- Nuts rain down during the "nut-raining season", but are not scooped up by squirrels or park visitors to eat. They are swept up and thrown out by the city gardeners.
- There is hardly anything written about this tree. The tree label says it is Cryptocarya rubra and the PlantList says that is an accepted name.
- A common name for the tree is "Chilean Soap Tree". :OP
I'm nuts about plants and all the animals and minerals that reside with them.
Thursday, April 27, 2017
Chilean Bellota, are the nuts edible?
There are a lot of red flags here:
Tuesday, April 25, 2017
A Quince to Perfume a Room
From Wikimedia |
So I posted a question on the California Rare Fruit Growers forum. It seems that the quince is Pseudocydonia sinensis, also known as Chinese Quince, Karin, Mugua, Mogwa.
I checked the PlantList to see what is currently the accepted name. "Chaenomeles sinensis (Dum.Cours.) Koehne is an accepted name...". So I googled both.
The bark is quite lovely. Why don't more people plant this just for the peely bark?
Where to buy it? Annie's has it on their "wishlist". J.L. Hudson Seeds has seeds.
Thursday, April 13, 2017
Fig Mysteries
Painting by Mrs. Henry W. Kruckeberg (Jennie?) 1902? from The Smyra Fig at Home and Abroad Henry Kruckeberg published stuff like the Proceedings of the California Association of Nurserymen. Here he is next to George C. Roeding in 1911. Perhaps Mrs. Kruckeberg turns up in some of these CAN photos as well. Original painting is in the Roeding Archives. Letter in the archives at library with letter from April 7, 1903. |
Quotes are intriguing: "Rock (according to Eisen) was the “owner of the largest assortment of fig varieties collected in one place."
Where did those figs go?
Other local mysteries are "Who was first to solve the mystery of caprification of the Smyrna fig?" Apparently there is a hand-written unpublished 75-page document written by George Roeding that will answer this question (BR).
When Gustav Eisen mentions the people who he has worked with, why does he leave out George C. Roeding? We know they worked together closely on the mystery of caprification. And he's mentioned many times in his book, This Fig. But no thanks? What's the scoop on that? The Roeding family says that Eisen was the first orchard manager for Fancher Creek. They were next door neighbors in Fresno. (BR)
At one time, John Rock had 18 different varieties of the Caprifig, the largest number collected in one place in 1901. (p. 122, in the Proceedings of the 26th Fruit Growers Convention in SF., December 1901).
Tuesday, April 4, 2017
Plants of old Mission San Jose
From Library of Congress |
What plants were present when E.L. Beard first gardened at Mission San José?
From David Streatfield's article "'Paradise' on the Frontier", he says "Knowledge of the plants that Spanish missionaries and the Mexican civilians introduced into California is still scanty. Little archaeological exploration has been carried out on any of the sites and the principal source of information is, therefore, documentary. Unfortunately, little documentation remains in the Mission records and heavy reliance has to be placed on what visitors such as Captain George Vancouver, F. W. Beechey, Sir George Simpson, and Edwin Bryant recorded in their diaries.
From these sources, it is evident that they grew date palms, olives, pepper trees, the native willow and wild cherry, hollyhocks, oleanders, carnations, nasturtiums, fouro'clocks, sweet peas, portulaca, French marigolds, calla and madonna lillies, Matilja poppies, Nicotiana glauca, jonquils, wallflowers, violets, Arundo donax, date, Mexican fan palms and the native palm, Washingtonia filifera."
From these sources, it is evident that they grew date palms, olives, pepper trees, the native willow and wild cherry, hollyhocks, oleanders, carnations, nasturtiums, fouro'clocks, sweet peas, portulaca, French marigolds, calla and madonna lillies, Matilja poppies, Nicotiana glauca, jonquils, wallflowers, violets, Arundo donax, date, Mexican fan palms and the native palm, Washingtonia filifera."