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Sunday, June 8, 2025

THE WEIRDLY, WONDERFUL SAGUARO

The saguaros ( pronounced sa-war-o) are in bloom and they look fabulous. With their white-flowered bouquets held mainly on the crown they look positively bridal. How fortunate we are to look out every day at our Belle, who never fails to disappoint us through the month of April, May and into June. 


This spring we have eagerly watched her from the very first time we took out the binoculars looking for those tell-tale little pips to appear. You can barely make out the tiny protuberances close to the crown, but as the days go by and they start to swell you know the saguaro is going to bloom. 



We were concerned she might take a year off from blooming because she is not looking her best this year because of the drought. 3 years ago she was looking quite plump having filled with water during a decent rainy winter. 


The monsoon last year did not deliver and we have had no rain this winter. Barely half an inch since November. Saguaros are perfectly adapted to drought and immediately there is any rain falls on the ground they quickly send out tiny roots close to the surface to take up the moisture. They fill up their stems and the pleats expand to full size. I remarked recently how wavy and thin many the saguaros were looking so it will be interesting to see the change when and if we get rain. 


And yet they have bloomed heavily this year. Is this a stress bloom? 



Saguaro, Carnegiea ( Cereus)  gigantia, along with prickly pear are known as arboreal cactus, meaning they are tree-like with a center supporting structure similar to a tree. It is rare to find an old one standing with such a well defined skeleton. This one is on an old, abandoned nearby golf course.

 

They are usually found more like this.


A close up of the skeleton shows the trunk as being made up of a series of woody ribs.


Tree-like bark on a 150+ year old saguaro. 



The saguaro are primarily native to the Sonoran desert, the upper edges of the Colorado desert and a small area of California near to the Colorado river, growing between 600' and 3,600' It is an extremely important plant in the Sonoran desert ecology. Its fruits have been gathered by indigenous peoples to make conserves and drinks. The seeds, high in fat  used as food and more recently used as chicken feed. The ribs of the plant are used for building materials and as a tool for collecting the fruits. 

The saguaro is also important to many species of birds and bats who feed on the nectar within the flower.  The distribution of white winged dove and the elf owl almost completely mirrors that of the distribution of saguaro. The fruits, when the pods split open are a major food source of desert birds. Woodpeckers make holes in trunks which provides a nesting are for many birds. Even branches of the saguaro make a good nesting site for larger birds.


White winged dove sips nectar from the  open flower of the saguaro and doing double duty pollinating the flowers. 



But it is the woodpecker holes that are responsible for the rather curious structure known in the desert as the 'boot'. Often seen  on display at nature centers or in the visitor center at the Saguaro National Park and Sabino Canyon. When woodpeckers carve out their hole the tree protects itself by producing a rough bark-like material, completely walling off the intrusion. Following the death of the saguaro, after it has fallen to the ground and much of its substance decayed the boot will remain. We have been fortunate to find two of these among fallen saguaros. Once dried they make a curious artifact that maybe only a desert dweller will prize. A good intact boot might have been used by indigenous peoples as a water carrier or holder. 



A saguaro does not grow arms until it is at least 50+ years old. Many saguaros take on the regular candelabra shape but sometimes there is no rhyme nor reason to where the branches appear. Some are spectacularly wild in appearance. 




and then there are some spectacular cristate forms where the arm creates pleats on the end of the tip which grow upwards instead of in a cylindrical manner. No-one knows why this happens. It appears to be neither causes by virus or damage to the growth point. It is probably genetic. 




Then some appear to change their mind and start sending up a normal branch. 


Estimates show that 1 in every 100,000-200,000 will cristate. Where we live in Stone Canyon, in an area of 1400 acres with an estimated 14,000-25,000 saguaros, there are 22 crested saguaros. An extremely high ratio. Someone in our neighborhood has donned his snake boots and combed the area to record all the crested saguaros. He led us on a hike one day to share a few of his findings. We also like to leave the trail and follow up one of the many washes in search of the crested form. 

Now into June the height of flowering season is over. The fruits begin to swell and will provide the bird life with food through the hottest part of the summer. 


On the golf course while saguaro may benefit from some additional water they are also at the mercy of the errant golf ball. 

Global warming is causing the death of thousands of saguaros. The saguaro closes its pores during the day and opens them up at night for photosynthesis. Overly high nighttime temperatures, this last two summers  have meant their pores have failed to open. They have had to rely on stored water with the resulting loss of integrity of the stem. They will often drop and arm in the same way that trees will drop leaves in order to survive. We have been a little more fortunate that the desert floor because we are at 3000' and about 8 degrees cooler than Phoenix but even here the changing weather conditions have taken their toll on the saguaro count. Plus in order for saguaros to germinate and survive they need at least 3 good wet seasons. We are all hoping for a really good monsoon this year although the predicted extreme highs in the coming weeks have us all a little worried. 


Tuesday, May 13, 2025

ILLEGITIMI NON CARBORUNDUM

You can probably work out the title even if you have never done any Latin. The phrase has no meaning in Latin but I understand my uncle was heard to mutter it a few times, in English, particularly during the war and then when the company he worked for lost all his pension just as he was about to retire.  He may have also used it in the garden too, as he was a keen gardener. Keep on keeping on might be the more genteel way to express this sentiment! I myself muttered it under my breath on several occasions recently. The most recent this morning.


A neighbor put their trash can outside last night and guess who came visiting. Javelina. They pulled it over and rummaged through everything leaving it strewn all over the driveway and road. Then, they headed across the road and tore off the pads on this Santa Rita prickly pear. A particularly nice specimen. It is a prickly pear they usually leave alone and there are many in the neighborhood.  They didn't even eat them. It was almost as though they were annoyed than no-one else had left their cans out. We all know better than to do that! And we know better than to plant things they eat. I'm the exception who, unwittingly, has given them a few tasty meals. Sometimes in desperation they eat things that they are not normally attracted to. Witness the morning I walked out the side door, heading for a walk, and there lying in front of me a half eaten mammillaria. If they had eaten the whole thing I might not have noticed because they had plucked it from between the rocks leaving it there for me to find. This particular cactus has rows of curved fish-hooks which stick to anything so maybe it was caught up in their fur and in the act of shaking it off it landed on the pathway. But the damage was already done with a huge bite out of the bottom. They have never touched these before so I thought these cactus were safe. I looked across to see if they had done any more damage and sure enough the tender new pads on my 3 pad Santa Rita had been pulled or knocked off and left. Fortunately I can replant them. 


At the front they pulled out a small native plant I had just bought depositing it on the driveway and then they headed over and destroyed all the flowers on the top of the cactus clump I had just planted. It was covered with netting. I need to get more serious with my protection. This is what they looked like the day before.


This the day after. The flowers may only last a couple of days but at least I would like all those days. 


Fortunately it was only the flowers and not the cactus. I bought the plant in bud and thought they would all be the same color. I guess people like the bouquet effect. Not me. So I dug the plant up and divided them and potted them up singly. They are now in the back garden until they recover and I find a new home for them. Maybe this time the javelina did me a favor.

I proceeded with my walk in the company of a Gardeners' Question Time podcast. Was it just coincidence that the audience, like I, were calling in with all kinds of pest problems hoping that someone had the perfect solution. Of course, every gardener suffers from some kind of gardening problem so I was feeling in good company and I wasn't going to let it spoil this beautiful day. 


When we first moved in the house one side of the back and side garden was open to the outside and it was evident from the many missing plants shown on the original garden plans that javelina had just wandered through there and eaten many of them. The fence was a costly venture but we immediately arranged to have the extension across from the house to the side fence. We had to match the existing fence as the HOA is very particular and we added a gate for access. So now the back garden is javelina free. But it is not critter free by any means.

The smaller animals do just as much damage, Being on the edge of the desert we are open to pack rats, mice, Harris antelope squirrels, skunks, raccoons and rabbits. Much damage can be done by skunks rooting under plants for grubs. And the earth workings of the desert mice and squirrels is particularly damaging to roots. They just munch right through the roots causing the plant to wilt. 

The base of the more tender agaves is a salad snack for rats and I have yet to get any pups on the A. desmettiana and A. desmettiana Joe Hoak. The tops of juicy cactus are a feast. I have bought my share of these wire baskets from the Dollar to cover over plants. 


It isn't attractive but wire fencing around some plants is the only answer. I thought the elephant food was starting to look a little bare and then one day I watched the Harris squirrel just jump up on the top and start snacking. Planting on pedestals sometimes stop the smaller rodents but even those are not foolproof. 

Quail, aptly called 'chickens of the desert' scratch around and pluck the tops of newly emerging seedlings. All the newly emerged seedlings of larkspur and love-in-a-mist disappeared overnight. The only spring flower to emerge victorious was the Orlaya grandiflora, or lace flower. These were from a package of seeds received at the Wisconsin Fling! I had them last year and then again this year. 


 

The only creatures I don't worry about are the snakes because a good snake population will take care of the rodents. There are also great-horned owls and screech owls doing their job to control some of the rodent population. But not enough for the gardener. 

When the quail recently began laying eggs in the front bed we decide that we needed to be more proactive in keeping the javelina out. We have erected a temporary fence across from one side of the driveway to the other blocking their passage. It can easily be moved aside for access and although inconvenient at times will remain until the HOA send notice to remove. I can almost guarantee they will. 



I am slowly discovering which plants have the best success in this desert climate and fast draining soils while finding I must give up on many of the plants I was able to grow in my Austin garden. There I relied on many plants to self seed. Here that is just about impossible. 

Saturday, April 26, 2025

YELLOW IS THE COLOR OF THE MOMENT

Two weeks ago we had friends visiting from Denver. We were so excited to show them our wonderful desert home but disappointed that the lack of rain this year was making the desert look very drab and dowdy.  Usually the desert behind our house is a sea of yellow, at this time of year, with flowering brittle bush, Encelia farinosa. This year their leaves are brown and dried up living up to their name. I wish our friends had come a couple of weeks later, as following a brief shower and a cold front passing through, all the trees burst into bloom. Maybe the shower and drop in pressure had nothing to do with it and the flowering had more to do with daylight hours and the natural cycle of blooming. The Palo verde, mesquite and acacia are now putting on a magnificent show. Just driving down the road with the trees in flower and the backdrop of the mountains is the most magnificent sight. 








This is the  Palo Verde, Parkinsonia x Desert Museum, in our front garden. Regrettably this tree was overwatered by the previous occupants and has grown very large. We have had to do some canopy pruning as well as root pruning as the roots were bringing up our driveway in several places. We were also fearful of them making their way into our sewers system. But for all these negatives we love the tree for the filtered shade it provides for the plantings beneath its canopy. It is the sterile hybrid of three palo verde species, P. aculeata, P. microphyllum and P. florida. Its attributes are that it is thornless, fast growing, drought tolerant and attracts many pollinators.

When the flowers drop the ground is a carpet of yellow  



Below is another common spring bloomer, the mesquite, Prosopsis sp.  producing long pods later in the season. These are a favorite of the javelina and can also be ground to make a flour as the Hohokam  lived did many years ago. For all their messy nature the trees both stabilize and being a legume, improve the soil.



Above the sweet acacia, Vachellia farnesiana, The desert trees and shrubs are competing for who is the most fragrant. 
Other shrubs like the hop bush, Dodonaea viscose, are also blooming. These reseed quite readily and I have a couple which seeded in a perfect place among the rocks and which I intend to keep. Yesterday, I collected the papery winged fruits, with the intention of sowing some behind the house in what we now call the hinterland. 


This tree loves dry rocky slopes so will be quite at home. 

In my limited space areas damianita,  Chrysactinia mexicana, is very much at home in fast draining desert soils. It is extremely tolerant of heat and drought. If I had one complaint is that the yellow color is just a shade too bright. It germinates quickly from seed but bringing it to even childhood even under controlled conditions is very challenging. The wiry roots are thin and easily damaged. I have had success with only one plant. It makes thousands of seeds but never produces seedlings naturally. 



In truth I think I prefer the gently sprawling nature of the yellow evening primrose, Oenothera primiveris. It is planted along the edge of the walkway between two rosemary bushes. 

evening primrose


The first of the prickly pear blooms are opening. 


The barrel cactus make up for having the smallest of blooms by making a bold statement with their structure. 


Flowers on the Blue barrel cactus, Ferocactus glaucescens


The blooms are barely noticeable on the golden barrels, Echinocactus grusonii, but they leave behind dry prickly pods with small black seeds. I don't know what the conditions are for seedlings to grow but I never find any. The quail are very good foragers.


Next time I'll introduce you to the saguaro. There is much of interest to share.

Tuesday, April 15, 2025

SPRING IS HERE AGAIN!

 It seems the arrival of spring flowers has jogged me into writing a post. This, after an absence of 11 months. I don't know what happened. Maybe it was being away from my garden for 3 months last summer, or the daily walks and hikes which take up most of the morning. Maybe it was the long breakfasts after the morning exercise... they certainly eat into your day, or maybe it is my shortening attention span for everything I do. Could it have been our purchase of a new trailer and the planning it takes to book campsites. Or was it quite simply the ease of posting a few pictures on Instagram and the scrolling that goes along with it. Sheer laziness?


So here we are, our third spring in the desert. It has been a magnificent winter with lots of warm sunny days but no rain all winter long. My newly acquired rain barrels filled up during a rain in November. I emptied the contents into 50 gallon milk jugs and used the rest. Since then not a drop. And no rain in the desert really means no rain and no spring wildflowers. Of course we have a drip irrigation system but it has been very difficult judge how often to run them. I fear not often enough. Even with all that warmth the budding of leaves and the opening of cactus flowers did not happen earlier. It has been right on schedule. 

For any gardener seeing that first green leaf begin to unfurl brings enormous relief. Relief that the lack of rain did not kill it. The first to break were the two Wonderful pomegranates, purchased for $5 each from our power company. The one from the first planting produced one tiny pomegranate last year, too late in the season for it to mature. This year I have counted 14 flowers on that tree and one is starting to swell. Undoubtedly I will have to protect it from birds and wandering javelina. This morning I noticed 1 flower bud on the second pomegranate, planted a year later than the first. 

The next, of the deciduous trees to begin leafing out were the desert willows. Similarly purchased from TEP. I have 4 of those all of which are coming along nicely. We removed a Texas olive from this spot in favor of desert willow. 



And another deciduous Sonoran tree is the Arizona wild cotton, Gossypium thurberi. Growing to about 10' 
this tree was nearly eradicated because of a fear of the boll weevil which had attacked the cultivated cotton fields. It turned out it was not the same weevil and the cotton tree is now returning. I first saw it growing at Tohono Chul garden and was able to buy one from their garden shop. I look forward to its pretty white blooms later in the spring. 

   
                                                                Arizona cotton tree


                                                               Cotton tree bloom from last year.


And then the cactus begin their spring routine. They sit quietly all year until the first buds start to appear. At this point they need to be checked every day as if you blink you can miss them. 

Yesterday the first bloom on the ladyfinger cactus, Echinocereus pentalophus, followed today by two blooms on another plant. 


And then a cluster open on another plant.


When we moved here I brought a number of plants with me. One was the Myrtillocactus geometrizans, or
bilberry cactus. I had planted it alongside the garage, far too close to the wall. Unfazed it began to send out arms and last year produced a pup and yesterday I noticed flower buds. This morning when I took David over to show him one of the buds had opened. It is not showy as many cactus flowers are but certainly welcome. 


A purchase last year at Tohono Chul plant sale. 


                                                           Echinocereus engelmannii

It is a great time of year for the aloes to bloom and for the first time in its life the Aloe vera, I brought with me in a pot and planted in the ground, is blooming. I found the perfect place for it alongside the fence where there was another Aloe vera clump. Both have produced many pups. 



The large stand of giant aloes in the back garden have bloomed with one side taller than the other. I can only assume that the uneven growth is due to the lack over overall watering provided by rain and one side receiving some irrigation water. I would love to divide this aloe but it looks like a daunting task which would likely damage the symmetry of the plant. 



It is visited by the hummingbirds and Gila woodpecker. 

New blooms on the mammillaria open in tiers every day for several weeks. 




There is sure to be something new every day and it looks as though tomorrow it will be the first flowers on the Gymnocalcium baldianum.