Emily as Persephone
garden
Photo via Conger Moss Guillard Landscape Architects
Have you seen a Parkmobile yet? You might have if you’ve been walking in downtown San Francisco near the MoMa or Yerba Buena Gardens! Be on the lookout for these bright red “dumpster” style boxed gardens – with attached benches – to roam about the district. Portable mini-gardens, the Parkmobiles will be moved periodically from parking space to parking space, taking advantage of a city permitting process for construction debris bins. CMG Landscape Architects has created Parkmobiles as part of the 10-year Yerba Buena Street Life plan, which aims to improve seating (thank god!) inadequate crosswalks (jaywalking downtown anyone?) and streetscapes (finally – a break in the gray concrete under gray skies!). Check out the cheery red mobile gardens next time you’re in the area. You can read more about the Street Life Plan and the Parkmobiles in my most recent article for Inhabitat.
Aphids infest my basil, I nearly choke after realizing I may have eaten some. PS I spent the morning “showering” my plants and spraying them with Dr Bronners….
Luscious fruits at Mission Community Market
Summersun finally brought my star jasmine to life. Thanks sister Sally for the long awaited birth of my Christmas gift!
My bathroom window is finally getting sun (thanks summer solstice!) I retrieved my herbs from Concord to live here a while.
A Nice New Book – “Grow Great Grub” By Gayla Trail
My mother just mailed me this book. It has a lot of glossy pictures. The girl who wrote it kind of has my dream job (and definitely has had an assortment of my dream apartments – the kind that have a deck or roof for container gardening!)
The author, Gayla Trail, also runs this great blog where you can see lots of wonderful photographs of plants and her various urban gardening results. She’s a brave lady, gardening up in Ontario, where the growing season is so short. It makes me feel even worse, knowing that you can literally grow year round here – and I could easily be eating my own produce, and saving money – right now if I had only the slimmest access to a sunny patch of concrete, roof, deck, yard, or stoop.
Unfortunately, our apartment building is a form of psychological torture as I cannot get down all six flights of stairs on my own power (still recovering from the broken foot), thereby cancelling out any dreams of neighborhood community gardens – our apartment is darker than a cellar, and though we have a gorgeous, sunny, hot, thousands of square feet roof with access and a door, our landlord simply won’t allow us up there! He lives in the building, otherwise there would obviously already be crates of fresh herbs sunning themselves up there.
Anyway, its much like another glossy and colorful photo-filled gardening book I recently read, Garden Anywhere by Alys Fowler. Lots of cute ideas for potting plants in used coffee containers and storage bins, lovely shots of sunny windows and with the light filtering through the root hairs of plants in vintage glass jars. Its all enough to make me want to cry.
Oh, ew: my aeonium has mealybugs!
You can tell by their “flocculent” covering. I googled it. Sick. Seriously, I had no idea what these disgusting little aphid things were on my nice new aeonium (repotted and rehomed from concord, ca to my apartment in sf). Its leaves were falling off and I suddenly spotted these white fluffy hairballs growing in all the crevices of the plant.
SO disgusting. I think this succulent is too far gone so I’m going to throw it out (and bleach the pot), but I already spotted two on my jade plant nearby! I’m not sure how to kill them yet so I hand-killed the ones I saw, and hope it doesn’t get any worse. They don’t appear very mobile, so I have no idea how they got from one pot to another. Some gardener’s forums online suggested killing them with rubbing alcohol but in a daze of repulsion, I sprayed the whole aeonium with lysol a couple days ago. Not only did kill only some of the woolly buggers, it also probably killed the top part of the aeonium. I wasn’t sure what they were, they could have been some type of plant sucking lice for all I knew!
First summer bramble-roses found next to sidewalk – more fragrant than anything you’d find at the flowershop