Tag Archives: garden

Metal and Clay

Last weekend, we visited two interesting companies selling the bits which make up our homes:

At Sims, we were looking for some steel pipe and angle iron for John, although I also came home with a treasure: a 4-shelf wrought iron plant stand for $20 which only needs a little work. Everything at Sims is sold by the pound – kettle drums, lawn chairs, fencing, old farm equipment, rusted bird cages, old iron stoves, and unidentifiable bits of steel. There is even a small section for sculptures.

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At Fireclay Tile, we looked for the tiles to pave our new side porch. John and I rooted through the new tile showroom and also the Boneyard in back where excess and nonstandard tiles wait for adoption.  We found some likely piazza tiles by Gladding McBean plus a tile mural for the center.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Play in a Garden

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Last night, my husband John helped to run the light board for a community theater group presenting the short play “Christ in the Concrete City” by Philip W. Turner. The production was by the Saint Andrew’s Players, directed by Melita Thorpe, and was held at dusk in the garden of St. Andrew’s Episcopal School (Saratoga, California). It was an interesting play, at times disturbing, and a fun evening.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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San Francisco Bay Area Labyrinths

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California Pacific Medical Center – courtyard, Pacific Heights, Buchanan at Clay, San Francisco

Labyrinths are maze-like paths used for thousands of years in design and public structures. Here in the San Francisco Bay Area, I have seen two types of public labyrinths: those inspired by the design on the floor of Chartres Cathedral (from around the year 1250) with 11 circuits and a distinct flower-like center, and the much-older classical Greek or Cretan patterns. Walking a labyrinth is a popular form of meditation, particularly in hospitals and Christian church buildings and gardens.  Some groups think so highly of this calming exercise, that they have painted portable labyrinths on canvas for spiritual retreats in places where no permanent labyrinth exists.  Some of the public labyrinths in the San Francisco Bay Area may be visited at:

Other Labyrinths in the area are listed here:

You can even have your own home labyrinth by buying a rug of that pattern from the Signals catalogue (pictured below).

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El Camino Hospital – inside main lobby, 2500 Grant Road, Mountain View:
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Saint Thomas Episcopal Church – courtyard, 231 Sunset Avenue, Sunnyvale:
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Lincoln Avenue downtown bench near Meredith Avenue, Willow Glen – San Jose:
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All Saints’ Palo Alto CA – Added March 2013:
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Images Copyright 2011-2013 by Katy Dickinson

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Technology and Cactus Management

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A few years ago, when he was Sun Microsystems’ Chief Engineer, Mike Splain gave a talk about his job. (We at Sun often heard from our remarkable technical leaders – see one talk I caught on tape: Ivan Sutherland Speaking On Leadership.) On this occasion, I remember Mike asking us to imagine that he had a spray bottle in each hand: one contained fertilizer, and the other weed killer. His job as Chief Engineer was to know which bottle to use and how much to spray. That is, to know which technical projects to encourage and which to kill.

I was thinking of Mike and his job yesterday when my husband John and I took apart a huge prickly pear cactus (Opuntia). Long ago, there was a prickly pear farm in our area of Willow Glen (San Jose, California). There are still many of these massive spiny plants along the bank of the Guadalupe River where we live. Three had grown up next to John’s workshop and model train room. In fact, they grew so large and heavy that they damaged the roof and threatened anyone walking on that side of the building. John wanted them dead. He generously consented to allow me to save the parts furthest from the walkway.

My cactus management tools are three:

  • A long serrated bread knife
  • Barbecue tongs
  • A bow saw (for big branches)

Add to these good gloves and a big bucket and you too can deconstruct a cactus twice as big and older than you are.

Like a technical project, prickly pears have some tender shoots which can either be left or easily cut off with a bread knife (depending on what direction they are headed). There are also huge fibrous trunks, more than a hand-width wide – like projects that have been growing and gathering resources for years that need a sharp-toothed bow saw to cut them out. The tongs are to keep the cactus manager from being skewered too often by her work.

Taking one section at a time, John and I removed all of the cactus parts headed toward the house.  What remains can grow for a few years before needing further attention.  Several hundred pounds of prunings went down the bank where they will in time root and build up my cactus fence.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Night Blooming Cereus

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On 10 July, I wrote about a flower bud starting on one of the six foot tall Cereus cactus columns in my garden in San Jose, California. Some years, there are many flowers but this year, just two. The buds take two weeks to develop into blooms and then last just a few hours. This flower chose to bloom after dark. By morning, the nine-inch-across bloom will be crumpled in on itself and gone. Imagine me juggling a flashlight and camera while standing on the boulders in my cactus garden at night. Here are pictures showing the growth of this spectacular flower:

June 10:
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June 21:
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June 26 – Morning:
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June 26 – Night:
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Aftermath

That particular cactus bloom surprisingly lasted into the next day. It has now started its journey from flower to fruit. More pictures:

27 July:
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27 July:
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1 August:
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6 August:
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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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Cactus Garden Redesign

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I redesigned a section of my backyard cactus garden yesterday – moving a four-foot-wide succulent black-spined-aloe from the garden section next to WP 668 (our caboose) to another area.  To make room, I had to remove a bed of smaller striped-aloes that were creeping onto a brick walkway on one side and slowing attacking a columular Cereus cactus patch on the other. My husband John had urged the removal of the invasive striped-aloes for some years, so he is happy. The striped-aloes are now colonizing our river bank in San Jose, California, where they have scope for expansion.

This project sounds like it required less work than it did.  Aloes are covered in sharp spines and they fight back.  The dirt was full of bits of aloe root – any of which can grow into a full plant given time – which had to be sifted out.  About a dozen boulders needed to be dug out and re-placed.  I am happy with the result even if I am scratched all over.

Before:
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. After:
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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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WP668 Caboose and Cactus

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WP 6668, our backyard railroad caboose, sits in a garden of succulents and cactus. In fact, we measure the growth of our cactus by how high on the caboose they rise. The Silver Torch (Cleistocactus Strausii) with its obscene pink flowers, and the Black Spined Aloe are particularly vigorous growers. I am probably going to take out one of the aloes before it overwhelms its spiny neighbors. It can go live on the river bank where size does not matter.

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Images Copyright 2012 by Katy Dickinson

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