Here is Part 2 of the tour of the back garden in January.
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Strawberry Plant |
The strawberry plant has been repotted and has a flower or two. I'm looking forward to more strawberries this spring.
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Curry Leaf Tree 1 |
The curry leaf tree growing near the patio area is doing well after having one or two branches pruned off. Meanwhile, the curry leaf tree growing behind the garage has been pruned down quite a bit:
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Curry Leaf Tree 2 |
Once it starts to leaf out, again, we will cut back all the suckers that are growing around it. I use curry leaves in my cooking and they are supposed to have many beneficial health effects, but, I only use a handful of the leaves at a time.
A few feet down the wall from the first curry leaf tree, the Star Jasmine plant is still growing up the homemade trellis:
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Star Jasmine Plan |
There is half a tree stump in front of it and some pieces of cardboard around it to try and keep the weeds down. But, there's a type of asparagus fern growing around it, too, and no doubt it will cover the cardboard in a few months.
In front of the star jasmine vine, is the bottle brush tree which was pruned back, last year:
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Bottle Brush Tree |
No flowers, yet, but, I think it will flower later, this year.
Nearby, we have the orange tree:
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Orange Tree |
And sharing the same planting bed as the orange tree, the volunteer plant that M thinks is a Carob plant:
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Volunteer Carob Plant |
I had suggested transplanting it or potting it up to M (carob trees tend to grow big and I'm not sure if I want a huge tree in the back yard), but, so far, that has not happened.
Just behind the orange tree, we have the avocado tree, looking a bit lop-sided because we pruned off all the dead branches on one side!
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Avocado Tree |
No signs of it flowering, much less bearing fruit, but, that's OK with me. It's something I grew from a seed and I will simply consider it as an ornamental plant.
Barely visible to the viewer's right, behind the avocado tree, is the old rosemary bush:
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The Old Rosemary Bush |
She with the tangled stems:
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Rosemary Stems |
The plant is over 30 years old, grown from a cutting my mother received from a friend with the same name as the plant! We probably should have pruned it back, a long time ago, but, now, I love how the stems look and I don't want to cut it back. The two upright poles you see are the trunks of the bauhinia tree (and its daughter plant) my mother grew from seeds given to her by her younger brother, from his garden. I have grown a seedling from these two plants and it's growing in another part of the back garden (behind the shed; I didn't take a picture of it). The rosemary bush has woven its stems around the two bauhinia trees.
Across from the rosemary bush, past an empty planting circle and the dormant nectarine tree (its twigs visible in the foreground), the calamondin tree has been pruned back quite a bit:
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Calamondin Tree |
The calamondin tree was already well established when I bought the house, so, I'm assuming it is at least 40 years old.
On the other side of the calamondin tree, we have one of the two loquat plants, grown from seeds, which were given to me by neighbor S (from her aunt's garden). This one seems to be doing better than the other one which we planted near the nectarine tree. They do grow to be big trees, but, I will keep them pruned if necessary (my previous loquat tree died before it became very big).
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Loquat Plant |
The big tree in the distance, beyond the wall, is a neighbor's avocado tree.
This is the plumbago/lantana hedge along the side wall. It started out as two lantana plants and a plumbago plant; the plumbago seems to have taken over! I had M prune it back at the end of last year and it is starting to leaf out.
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The Plumbago/Lantana Hedge |
I'd mentioned before that a papaya seedling was growing in one of the blueberry planters. M removed it from the blueberry planter on Friday and we planted it where the fuyu persimmon tree used to be, in front of the plumbago/lantana hedge:
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Newly Transplanted Papaya Seedling |
I hope it will grow well in its new spot and produce some papayas, one day.
We are now planting some succulents in the back, behind the garage, near the garden shed:
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Succulents by the Shed |
On the side of the garage, the lemon trees are full of lemons; here's just one of them:
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Lemons |
And nearby, the baby lemon tree (a sucker plant from the above lemon tree that I am allowing to grow):
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Baby Lemon Tree |
Here's how it looked last year:
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Baby Lemon Tree in January 2024 |
Nearby, we have the moringa tree; the recent winds blew away all the leaves, but there are flowers that the hummingbirds enjoy and pods that I am allowing to mature to collect seeds from them:
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Moringa Tree |
At the base of the moringa tree, I have the volunteer Berkeley Tie Dye tomato plant, that is bearing fruit and has flowers:
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Volunteer Berkeley Tie Dye Tomato Plant |
M is amazed that I am able to grow a tomato plant in the winter, but, I've picked a couple of tomatoes from it, already, and there are at least two more that are forming:
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Green Tomatoes |
That concludes the January tour of the back yard. I hope you enjoyed the tour.
Just in case you are interested, here is how the back yard looked last year, in
January 2024, when we had a wet winter.
You have a remarkable variety of plants in your backyard. It makes mine look anemic.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Anne. :)
DeleteI struggle to grow tomatoes in the summer! Very impressed
ReplyDeleteThank you, Angela. :)
DeleteYour garden continues Meaningful. The old rosemary plant looks amazing. In the language of flowers, rosemary is for remembrance and that plant definitely is full of memories.
ReplyDeleteWhen you said that the curry tree had been pruned, you weren't kidding! Will it bounce back? Some plants thrive on a severe pruning and it encourages them, but I'm always nervous about being so tough.
Thank you, Lyssa.
DeleteI believe in pruning back quite severely if the plant is well established. The curry leaf tree will bounce back. It might take a little time, but, I'll post pictures of it through the year.
Severe pruning works on Gladys, so I think that you're right!
DeleteThank you, Lyssa. :)
DeleteEverything in your garden looks good and healthy. I'm tempted to get some more strawberry plants this year.
ReplyDeleteI saw some small lemon trees with buds on in the garden centre last week. I had a good look so I know what I should check for. 🤞🏼I also need to do some repotting as soon as the weather picks up. Xx
Thank you, Jules. You'll know when your lemon trees start flowering, just from the scent. :) I'm looking forward to seeing what you will be growing in your garden, this year.
DeletePink strawberry flowers are amazing, worth growing even without the fruit! The trellis has worked out really well, hasn't it? I wouldn't want to change anything about the rosemary bush, either, with those gorgeous roots.
ReplyDeleteThe pink strawberry flowers are very pretty, aren't they? I'm looking forward to some strawberries, this year. :) The trellis has worked out great! And I'm thinking of making another one, if I can find enough branches/poles. :) That rosemary bush has a mind of its own! LOL.
DeleteWhat a lovely lot of plants! Such a nice variety. I really like all the lemons - wow!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Sharon. I made a batch of lemonade with some of the lemons. Need to make more. :)
DeleteVery interesting, as usual. I've only seen white strawberry blooms. Do the pink blooms produce a different kind of strawberry?
ReplyDeleteThis is an ever-bearing variety of strawberries called Gasana strawberries; pink flowers and red fruit. M bought a plant for himself, last June, and showed it to me, so I gave him the money to buy two plants for me. They produced a handful of strawberries, later in the summer. Only one plant seems to have survived, but, I'm hopeful that it will grow and produce more fruit, this year.
DeleteSo many wonderful plants! And that 30 year old plant!! Amazing! I have one I have managed to keep alive for almost 10 years now. I sure wish I could grow oranges and lemons here! You have some awesome things growing!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Mandy. :)
DeleteOh what a nice tour.
ReplyDeleteI did not realize you had 2 curry leaf trees. So the big one is right behind your house and the other is behind the garage. Looking at the garage one, I see how much room is behind that garage. That surprised me as I must've thought the garage was further back. So you have some space there and have made good use of it.
Is that where your compost pile is?
All your lemons look so nice and the little tree is really coming along nicely. As is the avocado - even with it's pruning :)
The calamondin tree is a solid sturdy tree. And the rosemary branches (I always think it is it's root system above ground but it's not, right?) looks beautiful.
Congratulations on your volunteer winter tomatoes. Quite an accomplishment :)
Thank you, Debra.
DeleteYes, two big curry leaf trees and several smaller ones as they send up suckers. We keep them cut down, but, at least one has been allowed to grow into a third, much smaller, tree. There is at least 20 feet behind the garage. I have a couple of compost piles, but, one is at the very back, behind the calamondin tree and the back wall and the other is at the side of the back garden, between the curry leaf tree and the bottlebrush tree. I don't have a proper compost bin and M is, at best, a very reluctant composter.
Yes, those are the stems of the rosemary bush, not the roots. :)
Thank you; the winter tomatoes are a treat! :)
I have had to buy lemons recently, and they were pretty expensive, so I thought of you and your crop!
ReplyDeleteElla
If you lived closer to me, I would have given you lemons from my tree. I've been making lemonade with the lemons, much to my daughter's delight. :)
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