This is Cuphea Susan's Little Gem, got it when Debbie and I went to ARE
photos from today
She seems as happy as can be. :)
Check that Sunrise for fragrance--mine was the first echie I've noticed it with.
not at that size but thanks anyway...it looks real nice where it is. :)
and you call yourself a Texas Gardener?!
I won't speculate but you know what I'm thinking. :)
LOL
What is the tree to the right of the large yellow blooming plant....
Ahhh well funny you should ask- it's a 2 1/2 yr old Royal Poinciana- will it ever do anything besides grow straight up by leaps and bounds? Will it ever bloom? Well I don't know, but it's fun to watch it grow- about 3 feet since March and 2 of them in the last month. Flowers in spring but wants no additional water until after it blooms...think that will ever happen?
http://davesgarden.com/pf/go/2755/index.html
Is it in the ground?
Yeah it's a really big tree at maturity.
How long have you been in that house?
1 year in Mar- I had planted it in the previous house and dug it up when I moved here- it was during the cool part of the year, early march and it wasn't happy but survived the tranplanting.
started from seed?
Not this one, but I do have several started from seed. This one is either red or yellow and the others from seed are whatever this isn't- I have to ask my daughter she bought the seed, I just planted.
april - Is that this year's picture of that Cassia alata?
Photos from today April--they are terrific! ;)
April that Poinciana is gorgeous! its prettier than the poinciana that grows in Miami! Are those seed pods hanging off your tree?
Speaking of the clerandendrum u--its now gracing me with blue....this will continue right up until frost.
Interesting use of color dontcha think? blue then red-orange then pink.....hey, it is the back yard. Since that yellow russelia is a pale yellow and not a bright yellow; I'm thinking it will look good at the foot of the clerandendrum too. Is it well rooted yet? What do you think?
This message was edited Jun 13, 2006 11:11 AM
april--cool looking variegated fire bush...I have never seen one and of course like everything else variegated, I love it! Debbie-- you also have fire bush too, right? It looks very pretty under your coral vine.
Both of your RC are awesome. Those are so pretty, I am gonna have to get me one and see if I can get it to establish roots before winter.
Thanks for the compliments!
Ok, CeeJay, yes that is this yeas Cassia alata- we had such a mild winter it didn't freeze back all the way; w/ the few freezing nights we did have I lost some small branches and there were some nasty looking leaves- I also fertilize most everything around it so it is getting that benefit. I have had to cut it back 2 times already.
Sylvia, well I don't think this Poinciana is at all different from what they grow in FLA- but I don't really know. This was bought on Ebay as a seedling maybe 3 years ago. As far as I know it is nothing special. On the Cassia alata/Candlestick tree, there are millions and millions of seeds each year. If I were careful I would pick up the pods and trash them, but I am a reckless, risk taking, adventerous type so I just run them over w/ the lawn mower- I pull them out by the handfuls or just mow them down. If you want seed let me know and I will collect some, other wise, they are lawnmower fodder.
Ms. Merae, this var. fire bush has an interesting story w/ local roots; Bob Beyers (gosh I hope that I spelled his name right) who lived in Houston until earlier this year, I believe he moved to Austin; anyway, I digress- Bob was visiting a friend in in one of the towns a little closer to Galveston, forget which one, and the friends firebush had a branch or 2 with this variegation- Bob suspected it was a virus and took a cutting and was able to produce this consistent variegation. He has refused to "patent" it so anybody is free to make and sell cuttings. I did buy mine from a nursery and they call it Beyer's Variegatied Hamelia ... I think Bob put a nice photo of it in Plantfiles. I don't believe this is a dwarf so fully expect it to take over my yard.
Deb I think that would be a great site for the Yellow RE- it might be rooted enough, I am always game and you know where to get another cutting if this doesn't work- just give it a little TLC and it should be ok.
April
Thanks, April. I had a Cassia alata last year and the large amount of seeds scared me!! I was able to cut them all off, but I realized that if it got 6 inches higher, I was in deep trouble. So I took it out. And put a Cleronendron ugandense there. I was amazed at how big your Cassia was this early in the season. That explains it. Love your variegated fire bush!
I might have put a Clerodendron U there if I'd known how big they get...my daughter neglected to tell me that! LOL. I'd always wanted one of these Cassia alatas but they are a bit messy and they are constantly covered w/ bees, hornets/wasps (no I really don't know the difference) flys and of course Cloudless Sulpher butterflies and their caterpillars- if I decide that I really hate it I know that I can kill it because I've killed MANY plants in my time! LOL. Oh and I am not afraid to use a saw!
LOL! After I pulled it up, I had a few seedlings that came up in the flower bed. Potted them up and passed them on to unsuspecting friends. After all, that's how I got mine! Yeah, they do get covered in insects, don't they?!
I am always trying to pawn mine off...I guess you don't want one then? LOL...
