by Lorraine on January 22, 2013
Oh my gosh. I cannot believe how, very, very long it has been since I last made a post about my garden. I guess I have been too pre-occupied with my daily life and all of the demands it makes upon me.
Yes, yes…we all have busy lives, don’t we? However my garden continues to delight me and of course it has changed considerably over the last few years, as I have too.
I really feel that tending and loving a garden whether or not it’s one filled with ornamental plants or like mine, more “native” and drought tolerant which is so important here in southern California, that are lives are just a bit richer for it.
Everyday, I can observe the different birds that find refuge in it and of course plenty of places to hide, built a nest and find food. The seasons evolve, the plants bloom and recede in the hot summer months, only to catapult back into life with the first winter rains.
Lessor Goldfinches and White Crowned sparrows have been enjoying it’s bounty and I know that soon, I will see other avian visitors. Spring is just around the corner and many plants are preparing to put on a show of flowers and color.
I promise that I will be writing more. After all, it’s the garden that provides respite for me, too.
by Lorraine on September 23, 2012
My life has been a bit upturned the last couple of months because I managed to fracture my right foot when I was just finishing up my workout at the gym. I ended up wearing one of those big, clunky orthopedic boots which was not exactly conducive to walking in my garden and allowing me to spend any time in it this past summer.
I am finally out of it but still limited on doing things such as hiking or conditioning walking and I have been told not to do any repetitive movements on my foot until the fracture is completely healed, which at this point it, isn’t.
But with the arrival of Fall, I know that soon I will need to be doing a lot of cleanup and maintenance in the garden. When it comes to using California native plants and in my case those of the chaparral-sage community, there isn’t much to be done during the summer months because most of the plants shut down for the season and become semi-dormant.
With the arrival of Fall and then winter, that is the signal to get busy in the garden. The plants are waking up and getting prepared to grow and that means it’s important to groom, trim, prune the plants that need a “spa day” and of course it’s the best time to do planting. Plus I have a number of projects in mind this season and am only waiting for the weather to be cooler before I get involved in them.
Although it is quite hot here today, about 102 degrees which is typical for Fall in Southern California. I know that I will be removing more plants in the next few months but I will need some help when I do. I can’t do any digging with my right foot to remove the plants I want to take out. So I will be hiring my P/T garderner, Nelson to do the heavy work.
It is approaching the 5th. year when I decided to remove my lawn and put in it’s place, native plants and I’m finding it difficult to believe that it flew by so quickly. But since that time, there has been more discussions, books and articles about creating landscapes based upon using less water, no fertilizers or pesticides and becoming sustainable.
And not to forget, the joy of drawing wild birds and butterflies into a new “wild” space. Especially the humming birds…..
I’m happy that I have done my part and I certainly have learned a great deal about using natives for landscaping. And yet, the adventure continues as I learn more about this unique method of landscaping. And I’m already thinking about the changes I will be making to the garden in the next few months.
by Lorraine on August 8, 2012
Okay, I obviously have not been posting anything about my garden since, (Let’s see, March?). I can’t believe how long it’s been and it’s not due to not having anything to say, but sometimes…there is just nothing interesting going on.
Gardens or in my case “landscape”, are always changing with the seasons and due to little rainfall this past winter, spring was not putting on much of show in my garden.
Yes, the Douglas iris’, Penstemons, and of course the ubiqus California poppy bloomed and so did everything else. But over all the amount of flowers were less than in previous years but still beautiful anyway.

Spring in the garden
I guess the most exciting thing was to find a dead rattlesnake a few months ago, right where I have two chairs under an umbrella. Now I have no idea how it ended up there, but it was a little bit unnerving, needless to say.
It’s extremely hot this week and rattlesnakes will naturally be out and about but not in the middle of the day. Typically, they will find a shady spot under a bush or rock and wait for things to cool down.
Caution prevails, here at my house. I’m not about to be putting my hands or feet in the target zone for their fangs.
by Lorraine on February 21, 2012
It’s the weather, music, my mood and the recent arrival of Sunset Magazine that always puts makes me envious, wishing I had a “Sunset” lifestyle.
Sigh…it’s so beautiful today and although I have been working at my profession, I’m not in the mood to do it because the skies are blue, the breeze is gentle and the sun is soft. I’d like to do nothing but spend my time in the garden, read the magazine and dream….
At this time California poppies are beginning to bloom and their bright, brilliant color in the garden, are like sententials for spring. And then there are the blue, dainty flowers floating upon long stems of Blue-Eyed Grass /Sisyrinchium bellum that make such an eye catching contrast against the poppies.
I have been listening to Hawaiian music on the Mountain Apple Company’s “radio” for most of the morning and dreaming of a Hawaii and the peace and beauty of the islands & the time when I kayaked from the beach at Kailua over a coral reef to a small island.
Then there’s the Palapa….Sigh, I could be on a Mexican beach, staring out over the ocean, drowsy and dreamy.
But I’m here and not in Mexico or Hawaii but I do have my native garden that is a good substitute for a vacation, sans the palapa but at least I do have Sunset magazine.
by Lorraine on February 12, 2012
Here is the continuation of the previous post about some of the birds that I had been seeing in my garden last December. Now that it is February, some have left the area and now I’m seeing more White Crowned Sparrows and on the one day that it was hot, I found an 8″ Rattlesnake that was dead (mysterious), laying in the sitting area of my garden.
Good grief!
During the spring and summer I am more likely to see English Sparrows and Common Goldfinches as they patter around underneath the plants, seeking seeds and vying for territory. And there have also been Hooded Orioles that have nested in one of my trees that last two years.
Robins and their loud voices are the “bad boys” of the garden during the earlier part of each year and commandeer the bird bath, shoving out the smaller birds from it and in general, taking over the garden for their own purposes.
Although, they probably spend more time at my neighbors house where they find fat worms in their lawn, the do poke around among my plants and splash so much in the birdbath, they practically empty it in their enthusiasm of fluttering their wings…
Hummingbirds never seem to leave the area as I have something in my garden that is always in bloom year throughout the year. They are currently enjoying the Desert Lavender and fuchsias and now there are some new flowers on the salvias to give them a bit more variety.
Anyone who that thinks California native plants are ugly and unattractive, lack the knowledge of what they really are like. It’s not that dried-out dead-looking stuff you see along the roadsides…those are invasive plants, especially along the freeways.
California native plants are magnificent, varied and beautiful. Grow a garden made of natives and you will experience such joy and pleasure in their beauty and also enjoy the multitude of birds that will find it a rich sanctuary for their lives, too.