Showing posts with label California Native Plants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label California Native Plants. Show all posts

Sunday, April 21, 2013

"Canyon Sparkle" Manzanita (Arctostaphylos insularis)

Thanks Las Pilitas Native Plant Nursery
Arctostaphylos insularis 'canyon sparkles'

I love this Manzanita "Canyon Sparkles" I picked up at Las Pilitas Nursery north of Escondido CA almost 7+ years ago. The very first year I planted it in the Fall of 2005, I watered the shrub once a week for two months, then twice a month for two months, then once a month until the following rainy season. It should be also noted however that I also heavily inoculated it with an excellent mix from Mycorrhizal Applications Inc of Grant Pass Oregon. After that first year - 'NOTHING' was done. Other than a nice layer of fresh mulch applied once a year which helps retain any moisture and keep plant roots cool, this plant got no artificial watering after that first year. Well, other than El Cajon California's seasonal rainfall which has been low like the rest of Southern California. One big advantage in training this shrub has been the extremely deep layer of sandy loam soil from a once ancient existing Bajada or Alluvial Fan which is nothing more than a Canyon mouth geological feature. Deep roots most likely now penetrate the deeper into the subsoil layers where moisture is abundant in these alluvial soils. 

I also noticed this year for the first time why this s called "Canyon Sparkles". The newer foliage or leaves are glossy dark green and shiny in the sunlight. This has been the first one I've ever planted, so it was a bit of an experiment. But what a success. I also noticed that when it started to bud out with newer leaf stems and flower bud clusters, there are now countless numbers of winged insects attracted to some scent this shrub is giving off prior to full mature bud development and flower opening. This was the same phenomena I experienced up in Anza with my California Coffeeberry bushes in Springtime. Thus far there have been all manner of differing flies species and many many Ladybugs. Honey Bees and Wasps are also visiting. Weeds have also never been a problem around these shrubs.


Arctostaphylos insularis 'Canyon Sparkles'

This is the view angle from the street and neighbour's driveway. In fact my mum's neighbour actually dislikes this plant and has directed her gardener to chop some of the branches on my mum's side of the iron fence to prevent the foliage from poking through to her side. This is the same folk who got my mum to remove the Laurel Sumac in the backyard because some of the top branch canopy was hanging over the chainlink fence and the guy also insisted the trunk of the Laurel Sumac was going to destroy his concrete wall. My mother was so intimidated that she hired a gardener to take down the Laurel Sumac, but only after I had moved away to Sweden. Whatever! 

Arctostaphylos insularis 'Canyon Sparkles' 
This view is direct from the street and curb view of my mum's driveway. At the very lower right of the photo is some very long and lush growth coming from the ground. I believe some branch has now rooted on the ground and re-sprouted. This is actually very common with many Manzanita   and they may be cut and transplanted elsewhere as a new plant, but I thought this would be damaging to the little tree as the growth is young and rather succulent. Too delicate to chance a move, so maybe next winter if I'm around here again.


This is simply a close up shot of the vigorous foliage growth coming from the ground under the main plant. I'd love to put one on the opposite side of the driveway across from this one, but once again I feel it's a timing issue and feel it's much too late and temps are very hot now. Works for me, but the plant is another story. The water rates are outrageous here and the sewer fees are also ridiculous because they are based on how much water you use, irrespective of if you are watering the landscape as opposed to it all going down the drain. Drive around most El Cajon and Santee Ca neighbourhoods and you'll see countless yards which look like a wreck. This mostly has to do with insane water bills. In the old days everything was lawns with trees in them. Things have changed radically. People is these southern California areas need to plant and work with more So-Cal natives. Of course that takes education and understanding of just how the natives actually work and what their requirements are. Not all are rangy looking as evidenced from above. But you truly do need to understand all the differing requirements and needs of each and every one of them you will choose. Doing so will allow you to develop and design any  specific plant community theme if you choose those with similar needs.  

One of the other things for which I appreciated about this particular plant is that it is considered a central coastal Manzanita and you'd think it would only do well along the coastal areas. Not so as the seven plus years of heat and drought of San Diego County's interior valleys have proved otherwise. Being that it is my first experience with this plant, I have no idea how well it would do at higher colder elevations of Southern California mountain ranges.


"Canyon Sparkles" Manzanita foliage close up shot


'Canyon Sparkles' Manzanita berries 


Pozo Blue Sage
This hybrid Cleveland Sage, 'Pozo Blue' (hybrid between (Salvia clevelandii) & (Salvia leucophylla),  is planted next to the Manzanita. Both have similar requirements and like the Manzanita, this plant does not receive summer watering. Only main care for Cleveland Sage is to cut it back in Winter for full lush growth following year after rainy season. As always, inoculate with Mycorrhizal mix. This not only keeps it further drought tolerant and allows for better nutritional uptake, but it will also make those important interconnections with it's neighbour plantings allowing both to share the chemicals the others manufacture.


photo: Mine
Cleveland Sage bud whorls along flowering stalk  about ready to explode in colour. Hopefully all  manner of insects and Hummingbirds show up. For the moment this plant has been giving off the most wonderful aroma reminiscent of hiking the backcountry of San Diego County. Believe it or  not, I actually use the leaves of this plant for  cooking Pinto Beans. I also use it as an air  freshener for the Automobile. This plant was also  purchased at Las Pilitas Nursery (Escondido) Below here in the final photo is an image of "Canyon Sparkles" Manzanita showing other uses for which you may find it attractive to utilize in. This picture is from Pete Veilleux on January 10, 2010. Clearly there are some creative alternatives in using native plants. Even in these pots, don't forget the Mycorrhizal mix and careful on those chemical fertilizers. I love the small cobblestone mulch utilized here. 


Photo Credit: Pete Veilleux

Arctostaphylos insularis - Island Manzanita 'Canyon Sparkles'
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Update September 2015
In 2014 I planted one other Island Manzanita further down the side of the wall from the larger Manzanita which was the subject of the article here. Below is the photo from 2014 of the one gallon Arctostaphylos insularis I again purchased from Las Pilitas Native Plant Nursery location just north of Escondido. At time of planting, the temperatures were 100+ degrees, which according to most conventional science-based Landscaper & Gardening experts is a big green thumb no no. I've debunked all this several times over by choosing the correct time of day to plant and providing a heavy thorough mycorrhizal application of inoculum as the key. 
See my post from 2014: 
Is it safe to plant & water California Natives Plants in Summer ?
Image: Mine (July 2014)

The key to the success was planting all the new plants just after sunset which allows the plant a measure of some recovery. Also basically leaving the one gallon plant's root zone undisturbed by loosening or breaking it up a bit. I have a practice of never purchasing and planting no bigger container plants greater than one gallon. In some rare cases where specific hard to get plants are not to be found in most Nurseries, I will purchase and plant from five gallon plants and on extreme rare occasions like Blue Mexican Fan Palm (Brahea armata) which I recently purchased on this trip in 2015, I had no choice but fifteen gallon specimens. More on them late in another posts as they are a sensitive plant to establish and hence I used a more robust MycoApply from them called "Soluble Maxx" with far more species of robust mycorrhizas. But getting back to the Island Manzanita which is NOT recommended for hot interior valleys of Southern California because they are a Channel Islands chaparral native plant, I also inoculated them with a mycorrhizal mix from Mycorrhizal Applications Inc from Grant Pass, Oregon called MycoApply. The "All Purpose Soluble" is what I purchased from one of their distributor 'Horizon Distributor's Inc' (Commercial Landscape Irrigation Equipment Supplier) on Engineer Road in San Diego. Below is the almost exactly a year later result.

Image: Mine (September 2015)

There you have it one year later. A very health happy Island Manzanita and there are some other reasons for this. First credit goes to the MycoApply because Manzanita like some other similar plants like those of Arbutus have no real fine root hairs like those of other plants, hence they require nature's performance enhancer Mycorrhizal fungi. Secondly, this location is a very fortunate one since on the down slope side of a sloping concrete driveway which channels rainwater runoff towards this side yard. In effect it is  concentrating the rainfall into one small location making the actual rainfall of an inch more like two or three inches of rain. This is the same effect a boulder strewn rocky landscape has in the wild. Take not next time of how much more luxurient the chaparral shrubs are in between a rocky landscape in the wild. The driveway here is artificially creating a higher than normal rainfall average in the same sense. Little things like this are good to know when designing a landscape layout in the beginning. However, Southern California has been under extreme drought the past 4+ years and rainfall amounts and the far apart spaced out storms have dropped very little as compared to what is normal. Still the sloping drive has been a plus. Little if any supplemental water has been provide with the exception of watering done by my brother there for a few months after we planted and left in July. Mostly once a week the first month (July) and thereafter once a month in August and September & October until winter rains came. Nothing after that with the exception of a wonderful long days tropical rainstorm August 14/14 2015 while we visited. You can see the results of newer light green growth triggered by the Thunderstorm.
http://mycorrhizae.com/

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Despite Reports to the Contrary, Invasive Plants will Cause Natives to go Extinct

Credit: James Cornwell
Native plants on a California reserve. Most natives are on mounding islands where they are trying to hang on. Once the mycorrhizal network grid system within the chaparral plant community has been replaced by a bacterial one, this actually favours the invasive annual weeds which thrive in such an environment. The California natives simply cannot compete. Sadly, it's not just the ignorant activities of the early cattle ranching pioneers who deliberately made an irresponsible business decision to alter the chaparral & oak woodland landscape to a grassland-scape using foreign grass species from Europe to feed more cattle than the land could support, but also the irresponsible actions today by what should be educated & informed Forestry Officials utilizing bad science to control mega-fires through a  proven flawed method called prescribed burns that have actually exacerbated the problem causing invasive weeds to spread rapidly. There is a war raging across the planet to stop the invasive species  from other countries from invading other lands. There is no country or region of the planet which has not been effected. For example, for all you south-westerners who demonize the Tamarisk for destroying 10s of 1000s of acreage of riparian habits in your desert regions, you should know that your beloved Mesquite is a horrible  invasive species in Asia and Africa where Tamarisk comes from. Both trees are wonderful plants in the correct balanced setting, but put the blame where it really belongs, on human idiocy, not the plants. Agribusiness in the United States had the bright idea years ago to bring Tamarisk over to the desert regions to create windbreaks. In their ignorance they never once utilized their powers of observation to consider the actual resources available around them that nature creates natural barriers like the Mesquite Mounds which could have been replicated by the constructing of large berms running for miles along fields and/or along roads and railway right-of-ways with various native mesquites, palo verdes ironwoods, etc. 
 
Southern Xinjiang Railway
windbreak
The example of utilizing a berm next to a railroad by use of heavy equipment has been done in China as the photo to the right proves. Extend this further back and plant with southwest natives and an artificial Mesquite dune could have been created for further height next to the Coachella Valley Southern Pacific or Interstate 10 right-of-ways. But it's the Mesquite from the southwest that has ruined the landscape in Africa and India where it has spread like an invasive weed, thanks to the bright idea of the United Nations (another inept made made organization). Here is what the Invasive Species Council based in Australia had to say on this matter.
"Aid agencies face pressure to provide quick solutions to long-term problems, so they recommend plants that thrive on degraded lands - in other words, plants with the attributes of weeds," Mr Low said today.
"Mesquite, a prickly firewood tree heavily promoted by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, is now causing great suffering in Africa, where it is invading farmland and national parks."
"Sudan has passed a law to eradicate it, and Kenya and Ethiopia have declared it a noxious weed," Invasive species Biologist Tim Low said.
Lately I've noticed, in the face of Climate Change and Global Warming alarm, that there are a number of movements out there trying to downplay the dangers of change and invasive species as not being all that bad and we should accept the inevitable. We should learn to live with these consequences and adapt to the change. That is bunk. I'll never except human stupidity and make excuses and concessions for it. There has even been an attempt to downplay the bad role that invasives will play in destroying native species from their traditional habitats. Yet a new study came from the University of Toronto, shedding light on the reality of the serious situation and exposing the falsehood of that propaganda. 
http://media.utoronto.ca/media-releases/arts/invading-species-can-extinguish-native-plants-despite-recent-reports/
TORONTO, ONTARIO - Ecologists at the University of Toronto and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH Zurich) have found that, given time, invading exotic plants will likely eliminate native plants growing in the wild despite recent reports to the contrary. 
 A study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) reports that recent statements that invasive plants are not problematic are often based on incomplete information, with insufficient time having passed to observe the full effect of invasions on native biodiversity. 
 "The impacts of exotic plant invasions often take much longer to become evident than previously thought," says Benjamin Gilbert of U of t's Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology (EEB) and lead author of the study. "This delay can create an 'extinction debt' in native plant species, meaning that these species are going extinct but the actual extinction event occurs hundreds of years after the initial invasion." 
 Much of the debate surrounding the threat posed to biodiversity by the invasions of non-native species is fueled by recent findings that competition from introduced  plants has driven remarkably few plants to extinction. Instead, native plant species in invaded ecosystems are often relegated to patchy, marginal habitats unsuitable to their non-native competitors. 
 However, Gilbert and co-author Jonathan Levine of ETH Zurich say that it is uncertain whether colonization and extinction dynamics of the plants in marginal habitats will allow long-term native persistence. - "Of particular concern is the possibility that short term persistence of native flora in invaded habitats masks eventual extinction," says Levine. 
 The researchers conducted their research in a California reserve where much of the remaining native plant diversity exists in marginal areas surrounded by invasive grasses. They performed experiments in the reserve and coupled their results with quantitative models to determine the long term impacts of invasive grasses on native plants. 
"Invasion has created isolated 'islands of native plants' in a sea of exotics," says Gilbert. "This has decreased the size of native habitats, which reduces seed production and increases local extinction. It also makes it much harder for native plants to recolonize following a local extinction." 
"Our research also allows us to identify how new habitats for native flora could be created that would prevent extinction from happening. These habitats would still be too marginal for invaders, but placed in such a way as to create 'bridges' to other habitat patches," says Gilbert. 
The findings are reported in the paper "Plant Invasions and Extinction Debts" in PNAS Early Edition this week. The research is supported by funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and the Packard Foundation. -
Credit: James Cornwell
Once again take note of the Chaparral islands which were referred to in the above article. Many of these chaparral islands also contain a native type of bi-colored sunflower called "Tidy Tips" which are also endangered as seen here in yellow on those mounds. This is the beautiful green time of year in California chaparral country. The lush looking meadows are however mostly made up of annual non-natives which will dry up and turn brown in summer. It's these plants which burn like gasoline during mega-fire season and it's generally the chaparral which gets the blame. Modern government mismanagement practices and policies have made this spread of invasives far worse as the latest article.
Image - Maureen Glimer
Many long time native Californians will remember this plant from the old days when they were once plentiful. The flower is called "Tidy Tips" (Layia platyglossa) and they were heavily growing on Rattlesnake Mountain in El Cajon when I was growing up as a kid in the 1960s. Unfortunately there is not a single plant existing up there any longer. I know because when I visited California in 2011, I made a deliberate attempt to look for it. What I remember most about the thick patches of them which grew interspersed with California Buckwheat & Coastal Sagebrush which also contained some Sea Lavender, was the biodiversity of insects, especially the butterflies population varieties which were very heavy. They too are now gone.

Credit: Me!!!
The beautiful bicoloured "Tidy Tips" were always thick and dense at the top of this street where that SUV is now parked, all the way halfway up this mountain. The yellow you now see is a mix of non-native MustardStar ThistleFoxtail grasses and so forth. Other than the coastal sage scrub, most annual wild flowers are long gone, including the Blue Bells which use to sprout the next spring after a brushfire. Above that parked SUV is a naturalized Palo Verde Tree which volunteered from a seed source of a 50 year old Palo Verde tree to the far left of the SUV, but which is out of the picture. I'll give that one a pass.
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Further references:
http://www.vcstar.com/news/2008/oct/08/tamarisk-helpful-to-settlers-can-be-a-pest-in/
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2013/01/04/1212375110.abstract


Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Early Childhood Influences = Future Urban Landscaping Layouts

Landscaping Ideas Brought to You Via Rattlesnake Mountain
This shot was taken just before the Sky Ranch Housing Development shaved off the top portion of the mountain and ripped apart the back sides for those more affluent primo view pads where now only luxury homes exist. In the 1960s the Coastal Sage Chaparral Habitat was still pretty much intact in many more areas than now, but rapidly disappearing. Amazing too is the fact that this particular area having such habitat considering this is one of the furthest inland areas where many such a frost sensitive California Coastal Chaparral dares to venture any further east. My old elementary school is to the right of the photo. Pepper Drive Elementary School in El Cajon CA which for years was kept orderly by a strict Principal named Calvin Metz (Mr Metz).

This particular mountain habitat was sort of magical and adventurous place for me growing up as a kid. All sorts of rocks and boulders forming multiple caves and other hideaways. The dominant Chaparral plant up there was Laurel Sumac (Malosma laurina) as you can see in the above photo above and below.

Laurel Sumac (Malosma laurina)

My Dad was a sports freak and general nut about any sports. He pushed us boys into sports (baseball/football), which was something I hated. I never succeeded and usually dropped out which incurred his vicious wrath. I never gravitated towards playing sports even with the friends I had. Didn't much like P.E. at school either across the street. I was also constantly told by he and the elementary school coaches across the street that I'd turn out to be an utter failure in life later on if I didn't participate. In the 1950s/60s world back then if you weren't a part of that macho world you were considered some kind of a sissy. Trust me I never cared, comments were like water off a duck's back to me. That didn't mean I was afraid of life since many of the things I did up on that mountain were bold and daring such as scaling cliffs, exploring old mines, catching rattlesnakes and other creatures.  Hardly the things Sissys are prone to do. Venturing up into that mountain was a way of escape for me from my Dad and what I considered the degenerating outside world I abhorred.

There were two entertainment films that stand out to this day that influenced my love for the natural world. The first film we actually saw in elementary school.

Island of the Blue Dolphins (1960)
Wiki excerpt:
This novel is based on the true story of Juana Maria, better known to history as "The Lone Woman of San Nicolas Island", a Nicoleño Indian left alone for 18 years on San Nicolas Island, one of the Channel Islands off the California coast, before being discovered in 1853.
This film shook me as to the reality of man's inhumanity to other peoples considered inferior to themselves. It both upset and angered me even as a six year old kid. But I also admired and was fascinated by this young Indian girl's learning how to live off the land and use of natural materials around her to survive. Being a coastal island habitat the vegetation on San Nicolas Island was almost identical to that of the Rattlesnake Mountain El Cajon area I grew up around and so I could relate and identify very much to it. Hence, after that first film viewing, every trek up that hill thereafter was an adventure into how life was at one time, not only because of the film, but also because directly behind my house and also up a valley to the right of that top photo of the mountain were two major Native American village locations as evidenced from the numerous metate grinding holes to be found in the more flatter granite bed rock boulders. I later was able to identify other village locations not so much from finding granite Metates, but by the vegetation which gave away their location. In almost every case there were several large groupings of the native Prickly Pear Cactus, Mexican Elderberry and Coast Live Oak.
This film went even deeper into my heartfelt love for the natural world as I could relate to the kid in the story. When I saw this movie when I was a kid, I thought it was wonderful and I think I must have been about 12 or 14 years old at the time which was the same age as the character in the film. He had read some kind of survival nature manual he at the New York Library but I don't remember if he had a copy of the book with him on his adventure or just some notes from the book or the book itself. Anyway he learned how to live and eat off the land, although I never wanted to eat those Algae Pancakes he made in the movie.  I think it had some good lessons for kids in building appreciation for nature, and remember it made me have a deeper appreciation for those mountains I lived at the foot of much more. 

The story was about a boy named Sam who runs away from home when he finds out that his family's summer vacation trip has been cancelled. So he heads out for what I believe was near his Grandfather's old farm in the Catskill Mountains on his own. It's there that he learns how to survive with the help of several wild animals including a Ferret and a Peregrine Falcon. During his year stay in the wilderness, he learns about himself and that he can't run away from his problems and the only way to handle them is to go back and face them head on.

By today's standards I'm sure the acting isn't all that great, but it was still a decent kids movie. I don't remember why the title was "My Side of the Mountain" still sticks in my mind so,  but it still has an sort of genomic imprinted effect on me and I am now 55,  so I guess it must have had an impact on me to last this long. Today with all the bad movies they make for kids these days, it's understandable why our natural world and human society in general has degenerated into what it is presently. If a parent or group of parents lodge any type of protests these days about what is going on with today's so-called enlightened permissiveness of society, then they are labeled with all manner of insults to foul to repeat here.
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Getting back to the Rattlesnake Mountain. There was(still is)  an Artesian Spring at the mouth of that main canyon which has now been destroyed and filled in by the Sky Ranch Housing/Condo development, though admittedly the spring itself is still present and running again last time I visited. It is at this same Artesian Spring was where there was a permanent Native American settlement was. There was an old abandoned Orange Grove back then. Some trees alive others dead. The spring was a source of water which had an old pipe which kept a irrigation reservoir constantly filled to water all the acreage on that alluvial fan where the grove was located. Interestingly the developers were obligated to restore native habitat with native only vegetation. I have to tell you though I think they have done a good job of restoring the Oaks and California Sycamores back to this area (something that was absent as a result of Orange Grove creation long ago) though there are some plants that are not so native. Here are some pics we took walking up a private asphalt paved utility/emergency road to the Sky Ranch housing development.

Below you can see quite a lot of Deerweed (Lotus scoparius)
This plant is a natural normal occurrence on these surrounding hills after any type of disturbance, usually fire. It's the first plant to appear after the native annual wildflowers do their thing after a fire blows through. I doubt they planned this plant's occurrence in abundance because on closer inspection you can see all of the evenly spaced shrub plantings of the more common natives they used.


Image - Mine 2012

I believe behind me there is a manzanita and although I love Manzanita, it was never an original plant or shrub to this particular mountain, or at least when I was growing up there. Also not native were the many Mediterrean Rock Rose. I don't know how that got past anyone, but it won't survive up there without irrigation.

Okay, now looking off to the left of the first photo is an area where the permanent Artesian Spring  is located. When I was a kid none of those willows, Sycamores or Cottonwoods existed there. The water was continually being siphoned off by an old time cast iron pipe which was dismantled along with the old concrete hold reservoir during early development. It was at least refreshing to see these welcome old friends (the trees) back where they belonged all along. Though once during those early 1980s El Nino heavy rain years, all of the above canyons actually had some running streams or brooks that at least trickled water down to the neighbourhoods below and into the stormdrains all year long. Seeds carried in the winds from who knows where of both willow and cottonwood did take root during those years and I'm sure the trees below are their decendants as they were never cut down. These trees grew bigger once the resevoir was dismantled.



Image Mine 2012
You can see the top of Rattlesnake Mountain above the trees which are in the foreground.
This next photo below is looking back down to the valley towards the city of El Cajon with Mount Helix way off  in the distance. If however you look in the foreground of the photo, you'll see the Coast Live Oak (Quercus-agrifolia) which no doubt existed before prior to the Orange Grove creation by the farmer and once again I must say it is a welcome restoration sight to what was once no doubt a major player in the livelihood of the Native American Kumeyaay peoples, as evidenced by the large trees still existing behind my mum's house. For decades we found volunteer oak seedlings from the large immense old oak behind our property in the flower beds no doubt put there by Western Scrub Jays .

Image Mine 2012

Here is a further photo below showing the view to the right of the previous one showing the road meeting an earlier constructed neighbourhood which was actually built many years earlier than the Sky Ranch Development above and also by another developer. This road does NOT go thru, there is a locked gate to prevent thru traffic. It is merely an emergency & utility road. To the furthest left at the bottom of the photo below is the top sports field of  Pepper Drive ElementarySchool. You'll also notice the California Sycamore which once again are a great choice in the restoration plantings, but there are also about four Liquidambar styraciflua which are not native but will never ever re-seed themselves or take over as an invasive species either. They seem to be maintaining themselves, but also seem to have some of them struggling further up the hill as evidenced by the tops dying back. They'll eventually be replaced with natives who will accomplish this on their own if some idiot doesn't start another fire.

Image - Mine 2012

Now the photos below along the road they have planted some more Mediterranean Rock Rose (Cistus ladanifer) but also some Prickly Pear Cactus (Opuntia-littoralis)  , but they seemed somewhat different than the native one to the area, or maybe not, but here are some pics.

Image Mine 2012



Image Mine 2012

I just want to quickly take a moment and show this next photo. This a a sign warning people to stay out of the Habitat Conservation Area. Now there are a couple of things wrong here and worth noting. First, you'll quickly notice the non-native Liquid Amber inserted into the Native Habitat Restoration/Conservation Area. Non-Natives are not supposed to be part of a Native Plant conservation Project, but what do inspectors know. Next take a long hard look at the non-native annuals growing there. You'll see of course the familiar Yellow flowered Mustard plant which comes from the Mediterranean area. But also look at those stickery looking dried seed heads and perhaps the deeper yellow flowers from which they originate. When I was a kid these plants didn't exist here. These stickery ones, and I really don't know their names are present everywhere all the way up even the wild untouched slopes, but more abundant in the heavier mechanized cleared areas of the slopes around the development. Fires have also fascilitated their spread here. But you can absolutely not wear short pants up here. Some areas are impenetrable even with long Blue Jeans pants. These things are horrible and to my observation nothing eats them. Jack and Cottontail rabbits which were at one time everywhere we never once saw which was bizarre.


Image Mine 2012

You'll also notice in the lower photo the warning sign for the poster namesake of this mountain, which by the way we actually did see in a small drainage concrete channel ditch. The really sad thing here is that at some future date someone will get bit and these little creatures will be Demonized and Vilified all over again and their populations will have to be cut down through some government mandated eradication project. Since we didn't actually see any rabbits, then you can bet they'll be heading for people's brand new yards looking for food.


Image Mine 2012

Here's a photo of the plant that was most important to save and restore and the reason is because of the little bird who mostly only likes utilize this and one other coastal sage scrub. The Shrubs are called California Sagebrush (Artemisia-californica) and California Buckwheat (Eriogonum-fasciculatum-foliolosum)  and the bird is called California Gnatcatcher (Polioptila californica)







Further up the paved road there was evidence of other misplaced non-native plants, fortunately most of which will not survive this area and re-seed themselves or take over the area. The other thing I noticed and certainly don't agree with is the extensive use of irrigation line everywhere after all these 6 years and still functioning in many places. First off, I have no problem with establishment, I get that, but after the first or second year you need to cut it off. While the plants will look good and healthy for several years they will deteriorate rapidly thereafter because they are adapted to a wet and dry season, not constant wet. They go dormant in summer and maintain health and vigor through the underground mycorrhizal network. The other problem is that the once sterile decomposed granite for which these plants were established in, most likely lacked any mycorrhizal inoculant program at time of the outplanting of the vegetation. I might of course be wrong on that, but you cannot count on these plants to maintain themselves in the wild without it if you've destroyed this part of the ecosystem. Constant water and chemical fertilizers won't provide the long term lifetime health benefits they need. We'll see of course as time goes on. I do hope they succeed.

Now notice in the photo below this plant in the foreground next to the road at the right bottom of the picture. It may even be some type of native Iris as we do have them throughout California, but not on dry south facing slopes of lower elevations where temps can often be over 100F or 40+ C and it was certainly was never historically native to this area. There actually were a number of these plant mistake choices all along the road, but I'm sure the government habitat restoration plant quota demanded a certain plant numbers count in the agreement. Where many specific plant species listed are scarce, many Habitat Restoration Landscapers will often sneak in some non-natives to use as filler. I'm sure the dilema was reasoned out as - "What do government inspectors know anyway ??????"
 LOL - I'd probably think and do the same thing. Usually the Government Expert requirements are overkill anyway. I'll have to write a piece on what I think of the firms who are actually hired and paid for by the developers to carry out the studies demanded by the authorities.

Image Mine 2012

Now further up and just behind me we actually saw a Bee Hive just inside one of those large irrigation  black & green plastic valve control boxes, but I didn't photo it. However, I do want to mention that in this very area where I'm now standing it was once a valley with three branches of dry washes which are now nothing more than rammed earth fill. In these three branches and on some of the granite rock hill outcroppings above on the previous ridges which are also gone, there were at one time over 8 different Bee Hives which had existed in the same exact locations since I first found them in 1964. In 2004 when I went up there walking around as I had moved back to El Cajon after selling my property in Anza, those hives were all still there. I know because I made a point of looking for them. This was in the spring of 2003. But at the end of that year in December 2003 every one of them was abandoned and I never saw any dead bees. I have no idea what happened. Was it Colony Collaspe disorder ( CCD ) or did the developer hire someone to come and irradicate them with chemical pesticides ? To this day I have no idea, but the CCD was just making headlines then. Now up further along this road above where the rattlesnake was seen is the development activity which is by now much further along.

Image Mine 2012


Image Mine 2012

Around the interior of the housing tracts and small slices of public park they apparently  abandoned the native plants ONLY approach to landscaping. They should have stuck to the natives. One thing that chaparral native plants get a bad rap with is that they have these dangerous  volatile oils in their woody tissues and they explode when fire comes through, so therefore non-natives are more fire resistant. This is a big fat lie. All organic material will burn. Any plants which are native to planet Earth will burn. Look at all those wet rainforests in the Amazon basin which Corporation Agriculture burns off so as to plant more and more GMO Soy & Corn. In these past extreme weather event years that have fueled fires with extreme intensity we have seen before, even the fireproof clay tile and concrete tile roofed houses go up in smoke by the hundreds. In these modern day years nothing will stop intense fires, but what the nature ecology of native plants will offer in the landscape is saving money on watering bills.
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For further reading on my native plant experiments just behind the above photos and what I learned as a Guerrilla Habitat Restorationist, please read my piece here: 
Curse That Invasive Native Chaparral
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PART TWO - Why I started this Story!
While exploring those mountains as a kid and winding my way up those curving meandering dry washes and Arroyos, you can't help get a sense of wonderment , especially when your child's imagination is helped along by the many adventure films of that long past era. Finding new hideaways and creating or building imagined fortresses or clubhouses inside of a grouping of Laurel Sumacs or Lemonade Berry later on would inspire much of my laying out landscaped architectural plans. 

Take a look at life on the interior of a Chaparral Elfin Forest.




This particular photo above is a protected Elfin Forest in Los Osos, California which is near San Luis Obispo California. There are a number of areas which are called Elfin Forest because of the character of the tiny miniature habitats which look like a forest from an Elf's perspective. (well you know, if there really were such things) As a kid climbing over boulders and exploring up through dry washes lined with Laurel Sumacs, Lemonade Berry, Manzanitas, California Holly and California Coffee Berry, all these things truly looked like a mysterious secret forest. It occurred to me later on in life that such small spaces replicated in a yard scenario would be ideal for such re-creations of Chaparral Elfin Forest themes for a natural private hideaway. 

It's tough to find many pictures on the net where folks have actually gotten off trail and explored dry washes and Arroyos in the Chaparral country. Many of these places are hidden wonders in springtime with all manner of herbaceous plants and ferns growing under the canopy of the minature forest. Usually depending on the rainy season these normally dry gullies and washes will run or at least rickle through the beginning of summer. Most trails in these Chaparral protected Areas, Parks or Reserves are nothing more than the usual cleared out thorough-fares for foot-trafficers in a hurry to get somewhere else. But hardly anyone takes the time to venture off the pathways to explore the reality that exists all around them. After all in the mindset of most city hikers, it's only stickery dry jagged brush that doesn't allow anyone to pass and who really wants to anyway ? But as a kid, many of the hidden meandering pathways we explored in old growth chaparral looks exactly like Pigmy Oak forests in the above photo. When you walk thru such areas, try and imagine replicating some small type of hidden privacy area within your garden or yard, even your public lookie-loo front yard. Take photos if you have a bad memory and need to allow youself to look back and get that visual again. 

And there are a couple of other profound moments or events of life changing things that happened to me back there in the 1960s that influenced my later imagination for all things landscaped and minature and have stuck with me ever since. I was in the Boys Scouts, Cub Scouts, and Indians Guides. These also spurred imagination and intrigue about the natural world. Then there were those private summer Kamps out in the Cuyamaca Mountains you work so hard to earn your way to by selling raffle tickets door to door for the local Boys Club. When I was in the Boy Scouts, the military bit never appealed to me. I could have cared less about Nationalism, the Flag, looking like a Hitler Youth at the Scout Jamborees (no offense meant here, but all of us kids actually joked about that back then) , but for me it was mostly fooling around and having fun while camping out on those wilderness treks. Then one day we hit Vacation Isle at Mission Bay Park in San Diego.

There is a specific place on this San Diego Mission Bay Park recreational area called Vacation Isle. This is the place that has that strange iconic 1960s Tower and that Model Boat Pond. Here's a map layout of what I'm talking about.

Map Image - City of San Diego

Image - City of San Diego
 
Now looking at that map towards the bottom is an area for camping or at least it use to be. It's just below and to the left & right of the Model Yacht Boat Pond called South cove. On either side of that cove are groupings of low growing trees and tall shrubs that are opened and kept clear for picnickers to under under the cool shade. Those miniature stunted trees reminded me of camping out in the chaparral, yet I realized that such miniature could be replicated into ones own small backyard environment where you had little space. Even if a person has a lot of space such as acreage, a small secretive cool shady hideaway is a great idea for relaxation and entertaining small groups of friends ona hot summer's day. You can also Google Earth map/satellite search this place and get an up front and personal close look at all the park vegetation and layout. It's actually pretty kool.

Another place when on a field trip that has stuck in my brain all these years is a place in Balboa Park at the very southern end of the park which is actually called the Balboa Park - Pepper Grove. This area has both California Pepper trees and Brazilian Pepper Trees which are meticulously trimmed and manicured to keep their small stunted shape and they had all manner of tunnels and pathways along with benches beneath them for picnicers to fire the imagination for one's own gardening ideas for small spaces. Once again I thought back to native chaparral scenery we camped out in. Something most folks always miss or pass up. But take a look at the features of the Pepper Grove in Balboa Park and see if you can't visualize a vegetated hideaway incorporating native Chaparral Plants and shrubs.





Image - City of San Diego

It's a kool playground area for kids, but adults can go into it with a different point of view as far as ideas to inspire and fire the imagination for one's own private hideaway. Now take a good look at my mum's house back in El Cajon again and I want you to pay close attention to the Laurel Sumac (Malosma-laurina) which BTW was a volunteer which came up on it's own and my parents left it and later asked me to take it out as it was getting bushy and over grown (mind you without any irregation other than rainy season), but I convinced them I could do something with it. I shaped it into a small tree. In fact you'll swear it is a tree, but it technically is NOT!

Image Mine Spring of 2005

My plans were to add a couple of Sugarbush (Rhus ovata) behind it. This is an earlier picture or photo as you will see later photos where the massive spread of those exactly 6 years old California Sycamores now exist with Canary Island Pines to the right of that. In this photo you are looking at a Texas Umbrella Tree and Fruitless Mulberry in their winter dormancy period. They are now long since gone and taken out. What actually happened later is that the neighbour to the left of the photo was upset that this tree would turn into a giant that would destroy his concrete block wall. It never would have done that but my mother panicked and hired someone or perhaps got my brother to later cut it down. I was furious, but what the heck, it wasn't ultimately my business anyway.But the tree was free and never needed any watering or fertilizing. Incredibly, I have never seen a landscaper ever use this small tree/shrub in this fashion or for this reason. I barely see it sold or bought at even the native plant nurseries, though I know they have them. Mostly they are used for restoration projects, but should be incorporated as a major player in the design.

Image Mine - Summer 2012

Clearly above the roof line you can see the 5 year old California Sycamores (Planatnus racemosa) at the farthest left of the roof ridge and to the right the 7 year old Canary Island Pines (Pinus canarensis) trees. Notice that the Laurel Sumac is long gone. In it's place someone has put a African Sumac, which hasn't done very well as far as shape and effective growth. However, though you can't see it, there is a Sugarbush (Rhus ovata) in back of that area. Below is a backyard picture of the Sycamores and to the left the African Sumac which I had to cut way back. Unfortunately the tree has to be staked up. I'm guessing because it receives to much water and large amounts of growth are long, leggy and weak.

Image Mine 2012

That should have been a Laurel sumac to the left. What I wanted to create along that cured meandering pathway was a tunnel-like path with native chaparral and smaller native in the understory which would actually look lush and be taken care of by the larger deeper rooted shrub/trees which themselves would be connected through the mycorrhizal grid or fungal network I inoculated them with at the outplanting originally. I've already written about some understory plants here in the blog and I'll introduce more as time goes on.

At the very least here you get some idea of what I'm trying to accomplish in my work and what influenced me along time ago and where my present vision of things comes from. Hope all readers here can walk away with something important and make their own educated practical applications to their own small space outdoor living environment called a privacy getaway for their back or front yards.