm wine is also made from the sap and is a source of Vitamin B.

Plants succeed in moist tropical climates where temperatures never fall below 10°c, the average annual rainfall is 1,500mm or more and the driest month has 25mm or more rain. They can also succeed in drier areas with an annual rainfall as low as 250mm and one month or more where rainfall is below 25mm.

Plants grow well in full sun, even when small but prefers growing in alluvial sands. Found in the wild on poorly drained, light, dry soils of low fertility. It is a suckering palm, forming a clump of trunks. Dioecious, both male and female forms need to be grown if fruit and seed are required.

P.S.: This palm was identified for me by Sasha Ireland on the FaceBook Group "Dolphin Coast Neighbours".


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