Don't be fooled. Inside this thin coating of sweetness is a fiery core of total insanity.

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

Excellent Crop of Decorative Growth

Conifer aficionados often refer to themselves as coneheads, so a post that features them has to start with a snippet from the movie Coneheads (many lines of which my son memorized as a teen).


Scene from the movie 'Coneheads"


Recently I decided to run away from home yet again, this time all the way to Oregon, to The Oregon Garden, an 80-acre botanical garden and resort in Silverton, Oregon, which required an overnight stay. On the way I stopped at Joy Creek Nursery to visit Tamara, blogger at Chickadee Gardens, who works there. While I was there she introduced me to Maurice, one of the owners, who recommended a morning stroll through the conifer garden.

It was a great idea!

When I first got there it was still incredibly hot and I was  sweaty and uncomfortable, so I relaxed for a while in my air-conditioned room. Eventually I ventured out to the restaurant for supper, and after that, into the garden, right around sunset, when the temperatures had finally started to go down a bit.

The sun setting over the garden -- pretty but also pretty smoky, the result of wildfires


A bit dark and mysterious, but I ventured in anyway

I know little about conifers, but I was pretty sure I recognized the one on the right as a deodara cedar

This graceful, wispy creature on the left with its Hakone grass tutu intrigued me, but there was no sign of a tag

As I ventured around a curve, I saw the shape in the photo below against the darkening sky, and at first I thought it was a cloud-pruned conifer. Then, something clicked in my head and I recognized it as an Agave bloom spike. I actually quickened my pace despite the heat to see if I was correct, and I was. I took a couple of bad photos and made my way back to my room.



In the morning right after breakfast, while it was still relatively cool (in the 70s), I headed back out to see the Agave and the conifer garden in the morning light.

Don't ask me what an Agave is doing in the entrance to the conifer garden -- perhaps it's just the sunniest spot with the best drainage

The tag says Agave havardiana

As tall as many of the surrounding trees


Swarming with bees

One last look at the Agave spike

A look back up the slope toward the main resort building

The deodar cedar again

Its lowest branches droop over the berm and rocks

I found myself drawn to the texture contrasts, between conifers, and between conifers and rocks and various perennials.

With Sedum spathulifolium





Pinus thunbergii 'Shirome janome'

Very drought and heat-stressed, I realized, after Googling it and doing an image search

In the daylight I still couldn't find a tag for the wispy conifer with the pendulous branches




The conifer so heavily laden with cones is Abies koreana 'Horstmann's Silberlocke' and it's enormous!


I have a 'Horstmann's Silberlocke' in my garden, but it's nowhere near this big. I don't think I realized it would ever get this big. According to the history of the garden on the website, the conifer garden was created in 2000, so I can't help wondering how big it was when it was planted. That's only 18 years ago.

Microbiota decussata



More great textures...




Picea abies 'Cobra'

The lower branches snake over the ground, and are interplanted (probably not deliberately) with horsetail

The lower branches droop to the ground

The tip also droops

A nice bench for Beldar and Prymatt