
This looks like someone's hair, doesn't it? Well, not really but it does have a mysterious quality to it...do you see a face in this photo? One could imagine just about anything, couldn't one?
The rain yesterday here in L.A. during "Storm Watch", created some very interesting things...in a strange way this almost looks like little icicles on this head of hair, doesn't it?
The reason I mention "Storm Watch" is because that is what the local news says every time we have some rain. You would think each time they do this that we are in for horrendous horrible rains...but, that is not usually the case. In fact most of the time "Storm Watch comes into being after the fact....like, we've had a huge not-predicted storm and then they start with "Storm Watch". In a way, it's really hilarious!
(Can't wait to see what the construction up the street looks like....if it has stopped raining by the time I get ready to actually post this, I'll take a walk up there and check it out...I know there will be rock slides on these streets, cause there always are--that's just a given...but weather there will be visible rain damage up at that construction site remains to be seen...)
This plant above and just down below is a plant called...well, Lordy, I don't remember what it is called! Sorry about that. Well, to continue, this particular one of mine is still quite small, only about 8 feet high, and unfortunately, it is struggling...I love the shape of this plant...I call it the Cigar Cactus, cause it looks like a big fat greenish yellowish cigar to me....I have about 3 or 4 in my garden...this one was down below, but we moved it up to the front because it was struggling so badly and I thought it might do better in a more protected environment.

It is still continuing to struggle but the root system is very healthy and I'm hoping it will pull itself together as time goes on...I mean it still looks pretty bad, but it's a very good sign that the roots are healthy. I had my gardener, Seven, check the roots this past Saturday ..a truly healthy one of these should really look somewhat greener than this and also fuller...some of my other ones look great...but, not this one, poor dear...In the wild, these plants can be 30 or 40 feet high, and some even higher. And with arms, too...this is really too young to have any arms yet...it's only about 35 or 40 years old and these plants grow very very slowly...maybe 2 or 3 inches a year, if things are going well...And you can see from this picture that the color is too yellow and that is not what it should be...I'm trying to stay positive about this wonderful plant so I approach everything we do with it, with hope. And I encourage it and tell it how wonderful it is!
And you remember "George"? That's the plant that has the Buttons, then they became like Nipples, and now...well, I don't know what to call what they look like now though they are getting closer and closer to turning into the flowers that they will become...


To get the idea of how huge these Pachycereus Pringlei plants can grow in the wild, take a look at this. As you can see in this particular picture there is a person standing next to the plant, and this will give you a small idea of how truly huge these plants can get. Amazing, isn't it?
George has a long way to go doesn't he? And, I certainly won't see it in my lifetime, that's for sure...I mean it takes at least two or three century's for one of these plants to get this big...and George is probably only 25 or 30 years old...But, the compensation of his size for me is the pleasure of actually getting close to the buttons which become flowers and then fruit. I mean that's pretty spectacular to me. And by the way, the fruit is edible...and in reading about the flesh of this plant it is supposed to have wonderful healing properties and also some kind of pain killer ability, as well...It certainly would be better than perscriptions. IF you knew exaclty how to extract it you could then administer it to someone, like yourself. (So much of our medicines come from the plant world to begin with...). I think it would be great to have your own personal pharmacy growing in your very own garden, don't you?

I love this picture...it has so much going on in it and it has this kind of abstract quality to it. It's not that I think it's a perfect picture or anything like that. It just pleases me on some level I can't really explain...Maybe it is the fact that there is so very much going on it, you know? The many different shapes and the slight sense of the rain....And the many colors, too, as well as the fact that the focus is really not sharp at all.... Anyway, I just thought I'd share this one picture because 'George' is there along with a number of other wonderful plants, and just because I like it so much. This was taken while it was raining and though you cannot see the rain exactly, you can see the slickness and some droplets on that Senecio there in the right foreground of the picture and on those lovely light green Senecio leaves behind it.
So, as a reminder of how these Buttons/Nipples/Nub Flowers on George

And now, here's the most recent photo of the 'George' flowers. I actually took this today and it's about as close as I've been able to get and have them stay 'in focus'.

More will be revealed....
I don't get bored with the nubbins on George, Naomi, I think they are cute. I will be interested to see them as they flower and then fruit. I can't believe how big some of the cacti get; that one with the person beside it is amazing. Who knew they lived that long?!
ReplyDeleteSo pretty. I love your plants. :)
ReplyDeleteStorm watch in California cracks me up. Like we're aspiring toward Tornado watches in Oklahoma or something. *snort*
Fantastic stuff.
ReplyDeleteSoon, I will start hacking through the compost and pushing around the dirt in my vegetable garden, getting ready for my next crop of habanera chilies, tomatoes, and cucumbers. I am totally garden-focused for several months of the year, thinking during the drive home on the Garden State Parkway (Ha ha!) how wonderful it will be to go out back, water the garden, and see who's grown. I'm also out of my homemade hot sauce--I'm getting antsy. I need chilies!
Great photos and an nice tour.
Thanks,
Rick
Love your plants, Naomi. Cigar Cactus is beautiful! How huge is this one named Pachycereus Pringlei. Love also 'George' flowers.
ReplyDeleteHave a nice weekend surround by your amazing cactus species!
I really admire your ability to take detailed shots of many interesting things especially plants which I love very much.
ReplyDeleteDo you have an album for all of them? It would be nice to have some of them framed and displayed in your house or office. Or maybe you can give them as gifts.
Lovely post Naomi! I don't get tired of hearing about your plants and seeing their progress! That one you call the Cigar Cactus reminds me of a big hairy ear of corn!
ReplyDeleteStorm watch sounds like putting the horse after the cart lol.
ReplyDeleteWe have lots of rain here in autumn and winter, too much in fact :)
You've got some really nice nubs, Naomi.
ReplyDeleteThat sounds kind of dirty doesn't it?
I'm amazed by nature too. Beauty is all around us. We just have to take a closer look.
My favorite thing about the weather reports on TV in CA is when there is actual thunder and lightening. You would think they had never HEARD of thunder and lightening, they way they go on and on about it. Cracks me up every time. Plus when it gets cold enough to snow at 3000 ft. YOu would think that this was a calamity of mythic proportions.
ReplyDeleteHey, 70 degrees tomorrow in Boston. Sunny, too. Just like it's supposed to be in LA!
Here via you know who.
Wow! I can't believe how big your cacti are! I thought you meant 8 inches instead of 8 feet... but no. Wow!
ReplyDeleteThe first picture reminded me of animal wiskers. At first I thought it was a seal. You should've seen me lookin' for its eyes ;)
Here from Michele's. Can't believe how long it's been since I've been here. Haven't been playin' much lately. So when I saw your name after mine... I wanted to rush over and say hello!
(And... I'm here from Michele's ;)
I love to see your cacti! We used to have one in the hall that was almost six feet tall, but a guest's little boy SAT on it and it was never the same after being cracked in half. We picked the prickles out of the little boy for hours. I'm here from Michele's right now, but I come here all the time.
ReplyDeleteas Indy and i were wandering the other day i saw cacti on my neighbors porch in an olden wooden tub, i thought of you and snapped a pick, the picture is about halfway down the blog now, with a blurb about how much i love your blog. I can not pass a cactus now without thinking of your beautiful garden.
ReplyDeleteStorm Watch! The Blizzard of '94! I have been developing a blog post in my head about our culture of fear. Bird Flu! Yikes.
ReplyDeleteI love that abstract looking photo, and that first one not only looks like hair, it looks like Beaker from the Muppets. ;)
Here via michele, but I don't need to be. :D
The other one looks like lots and lots of fingers put together.
ReplyDeleteI am amazed every time I read one of your posts about cacti (spelling?). They really are incredible plants. As for the storm watch, here in Georgia, every year it seems they predict a minor dusting of snow. It never happens, but there is always a run at the supermarket and you can't get bread or milk after that. I swear I think its just a marketing gimic. MIchele sent me.
ReplyDeletei came by here last night, and since i have already commented on this post, i will comment on the one below, because, well michele told me to come say hi!
ReplyDeleteHey there. I'm here from Michele's. Loving the cacti but I must tell you, being from the upper midwest my only experience with cactus was grabbing one once. You only do that once! ;o) Funny thing about those storm watches. I guess it happens like that everywhere.
ReplyDeleteI promise - as soon as the rain stops for more than ten minutes, I am going for a blogwalk in Merrie Olde Englande.....
ReplyDelete:-)
cq
The first thing that crossed my mind when I saw the opening photo was - Naomi has been photographing Hedgehogs? :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing more pictures of your beautiful gardens.
Michele sent me this time :)
ReplyDeleteStill no arrangments in place that I know of so we can't make plans yet for August :)
hello from your friend in the Mountains, we got asprinkle of snow today, thats all
ReplyDeleteI love when you post the pictures of the cacti (is that a word??) lol Michele sent me, but you know I am here often! :)
ReplyDeleteI love the picture of the rain drops on the fuzzy hair of the cactus. I just spent the day digging in flower beds here. In Oklahoma we had red clay and here they have gooey black clay. You essentially have to replace it with topsoil for anythng to grow. Mom ordered 4 O'clocks and we had to plant them. I am so tired and sore. They better grow!!!!!! Maybe the cactus would like it... no, not likely.
ReplyDeleteNature is amazing... thanks for sharing some of its wonders.
ReplyDeleteHere from Michele's.
Cheers!
Very cool pictures. Lol i thought the second one down was a cob of corn. Can you tell I don't have a green thumb?
ReplyDeleteHere from Michele's tonight.
There's something so captivating about water on flora. You know it won't last long, that it'll evaporate in mere minutes. So capturing that moment with a camera becomes all the more meaningful because it is so ephemeral.
ReplyDeleteI hope you have one huge hard drive to store all those pictures - the ones you've taken, and the ones you've yet to take and share. It's a joy to peek over your shoulder.
I love the 'hair' on the 2nd picture. It looks like it's just on the sides & reminds me of a cartoon character.
ReplyDeleteOh, do I know what you mean about Storm Watch. Every station has their own name for it, just like the weather systems they use, like Doppler 2000 or Storm Watch 2006! Tarzan & I laugh about them too cuz they're so dramatic. I mean, for goodness sakes, it's RAIN people! Not a meteor! Gotta love California :)