Showing posts with label Dombeya burgessiae 'Seminole'. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dombeya burgessiae 'Seminole'. Show all posts

Saturday, November 12, 2022

Bonus Blooms for Fall

 It is always a relief for me when the cooler temperatures of fall come bringing the promise of rain. Fall is also the season that some plants really shine with peak bloom. Here are several fall bloomers that I enjoy in my garden. 

      Senna splendida 'Golden Wonder' tree form

       

    Close-up of the large flowers of Senna splendida 'Golden Wonder'

Senna splendida 'Golden Wonder' is a lovely small tree. If it isn't pruned, it is a large shrub. The flowers of this plant are showy, large, and long-lasting. They are easily 3 inches across and a nice rich buttery yellow. While its main bloom period is in the fall, it puts out blooms intermittently all year. All sennas are host plants for Sulphur Butterflies. The caterpillars are green and yellow and blend in with the foliage and are hard to find. There are never enough of them to do any noticeable damage to the foliage. This plant was tough to get established but now it is tough and drought tolerant. It can tolerate a light freeze. Full sun and well-draining soil are requirements for good growth.

                  Hypoestes aristata or Ribbon Bush

Do you remember the polka dot plant so popular in terrariums when we were kids? This lovely plant is in the same genus. I barely notice the glossy light green leaves the rest of the year, but in the fall it is engulfed in lavender ribbon-like flowers. Cut back Hypoestes aristata after bloom to keep it densely growing. I keep this one around three feet tall and wide. I water this about once a week-to ten days in the summer and not at all in the winter. This South African native is an easy plant to grow in full sun/light shade and well-drained soil. It will tolerate light frosts and is evergreen. It is popular with hummingbirds and bees. Like the Poinsettia, the colorful flowers are actually fused bracts instead of petals. 

     Flowers of Odontonema strictum or Fire Spike

If you only have shade and want to attract hummingbirds, don't despair! This is a shade growing hummingbird plant. It will bloom in pretty dense shade. Of course, there will be more blooms if you give it more sun, but it blooms surprisingly well in shade. Odontonema strictum grows to about six feet tall and is a strongly upright plant. In the fall, large spikes of the most incredible red form in the leaf axils and ends of branches. The flowers do not bloom all at once and will open from the bottom up over a long period of time. Even after the flowers drop off the spike. the structure left behind is bright red and showy. This plant looks so tropica with its large glossy foliage, but it is surprisingly drought tolerant and easy to grow. Cut it back after bloom for more branches and more flowers. It is light frost tolerant. They say that hummingbirds can see red a mile away and I do not doubt it with this plant!

       Dombeya burgessiae 'Seminole'

Why this plant isn't grown more in San Diego is a mystery to me. It is one of the easiest, most rewarding plants in my garden! It is a robust grower that blooms from an early age. In the fall, it is smothered in pink bouquets of flowers. This plant wants to be eight feet tall and wide, so I chop it to the ground after it blooms, to keep it around five feet. While other plants languish and droop in the summer heat, this one stays healthy and strong with very little water. It takes full sun to part shade. I think it benefits from a little shade. It can be propagated by layering low-growing branches. The leaves are large, slightly fuzzy and a grey-green color, and typical for members of the Malvaceae. It will tolerate a light frost. 

In San Diego, fall can be a rewarding and bloom-filled occasion if we take the time to find autumn-flowering plants. There are a surprising number of plants that bloom in the fall. My goal is to have plants in bloom all year round, and we can in Zone 10. 







Monday, July 30, 2018

Dombeya x 'Seminole' Loves the Heat

My garden is inland a little bit from San Diego so we get heat in the summer. I love those plants that like heat. You know the ones I mean, just as I am wilting, they are perking up and look positively chipper as the temperature climbs. Their growth accelerates as temperatures go above 80 degrees F. Dombeya x 'Seminole' is one such plant. Planted last fall as the temperatures were cooler, it kind of sat there for a few months--that is-- until it got hot, and now it is putting on impressive growth. Not sure what made me try it, it is supposed to really like water, and I never intended to put water lovers in my garden. Once a week this shrub gets maybe 30 seconds of water from the hose and it is doing well. I have it sited under the high shade of a tree it is refreshingly dark green and robust on that amount of water. The leaves are large and really green like a Hydrangea macrophylla and because of this is often called, "Tropical Rose Hydrangea."
Dombeya x 'Seminole' or Dombeya burgessiae 'Seminole'                                                                     S. Reeve

So far the growth habit is full and it hasn't required pruning. It takes well to pruning and can be kept 3-5 feet high and wide pretty easily even though it wants to be 8 feet tall and wide. Dombeya is in the Malvaceae. Originally this species comes from East Africa and was named for Joseph Dombey, a French botanist from the eighteenth century. This plant is a hybrid created in 1973 by crossing two selections of Dombeya burgessiae, E-29 and 'Rosemound'. This created a smaller denser plant with brighter pink flowers. The flowers are held on the outside and are very showy, occurring in large clusters of vivid pink petals. Each flower is 1-1.5 inches. The flowers are not fragrant. 
               Blooming Dombeya x 'Seminole'    

This is a long-blooming shrub. It starts in the fall and blooms until the spring. Large bowl-shaped flowers are popular with bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds, making this a "must-have" wildlife plant for my garden. 
Costa's Hummingbird on Dombeya x 'Seminole'                                                                                   Pedro Lastra

This plant also does well in a pot. It is a precocious flower machine and will bloom very young. If you are in a colder zone, you could try it in a pot and take it in in the winter. Dombeya burgessiae 'Seminole' can take pretty radical pruning too and still come back just fine. Prune after the blooms stop in the spring. It is not cold tolerant though and is rated USDA Cold Hardiness Zone 9 and higher. Zone 9 is a little iffy though as this plant does not tolerate freezing temperatures at all. It is evergreen here in Zone 10b. It needs well-draining alkaline to slightly acidic soil which I have here. Not that I fertilize anything, but I wouldn't use chemical fertilizer on this plant, as I can imagine one of the those "miracle" fertilizers would cause lanky unattractive forced growth. The fruit is a five-chambered oval brown capsule. 
Nobuhiro Suhara photographer

Leaves appear healthy and I have not seen any pests on this plant. What remains to be seen is how well it flowers in a little shade. I have a feeling it will bloom just fine.