While The Aloinopsis spathulata hybrids bloom in my rock garden every afternoon- the yellow Rabeia albipuncta (left) starts in late morning, the others reliably after lunch- I'm reminded that while my neighbors are still doing all kinds of spring cleanup, mine took so little time all I seem to do is drink tea and look at these while their blowers howl on in the background.
And while my research on low- and no-water landscapes has taken a bit of a blow this week, (details later) the interest and awareness of this brilliant trend has full steam momentum.
I'm giving a talk for a beloved non-profit Resource Central (Boulder, CO) in Golden in a few weeks (April 19)- a practical, realistic,
HOW-TO talk:
Xeriscaping in Colorado: Weather, Wildlife and Beyond!
It's wonderful how no matter what life throws at you- hail, rabbits, late frosts- xeric gardening still marches forward with the power of working with nature, not against her.
If this one is not pure Aloinopsis spathulata, it's pretty close.
Droolers over these non-photoshopped plants should know they can acquire seed from the:
-NARGS seed exchange (closed for this season, back again next December) or buy plants
-April 21 at Denver Botanic Gardens: the RMC-NARGS Plant Hunter's Market, or
-Sunscapes under "Aloinanthus"
You have no excuse not to grow these sun worshipping gems!
1 comment:
Your plants are so healthy, and that first pic... Trying to figure out the species of "rainbow" cactus in front of a boulder - perhaps some kind of Echinocereus?
Can't wait to hear more on the setback you had on low-water or no-water gardening.....
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