|
Hot Gardens Newsletter - June 2004
Current
newsletter Previous Newsletters By Month
The
Disappearing Anasazis.
The drought in the Colorado River
drainage continues.
2004 winter snows in the
Rocky Mountains
were below normal and the
Colorado River
is drying up.
At
Lake Mead
, for example, the water level behind
Hoover Dam is 70 feet lower than it should be and a town that was
submerged when the
Lake
was filled back in the 1930s, is exposed again.
Lake
Powell, behind the Glen Canyon Dam farther up the Colorado
River, has even less water in it. And
the Colorado River no longer empties into the
Gulf of California
– but vanishes into the parched
earth before reaching it.
Newcomers to the Southwest may not be aware that the great "oasis
cities" -- Las Vegas, Phoenix, Los Angeles -- rely heavily on the
Colorado for significant portions of their cities' water supplies.
Local groundwater is not enough
for the millions of people.
While all of us
who live in the desert southwest and California
hope that coming winters will give us
above-normal precipitation, there is evidence that previous desert
dwellers, the Anasazi people, faced decades-long drought.
By looking at tree rings, researchers have discovered that there
was a major drought in the Southwest between 1125 and 1180 – that’s
55 years! Again, in the
following century, a drought came and, this time, the Anasazi destroyed
their kivas and abandoned their pueblos.
The prospect of a decades-long drought is real.
Consider this when you design and plant a desert garden.
 |
Just one of the mini-gardens of succulents and cactus in the
Desert Garden section of the Huntington Botanic Gardens. |
Cactus
Confession.
Cactus and Succulents are the ultimate drought-tolerant plants,
but we confess they have never been of great interest to us until a
recent visit to the Huntington
Botanic Garden
in San Marino, California.
The Desert
Garden
section of this Botanic Garden is guaranteed to inspire a love of
succulents and their prickly cousins, cactus.
And what a joy – almost every single plant is clearly
identified on an easily readable label.
As important as
the individual specimens are, the overall design of the
Huntington Desert
Garden
is spectacular.
For one thing, they have not planted one specimen here, another
there. The plants are massed
in groups to create dramatic, dense borders and mini-gardens along
winding paths beneath pines and mesquites.
We have added a
new page to the Hot Gardens website to show you how beautiful a cactus
and succulent garden can be. Visit
our new page, then visit the Huntington Botanic Gardens in person or
online at www.huntington.org
Palm
Season. Unlike other trees,
palms do best when planted in warm weather.
They love warm soil around their roots.
Of course, a newly planted palm, like any transplant, needs
additional watering until it is established.
Another note about the
Huntington
Botanic Garden:
they have huge section devoted to Palm trees right next to the
Desert
Garden. Some of these palms
will thrive in the desert, others will not.
Be sure to check with your local nursery about which palms do
best in your area. (Then
after you have seen the palms
and cactus, go to the Huntington Tea Room for a traditional English
Tea!)
New Climber. There is a new hybrid of
the Cape
Honeysuckle
in nurseries this year with a light
yellow blossom. This South
African native vine blooms beautifully for months on end and is probably
one of the best climbers for the desert. It needs support so plant it
adjacent to your arbor or pergola; it is too vigorous a grower for a
simple short trellis.
Go to our Newsletter
for June 2003
|
|
Our
Favorite
Garden Soaps
We came across hand made
soaps that do an excellent job of cleaning up without the usual
abrasiveness associated with garden soaps. They are thorough
and gentle -- which is what hands deserve after hours of rough
treatment in the garden. You can find these fragrant soaps
at PasadenaSoaps.com
They are definitely a Hot Gardens favorite.
|
Moving to Valencia or
Santa Clarita?
Take an online
tour of the best areas now. |
|