Monday, October 08, 2007

Magic Cuttings

Salvia coccinea (red) and S. guarantica "Black and Blue" (ultramarine). A hummingbird fiesta.

I know that all too soon, summer will be gone. Heck, it's gone already. Finally, after a sweltering September, the nights are crisp again. I can't remember a hotter September--days in the 90's, nights in the 60's. October: even worse. Everything is fried to a crisp. Took Baker on a hike yesterday and he took off after something and came back overheated. There was no water to douse him in where we were so I found a hose and drenched him. But they're promising a cooling off for tomorrow, and the sun has this wine-rich quality that, even when it's hot, isn't. The light is pellucid and penetrating; the heat somehow false.
Every year, I've fallen into the trap of taking my cuttings too late. I wait until October or, worse, November, when the plants are practically dormant, when their hormones are not flowing any more, and I take cuttings, and have a heck of a time getting them to root. Duh. You take cuttings when plants are actively growing. My plant friend Gordon told me that. So this year I took my cuttings in early September, and as I write they are already throwing out roots.

I'm a plant hoarder. There are plants I have decided I cannot live without, and I carry them over in the greenhouse from year to year. One year I lost ALL my fancy-leaf and miniature geraniums in the greenhouse, 28 varieties, to a power outage on an 8-degree night. It hurt. But the mercurial electric heat has now been replaced by good ol' gas, and we put a drip valve on the gas line, and we haven't had an unplanned gas outage since. And so I take cuttings.
I cannot live without heliotrope. Smells like cherry vanilla pie. Ergo: Must have it. So, apparently, must this clearwing hummingbird moth. Heliotrope roots well from cuttings, though I usually wind up digging up the whole plant, cutting it back to about 4" tall, and keeping it over the winter that way. Heliotrope is very forgiving. This time, I rooted cuttings. My three-year-old plant is getting too darn big for the greenhouse.
Here are some of this September's cuttings, already dipped in rooting hormone. Did you know that rooting hormone has pretty much the same chemical makeup as angel dust? Well, it does. Maybe that's why it's getting so durn hard to find in the grocery store any more, kind of like cough medicines that are a precursor to methamphetamines. I can't be bothered with either angel dust or meth. Life's too good, too full of beauty and possibility, and too short for "recreational" drugs.
The cuttings, ensconced in their rooting planter. I put Saran wrap over the top for humidity for the first week or so, until they settle in and stop wilting.Dinner outside, with hibiscus and parrot. A touch of tropicalia in the waning light of summer.

In the fall of 2006, my friend Mary Alice brought me a large peach-flowered hibiscus. She apologized for its size and the lateness of the season, but said, "I walked up to it and it spoke to me. It told me it was meant for you." And it occurred to her that I had a greenhouse where it could live over the winter. All true. I kept it over the winter, and it got about three feet tall and took a gallon of water every day. Come spring 2007, I breathed a sigh of relief, took it out of its pot, and set it in the lower garden. It's now as tall as my chin and covered with huge peach blossoms. Needless to say, it's not coming back in.

At the start of the winter of 2007, my horticulturally-inclined friend Jason took a few cuttings of this hibiscus, because we both knew it was going to get too big for the greenhouse. He grew it over the spring and summer, and gave it to me this August. Oh, thank you, Jason, for all the wonderful plants you brought me. You are theRooting King, the King of Salvias. Here's its first blossom. And mine. Come spring, they'll probably both be looking me square in the eye.

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12 Comments:

At 5:29 PM, Blogger Lynne said...

That's one beautiful photo of Phoebe. Are you seeing glimpses of the adult Phoebe in her face yet? It felt so peculiar, I remember being speechless the first time I saw it in my kids' faces.

 
At 8:09 PM, Blogger KGMom said...

I had forgotten about heliotrope--one of fav flowers. How could I forget it? I didn't get any this year. Its smell is delicious, and its grand purple reminds me of a dowager aunt.

 
At 8:41 PM, Blogger Mary said...

Yes, Phoebe - perhaps the most beautiful flower in your greenhouse and gardens. Those eyes and pure beauty... Look at her often and take it in.

I remember my daughter standing with me at the kitchen sink during her high school years. Sometimes you just want to look at them for no other reason than to etch their face in your mind, a period in time. Her reply was usually an uncomfortable and impatient, "WHAT?!?!" (Teens are paranoid sometimes.) I got the same response when I saw her on college breaks.

I said, "Oh, nothing." But I think she knew I was admiring her and saving the view for the days I wanted to remember.

I admire your greenhouse work, by the way :o)

 
At 10:08 PM, Blogger Toni said...

How wonderful to have a green house to carry your plants over from year to year.

Your daughter is beautiful. Take it all in because they grow up so fast.

 
At 12:25 AM, Blogger catbird said...

Nice flowers, even more stunning kids. Phoebe gets more lovely with every picture. In this one, her eyes look bottomless. Them's some offspring y'all got there. (And I love the heapin' helpin' of Liam, who looks to be on the verge of using his plate for a pillow. And how come Charlie always knows to show his best side?)

As for heliotrope, have you noticed some varieties have lost their fragrance? The same thing's happened with petunias. Apparently, selecting for smaller, more profuse blooms or unusual colors leads to less aromatic plants. At least, that's what I think. Me, I like 'em stinky.

 
At 3:17 AM, Blogger alan said...

Having been blessed to hear you, I've always been a bit too "star struck" to comment, but I read something just now at a friend's where you mentioned your mother's vision problems.

One of our morning talk show hosts on public radio's KCUR-FM, local newsman and legend Walt Bodine has Retinitis Pigmentosa (in fact he gave up his television news editorship because of it). For years the radio station used a computer program that enlarged and emboldened things to a size he could see. (I have heard of late that he is completely blind now.)

I don't know if you could use it to make a book readable for your Mom, but if it even helped with newspapers or letters it would have to be worth checking into!

Forgive me for following you "home" with this, but if there's even a chance this might help I'd have felt guilty for not mentioning it...

alan

 
At 5:20 AM, Blogger Julie Zickefoose said...

Dear Alan,

Thanks for coming over from the Dharma Bums' blog. I'm so envious of Robin's ability to use Skype with her (sighted) mom. We got all the gizmos we could for my mom, including a thing that would project her letters and bills huge onto her TV screen. It helped for awhile. Macular degeneration is a cruel disease, though, and it steals a little more every day. I often wonder if I owe my ferociously visual nature in part to the knowledge that MD has a strong genetic component. Watching Mom lose sight over the last two decades has been hard. She copes and compensates with great grace. Thanks for your thoughts.

 
At 7:55 AM, Blogger dguzman said...

Lynne's comment is so true--I have seen glimpses of the beautiful woman that our little Emerson will become, and it always makes me want to cry. And then of course she gives me the "WHAT?!?!" that Mary describes. She's such a great little soul.

Your flower and greenhouse work is inspiring. I'd LOVE to have a greenhouse, but we'll likely move away from here in a couple of years, so I have to wait until we put down our own roots someplace. Then I'm building a greenhouse! And I'll come back to your blog for instructions.

Oh gosh, I have two friends with macular degeneration. One's a book editor and one's an art director, and knowing they'll both lose their lives' work to the disease is almost as hard for me as it is for them. But as they're always telling me, what else can they do but accept it and cherish the vision they have left? My best wishes to your mum.

 
At 12:46 PM, Blogger Mary said...

Julie,

Michael has macular degeneration. A premature twin in 1949 (incubated for two months), he lost sight in his left eye and his right eye was severely affected by oxygen. By the time he was in his late twenties, his blind eye deteriorated and had to be removed and replaced with a prosthesis. His good eye continued to weaken - with the laciest retina you can imagine. Around 1994 he had a lens implant that helped his 20-700 vision see 20-40 corrected. He's 58 now and is holding steady but we know that his retina could go at any time which would require emergency surgery. The future is uncertain, you know.

I hope your Mom holds steady, too, and soaks up everything she can. Bless her heart.

 
At 12:50 PM, Blogger littleorangeguy said...

This post has been removed by the author.

 
At 7:46 PM, Anonymous Janet said...

Interesting that no one has mentioned the sphinx moth in one of your photos. Unless, of course, I missed the comment. You, or someone in your neighborhood must keep tomato plants?

My mother is also having vision problems due to a hemorrhage behind the retina. She's also been diagnosed with breast cancer (I was first with that diagnosis, strange isn't it? Me first then my mother?) and a few weeks ago, she had a TIA (stroke). She's AMAZING though in the way that she stays so positive!

I do wish your mother well.

Janet

 
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