Friday, February 9, 2018
Gardening in San Diego-This or That?
This is a photo of my garden in Athens, GA where I lived starting in the late 90s. I loved getting the chance to garden in the South. My career as a flight attendant brought me out to Atlanta originally, and school kept me there a little while longer. Words cannot express how much I loved that garden, the soil that I built, and all of the plants that flourished there. I miss it so much! In my mind, I can still walk around and look at the plants. As the saying goes, when the gardener leaves, the garden dies, and, unfortunately, it only exists now in history. I dearly miss the sweet little native spring ephemerals that started the gardening year, and the cherished, but loud, memory of the frog chorus in the springtime. The thing is I saw firsthand how camellias, azaleas, hydrangeas, magnolias, and other "Southern" plants grew and thrived on almost 60 inches of rain a year and deep acidic loamy soil. We had warm summer nights and sometimes 100% humidity!
Labels:
Athens,
azaleas,
Calfironia natives,
camellias,
ephemerals,
GA,
humidity,
magnolias
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Both gardens are lovely. But, you can grow all those wonderful California winter/spring annuals that get wiped out here in the east by early summer heat and humidity. Plus, there's an enormous range of bulbs from around the world that love your Mediterranean conditions. I envy you! ...ps.snow is about a foot deep here right now...
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