Saturday, May 7, 2016





"No two gardens are the same. No two days are the same in one garden."
~Hugh Johnson


Here's a gardening practice a Japanese Hawaiian gardener taught me when I was a mere grasshopper back in my 20's. Some flowering shrubs can be severely pruned back each year in order to keep them within prescribed bounds, and will stimulate profuse blooming.

One such plant this technique works especially well on is Lantana camara. It's an approach I incorporate starting April that will work in most SoCal locations. Below is a container garden lantana showing vestiges of winter doldrums, before it was pruned back hard:


-Andrew Kliss
Before


-Andrew Kliss
After


-Andrew Kliss
A little over one month later


Yes indeed it is pretty drastic, but the outcome within a short time is a beautiful bushy shrub chock full o' blooms.

Other plants that can derive benefit from severe pruning include:

Took a casual stroll through the garden this morning just before posting. How enjoyable it is to visit living things that have become your friends; who depend on you to take good care of them, and who in return reward you with awe and beauty only creation can provide. Below are some photos I took with my smartphone (love this thing):


-Andrew Kliss
 Ruta graveolens, Common Rue


-Andrew Kliss
Fennel. Finocchio, or Florence Fennel


-Andrew Kliss
Verbena bonariensis, Purple Vervain



As an aside, I also wish to share some photos of a couple of cacti blooming in the rest of the yard:


-Andrew Kliss
Echinocereus pentalophus, Ladyfinger (taken a few weeks ago)


-Andrew Kliss


-Andrew Kliss


These blooms on 'High Noon' are six inches across. Some Echinopsis hybrid flowers can span 12 inches!



Saturday, April 9, 2016





“We're all vulnerable. Mix the wrong feelings together, the right kind of bad with the wrong kind of good, and you'll wind up with a total breakdown.”
~ Caterpillar from Alice


While cruising around the Container Butterfly Garden this week,


-Google


I came upon mas grande Monarch butterfly caterpillars than those posted the last time. Looks like the season is well on its way to being a productive year!


-Andrew Kliss
Fat cat on an Asclepias curassavica.


-Andrew Kliss
Little one on my Asclepias fascicularis.


-Andrew Kliss
Another fat cat munching away on Gomphocarpus physocarpus.


There is an easy way to identify whether a Monarch butterfly is either male or female.


-Google



Saturday, April 2, 2016





“When a caterpillar bursts from its cocoon and discovers it has wings, it does not sit idly, hoping to one day turn back. It flies.”
~ Kelseyleigh Reber


Some of the first Monarch caterpillars found in the Container Butterfly Garden! I spotted two last week, but lost one to what I believe is predation or possibly disease, and the other, I have no clue.

Newest members:


-Andrew Kliss
Cat munching away on A. curassavica leaves.


-Andrew Kliss
Little, tiny guy keeping company with a Monarch butterfly egg thrown in for kicks!



Saturday, March 12, 2016





“Just living is not enough," said the butterfly, "one must have sunshine, freedom, and a little flower.”
~Hans Christian Andersen 


A recent report noted increased Monarch butterfly numbers in Mexican overwintering grounds: very encouraging indeed! Some of that success is attributed to U.S. expanded public awareness of plummeting Eastern region Monarch populations. As such, many gardeners, landowners, nonprofits, and governments have stepped up to the plate, creating habitat and planting milkweed throughout the Monarch migratory corridors.

Another related article from The New York Times, Monarch Butterfly Migration Rebounds, Easing Some Fears was brought to my attention by one of this blog's followers: thank you Marion!


-Rebecca Blackwell/Associated Press



-Google
 Illustration detailing the migratory timeline of eastern races of Monarchs.


...and then there is this that just came in:
Mexico's monarch butterflies die in unusual cold storm, while US conservation effort also imperiled


-dailykos.com


Back in the container garden, all of the plants received their first fertilizing for the new season in the first week of March with a high nitrogen general purpose liquid fertilizer to stimulate stem and leaf production. Later in the year the container garden will switch to both liquid and granular formulas that contain greater amounts of phosphorus to encourage more blooms.

The perennial milkweed I pruned back in winter are beginning to stir, breaking out in leaf and flower buds. Also, the native milkweeds are shooting up stems from their dormant roots, ready for another season.

Monarch butterfly visitors were beginning to flit about the sprouting Asclepias curassivica during our last warm heat spell, but as temps and the weather changed to much needed recent rains, they disappeared. No sign of caterpillars; they'll make their presence known soon enough. News from the Santa Barbara and Frisco Bay areas report Monarch eggs and caterpillars on milkweed, heralding an early spring.  

For those residing in milder climes, now is the time to take stock of your gardens:
  • Pot up plants that have outgrown their original containers.
  • Prune back overgrown perennials to make them bushier, which produces more leaves and flowers.
  • Begin a regimen of fertilizing. I start off the season with a high nitrogen (N) formula to kick start growth, and then switch to higher phosphorous (P) and potassium (K) numbers to stimulate flowering, stronger stems, and encourage a healthy root system.



Saturday, March 5, 2016





Just a quick note: the annual Butterfly Jungle exhibit at San Diego Zoo Safari Park (formerly Wild Animal Park) will be opening soon.


-San Diego Zoo


The Newport Beach Environmental Center will open its Butterfly House in mid May.


-Environmental Nature Center



Friday, February 26, 2016





"My green thumb came only as a result of the mistakes I made while learning to see things from the plant's point of view."
~H. Fred Dale


Here at the Container Butterfly Garden compound, the busy little propagation elves are hard at work again, well, propagating.

With recent purchases and seed swaps of several new species, various aspects of preparation and germination are revving up. Some need cold stratification, while others can be placed in a planting medium immediately.


-Andrew Kliss Photography
Mini Greenhouse


This is the little mini greenhouse setup I have running in my bedroom which includes a grow light stand, greenhouse high dome, tray, and a heat mat beneath the towel. The towel is for catching any condensate that escapes from between the dome and tray. It sits nestled in front of a bay window where I can open the louvers to let in the morning light.

For more info on the equipment, this earlier post goes into greater detail: Saturday, December 7, 2013. Since my initial setup two seasons ago, I've learned a bit and refined a few things:
  • Instead of using the plastic cell inserts, I switched to Jiffy peat trays and peat pots. Both come in several sizes. Much easier to use; doesn't cause plant stress from trying to push little seedlings out of the plastic trays. With the peat trays, all one needs to do is cut the individual cells apart and plant it cell and all when ready. Ditto on the pots: plant the whole thing in the ground or larger container.
  • The Jiffy brand of seed starting medium was to put it mildly, terrible. Black Gold Seedling Mix I purchased from Green Thumb Nursery is da bomb. Love the stuff. The saying applies here too: "You get what you pay for!".


-Google
 Jiffy Seedling Starting Strips

  
-Google
 Jiffy Pots

Peat starting strips and pots are fairly ubiquitous, as are trays, and covers. They can be found at big box do-it-yourself home improvement centers, Walmart, larger nurseries, and online such as Amazon. The only place I find high domes locally are at the neighborhood Green Thumb Nursery nearby. Generally, for seed germination and small cuttings, the busy little elves here use peat strips. For fast growing plants and larger cuttings, the elves use peat pots.

One can also recycle newspaper to make starting pots for both seeds and cuttings. A thing to avoid though is colored inks; black ink is soy based and safe to use, whereas colored inks may contain toxic chemicals:






 Come spring, I'll be making making cuttings of various plants 'cuz I'm a tightwad and squeak when I walk and don't wish to spend more money on plants than I have to if there's the know-how and the resources to do so otherwise.


Saturday, February 13, 2016





“The world contained in a seed, Determined by its program.”
~Dejan Stojanovic


First, a little bit of news about the latest Western Monarch population count. There has been a gradual rise in numbers the past few years overall as illustrated in the graph below, but well below the high of 1997-1998:


-Monarch Joint Venture

Encouraging news indeed. Southern California though, has seen a reduction in numbers according to The Xerces Society article: "Less positive is that in southern California, the majority of the sites surveyed had fewer monarchs than last year." What is shocking when looking at the graph is the plummeting numbers between years 1997 and 1999.

Now on to some fun stuff...

The Container Butterfly Garden has been wheeling and dealing like it never whelt and dealt before, exchanging plant seeds of late with like-minded souls. So, I got an idea (dangerous) of creating and designing a custom seed packet to share and exchange seeds with, which can also be used to store seed in. The Container Butterfly Garden is offering a ZIP file containing two printable PDFs: one for small packets, the other is a large packet. Click on Seed Packet Templates if you wish to use them too.


 
-KlissKraft



-KlissKraft

"I WANT YOU TO PLANT BUTTERFLY PLANTS!"



-Google
Print on a 8.5x11 sheet of paper (size A4 for Euros). 
Cut just inside the black outline, fold, and then glue.


Fold the bottom and side tabs in, using a ruler or straight edge to get a crisp fold and glue the tabs together where they overlap each other, making sure you don't glue them to the inside of the front panel. Next, add a bit of glue to the tops of both folded tabs. Thirdly, fold the back side over, align and press: TA-DA!

A little tip when sending seed via mail: if using a regular envelope, place seed in bubble wrap to protect them from possible damage by postal automated sorting machines, or at least wrap them in a paper towel folded over several times. Small manila cushioned mailers work great too.