53 and 5!

I DIDN’T FORGET THIS ASK FOR THE PLANTBLR NUMBER THING, IVE JUST BEEN STUMPED FOR SEVERAL MONTHS TRYING TO THINK OF SOME GOOD ANSWERS IM SO SORRY!!! I still don’t have good answers for these two questions but I’m gonna force answers outta myself anyways.

5. A plant you share an interesting story with?

I have pondered on this a lot as to how to interpret this question for the most interesting answer; my struggle with Musa/Ensente, my opportunity to try to grow Asmina from seed for the first time leading to my obsession to continue seaching, tulips in bloom relative to my birth. After a lot of think, I settled to go for my currently-oldest houseplant, my senior of the collection who has endured some abuse and was the start of my explosion of houseplants;

My good old Crassula ovata Jade Plant. 

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I think this is the oldest picture of it but I’m not sure as I was searching through the blog for these pics and this one did not have my old-style “photographed on this day” note. Originally called “Jadey” by me back then, it was an apartment warming gift from my former highschool EA teachers, and the houseplant that pushed me to considering indoor cultivation more (before this fella I had many plant deaths on my hands including bromeliads, Pepperomias, and particularly African Violets).

Anyone who knows this plant will know; Jade plants are very trouble-free so long as they get tons of sunlight and are not overwatered, and this girl was no exception to the rule; It has been the one houseplant that shrugged off my leaving for holidays and even enduring the Neglectathon when the plant collection and I returned to the farm for permanent residence- but I’m getting ahead of myself. During college it thrived, to the point it got pruned, propagated and shared throughout the Horticulture Tech Class (I may have even given some to @omgplants but I genuinely cannot remember). 

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But one winter 2013 in the apartment, I wasn’t watchful, and I inadvertently killed a large amount of branch-to-trunk due to cold conduction from the windowframe to the plant itself.

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The damaged plant material was cut off with a knife (which was over half of the bottom trunk) and given an application of Cinnamon as an attempt at anitfungal protection.

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Luckily in nary a months time, it was showing to be recovering from the nightmare with just a callused battle scar from the ordeal.

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A firsthand proof to me that plants, houseplant or not, can be rather tough cookies.

Unfortunately misfortune befell it once more; its lovely open branch arrangement lead to getting caught onto the curtain and then toppling over from its window as the curtain was being pulled over the window. With that, it got an unplanned prune up to fix the mess that was left behind.

From there any posts for it specifically never really popped up, however it did get odd cameos in group plant pictures/posts to further the documentation of its journey;

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By 2015 you could see in cameo in the plant tour of the time, when I returned to the farmhouse and brought my gargantuan plant collection with me. By this time it was growing leggier from the change of light conditions and grew painfully topheavy along with its variegated relative.

From there was when the great plant dying (ie- the winter colds triggering the slow death of the African Violets) followed by neglectathon began. As I grew doom-and-gloom with my own mind and trying to resettle in space that was shared rather than mine and mine alone, plants were forgotten to be tended to (mainly watered, they were watered scarcely if at all) as they were scattered across the different small windows of the house (unlike the apartment where I only had two windows which I walked by every day, the farmhouse had windows in very out-of-the-way spaces) and even the toughest of houseplants started to struggle even more.

By 2017 the house addition mom so wished for this farmhouse was being put together and a call of opportunity, a second chance; among the features of the addition, large south facing windows to almost rival even the apartments of London. My bedroom was moved to the new basement floor to give me more freedom and space, the plants too would get a similar treatment. While in none of the photos, the Jade was part of great houseplant bathtub soak and relocation. Given more light and a little more water (to this current time of this ask I am still fighting to return semblance in my life/routines again, watering being one I still struggle to reclaim for the houseplants) it thickened with water and grew a little better, but started to lean out of its pot and still showed severe leggieness (curing legginess requires more than a change of light, it also means they need to be pruned, something I felt it would not tolerate after the neglectathon ordeal). It is one of the few “leggy succulents” left in the collection.

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This autumn of 2018 old Jadey got to cameo in a tweet with other houseplants once again (tumblr mobile makes photosets not as easy as twitter so my apologies for no updates on that here yet). After far too long, she has finally gotten the repot she so painfully needed, and a light trim to begin fixing her wiriness and reshape. Currently her rootball is almost nonexistent (ripped apart to give her a chance in fresher, albeit peatier potting soil) and needs to regrow her roots, as well as branch/bulk up her branches. A tradeoff currently is that she has been exiled from the plant-shelf spaces due to her height and being in a fragile clay flowerpot, but I’m hoping she’ll continue to live on with her houseplant juniors and continue holding the trophy for oldest owned houseplant.

53. Favourite flower?

Always a question that I can never answer with just one flower.

My default answer has always been a tie of 4 plant genera; Trilliums, Liliums, Lavendula, and Dianthus.

Since the new garden additions and struggle to grow certain favourite species (the first two in particular) new plants/flowers may come to soon wear the rivalry crown of “favorite”; New England Asters are becoming my favourite autumn queens while Northern Wild (Senna hebecarpa) has come to impress me for its bee-attracting qualities and mildly exotic charm in the midsummer.

60, 63 and 67!

60. Do you have a composter?

I want/need a composter*

63. Biggest plant you own?

We’re gonna just use houseplants for this one. The Dracaena used to be the biggest (it’s on its way out if I continue to be unable to do anything to help it), but now the Clivia minata and the Hoya carnosas are the biggest beasts I own. Vines so long that I need to consider a new and sturdier trellis set up in the pots.

67. Smallest plant you own?

I had a Haworthia species for a while that was the size of a dollar coin but I think it’s dead now. I guess my baby Schlumbergeras at this point? Small plant species don’t last long for me

80, 78 (I want to send so many of these, ive wanted to pick your brain for ages >o> )

LMAO O RLY NOW? XD

80. Favourite common plant name?

I guess…. Wakerobin (Trillium) and Touch-Me-Not (Impatiens)? The former is such a vague romanticized name, whereas the latter makes Impatiens sound like THESE TERRIFYING POISONOUS PLANTs when all they are named this for is cause their seedpods go pop like a green spring.

78. Where do you get your plant knowledge from?

Lots and lots of books. I used to borrow more books than I could carry from the library to browse and browse back in my high school days every week. I’ve also hoarded plant books in my own personal collection, and I used to watch a lot of gardening/plant vids too. I have also browsed info through the internet albeit with a more critical eye than I do with books. A lot of other knowledge has come with experience, though that’s a bit of a more slower learning process for certain details.

23 ooohh

23. What are some of your favourite plantblrs?

I don’t like picking favourites aaaahhh;A; this is why I could never bring myself to answer that one ask that asked the same thing lmao.

Some that come to mind though are @plantyhamchuk, @geopsych (they remind me of my home landscape… even if their land is not as flat lol), @omgplants (one of the first plantblrs I had followed back in the day), @continent-of-wild-endeavor, @indefenseofplants, @botanyshitposts, @5-and-a-half-acres, @cactguy and soooo many others (I CAN ONLY REMEMBER SO MANY OF YOU AT ONCE BUT YOU’RE AWESOME YO!!).

@milos-garden used to be a huge favourite of mine too, but they haven’t been active since at least 3 years ago. Miss ya dude. I miss a lot of old now-inactive plantblrs.

89?

89. What’s one thing that irritates you about the plant community?

Trying to dig up some gossip/dirt huh?

This one is hard to pin cause it really depends on the person, I have yet to personally get any serious issues overall in any plant group but I’ve heard enough stories. I’d say, those who shut down other folk or overassume in a mean mater-of-fact way. Shutting people down for not knowing or having contradictory information is no good. Horticulture can have a lot of weird exceptions to usual rules in growing plants, and one has to remember that.

I also don’t like when people encourage stealing plant/plant-material from the stores, gardens, or from the wild without huge warnings/disclaimers for newbies reading said material. It’s a big gray area which can have a lot of technicalities that can go from white to black very quickly. Have many people taken plant material in such a context? yes (even me* *though when it was from a store I was encouraged to take cuttings by the owners of the place so it wasn’t really stealing), should it be encouraged though? Not really, you have to be really careful on that sector of horticulture, irresponsibility is a slippery slope.

That being said for the most part I’m not really gonna fight anyone about opinions/views of these kinds of things which they’re often set on (except plant poaching cause I can definitely prove the damage that has been done through that). I am far too tired™ to be debating/arguing about these things. It may not be great to “agree to disagree” but it’s the only way I can keep sane in my favourite hobby.

91, 94!

91. Favourite leaf shape?

Cordate (heart shaped) leaves and fear-like leaves. I can’t say as to why for the former but for the latter I like the primeval/tropical/prehistoric appeal from the leaf form.

94. Favourite leaf texture?

Fuzzy leaves and coarse/rugose leaves. Fuzzy feel nice and therapeutic whereas coarse leaves are both visually appeal and to a degree practical (most insects prefer to eat smooth leaves over coarse leaves).

2, 6 and 14!

2. A plant you always kill?

All Saxifragias (first plant that popped to memory that would not even survive the season they were planted in), Azaleas, and Blueberries, and many varieties of roses. Our garden soil tends to be too dry and not acidic enough for most of those plants. Any plant that NEEDS acidic soil is about toast on this farm guaranteed.

Bonus addition; All orchids for the houseplant category. Any that survive are still destined to die.

6. A plant you grew from seed/cutting?

At least one of my Hoya carnosas was grown from a cutting from a lady in London ON. I’ve also done impatiens, coleus, african violets, and jade plants before.

As for seed? I have grown so many species (especially recently) from seed; Cercis canadensis, Tulip tree, Buttonbush, Coleus, Impatiens, tomatoes, magnolia species (which I can never get past sapling), Alpine Strawberries, Prairie smoke, Catalpa, White spruce- I COULD GO ON-

14. A nostalgic plant

Hmm… Rugosa roses I suppose?

Their nasty thorns, their coarse leaves, their clove-scent flowers, the large juicy looking fruit hips.

They are not much to sneeze at as far as roses go (to most people anyways) but they have an unforgettable presence in my younger-gardener memory. 

I could think of some plants I’ve never grown that give me a nostalgia but I think there’s another number ask more appropriate for those.

#92, please!

92. Favourite fruit and vegetable?

I’m having to think a bit as I am the pickiest of eaters lolol.

Strawberries come to mind first for fruit (since it’s one of the few I’ll eat raw and am not entirely bound by cultivar choices like I am with Apples).

For vegetable? For eating I can’t really think of anything I’d truly eat without cheating through unhealthy cooking BUT, I’d say Potato and Rhubarb; Potato wedge fries are fucking delish, and Rhubarb while I don’t like to eat it I love as a perennial vegetable which also is visually dramatic in the garden with its gargantuan leaves.

The bug hotel one!! I think 98 or 99?

98. Do you have an insect hotel in your garden?

I have considered getting a Mason Bee hotel before, but otherwise no. Closest we got is purely accidental ones like the woodpile which have become nesting grounds for the Leafcutter Bees.

Next would be the Swamp Milkweed I grow to attract Monach butterflies/caterpillars, and the tall stiff-stemmed plants for the Garden Spiders.