UC Blogs
Sorry, This Rooftop Is Occupied
Up on the rooftopReindeer pause,Out jumps good ol' Santa Claus... With all the rooftop beekeeping underway throughout the world, Santa may have some...
The San Francisco Chronicle engages in rooftop beekeeping and maintains two colonies and a fruit and vegetable garden. Journalists Deb Wandell and Meredith May are the beekeepers. Extension apiculturist Eric Mussen of the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology and Queen Turner, head of the beekeeping Section, Ministry of Agriculture, Botswana, inspected the hives last June. From left are Turner, Wandell and Mussen. (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)
San Francisco Chronicle journalists/beekeepers Journalists Meredith May (left) and Deb Wandell inspect a frame of honey on the Chronicle's rooftop. (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)
Revisiting 'The 13 Bugs of Christmas'
It's time to revisit "The 13 Bugs of Christmas." You've heard "The 12 Days of Christmas," beginning with a single "partridge in a pear tree" and...
A golden bee (Italian). (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)
Un-Stump the Master Gardener
I have a question to anyone who might know what the plant is in the two following pictures.
A friend of mine asked me what it could be. She said that someone gave her a bulb and this is the results. Unfortunately, she did not get the name of the plant. If you look closely at the picture you can see where the stem starts in the barrel and grows almost to the patio roof. The second picture is a close up of the blossom.
I have asked several Master Gardeners, but so far it seems to be a plant that resembles a lot of other plants, so no one is sure what it might be. That is my reason for asking for help from anyone that might have a clue for me so that I could identify it for her with your help.
Mystery plant. (photos by Betty Victor)
The flower in question.
Ah, Salvia!
Did the hard freeze damage your plants? Were you surprised by the seemingly random path of destruction? Or, were you a diligent gardener who took the time to cover your cherished plants and was rewarded by healthy specimens ready to carry on to 2014? I admit to being lazy, wimpy, busy, and hopeful, actually, that my plant selections were sufficiently hardy to brave our very cold first week of December.
Determined to allow natural selection to take its course, my only real attempts at plant protection were to move the pots on the south-facing patio as close to the house as possible. One night I brought several pots in to the house and was rewarded by a hibiscus bloom the next morning. Unfortunately, that was its last bloom, I am sure, as I foolishly moved it back outside and it is now a sprawling brown mass of dead foliage. My one bright spot of December flower gardening has been my Salvia spathacea 'Las Pilitas', a low-growing pitcher sage with magenta blossoms. I am seeing these blossoms for the first time this week! First planted in May on a bank with other sages, this poor thing did nothing until it was moved to a pot and began to grow steadily from its four inch height to its present two-foot height. The identification tag it came with from the nursery said it required part shade and low water. Turns out if in fact much happier with regular water and rich potting spoil.
Sunset Western Garden Book claims this Salvia is hardy to 20 degrees, and I am happy to report it must be correct. Thank you, odd 2013 weather weather for bringing us this Christmas Blossom.
S. spathacea 'Las Pilitas'. (photo courtesy of Laspilitas.com)
Salvia spathacea 'Las Pilitas'. (photo by Diana Bryggman
See Full Videos, Powerpoints and Papers from the 2013 Alfalfa & Forage Symposium in Reno
OK, so your truck got a flat, the cows got out, and you were unable to attend the 2013 alfalfa shin-dig in Reno this year?? If you were not among...