Sunday, September 22, 2024
Liberating the Yucca
This is our one dahlia that hasn't bloomed yet -- the one that was nibbled down to bare stems in June and thus got a very late start. Now it has multiple buds, a couple of them pretty far along, so it looks like we'll get some flowers after all. Fingers crossed!
I walked Olga up to the corner yesterday morning, where my campaign against neighborhood trash continued. This time it was more discarded cabinetry, a vent hood and a refrigerator. I reported it to the council and within an hour or two they carried it all away. There was also a spray of broken glass from a fluorescent tube that had been thrown out in an earlier junk pile, and I went up there with a broom and swept it up. Lest you think this was a charitable act, let me just say it was purely selfish -- Olga walks in that area every morning and I don't want her getting glass in her paws.
After that I sat in the garden reading The New Yorker. I am six issues behind and my magazine stack is big enough to make me feel guilty, so I've gotta work through some of it. I read a chilling article about the leader of a religious cult in Kenya whose extreme (and insane) interpretation of evangelical Christianity has led to the murder or starvation of hundreds of his parishioners. It's all very Jim Jones, and as someone who just doesn't have the capacity for that kind of religious belief, I find the blind devotion a huge mystery.
I also embarked on what turned out to be a very ambitious repotting project. I took our huge yucca tree out of its smallish pot (in the photo above, it's the empty clay one on the right, by the chair) and put it in a bigger one, and then moved Manny Two into the smaller one.
I'm making it sound easy, but it was not. The yucca was so root-bound that Dave and I together couldn't pull it out of the pot. At one point Dave pulled the trunk and I held the edges of the pot, and he was dragging me along the ground behind the tree. I went around the edges of the root ball with a long bread knife, and that didn't help. I was afraid we'd have to break the pot, but I wanted it for Manny. Finally we soaked the whole thing in water, and that helped loosen the yucca enough to free it. The root ball was rock-solid.
It now has more room to grow -- which is good and bad, since it's already near ceiling height -- and Manny is happier in fresh soil. In its new pot, freshly watered, the yucca was so heavy that getting it back inside was very difficult. I'm still sore from the exertion. It's not going outside again!
As you can see, Olga was a big help.
I found this shiny, polished blue pebble in Manny's old pot. It was like a little piece of treasure, buried in that dusty, dry, exhausted potting soil.
(And how do you like my high-tech labeling method for my AirPods? That's so kids at school don't try to claim them as lost property when they're sitting on my desk. Which has happened.)
This morning, it's pouring rain outside. A glorious sound!
I had plans to repot several large plants. Glad I procrastinated now that I’m giving them away. Our yuccas have topped out on the terrace a few times and we’ve had cut them down. They seem to love it. And then we have to thin out some of the new arms. Today’s garden photo is wonderful. Poor Olga was clearly exhausted after all that work (or, I suppose, before).
ReplyDeleteYeah, good timing on the plants! I think we'll probably be cutting our yucca eventually too.
DeleteWe have definitely had some biblical rain overnight haven't we? Tremendous thunderclaps last night just as I went to bed. Luckily the dog isn't bothered !
ReplyDeleteYour dahlia looks as if it might be the same as the only one I have left out of about 7 that a friend gave me earlier in the year......those damn slugs got the others!! What a lovely thing to find in the old pot. I wonder who put it there and why.
We didn't get much thunder, at least not that I heard, but we've had plenty of water! I didn't have any dahlia fatalities due to slugs, but probably only because my dahlias are all several years old.
DeleteI wish there was some video footage of Mighty Dave dragging you and the yukka across the lawn. Upstairs, the Russians were probably laughing like bolsheviks while next door Mrs Kravitz must have wondered what the hell was happening, "It's those crazy yankees again!"
ReplyDeleteI'm sure we looked completely ridiculous to the neighbors!
DeleteI'm a bit confused about the garbage on the streets. Is there no pick up for those things and people are just throwing crap onto the sidewalk? And if they are, can't they just call the council to have it hauled away?
ReplyDeleteI think I know the answer: people toss their trash on the streets for someone else to remove?
Apparently people in flats above shops on commercial streets do not have bins. I have no idea why this is, but they are told to put their garbage on the sidewalk at a certain day and time for collection. Of course they ignore the days and times and dump everything at any hour, and then the bags get torn open by animals and soon there's a big mess.
DeletePeople are supposed to arrange collection of larger items, like furniture, with the council. But there's a modest fee, and of course people don't want to pay it, so they surreptitiously dump that stuff on the sidewalk too.
You are a very dedicated plant rescuer!
ReplyDeleteI remember how people in London just dumped stuff on the kerbs any time, entire bedrooms suites and such like.
You'd be persecuted here by the neighbours if you do that outside the assigned days (four times a year).
If memory serves me, you can trim the yucca at the top - discretely - and so preventing it from growing too high. The bigger pot will probably encourage more roots and thus growth, so maybe keep the top down a bit.
It's ridiculous, the quantity of stuff that gets dumped on sidewalks. It drives me nuts. Yeah, I've heard yuccas can be cut back, and I suppose we'll have to do it eventually.
DeleteThat's the kind of struggle I had with my ficus, a two person deal. Son and self pulling till it came out and one of us sat down suddenly, buried in foliage.
ReplyDeleteHa! Ficuses have really strong root systems. In some places they can uproot sidewalks.
DeleteYour garden looks so lush in that re-potting photo, Steve, with Olga lounging on her grand estate!
ReplyDeleteShe does love "her" garden!
DeleteI've broken more than one pot trying to get a plant out of it. It's not an easy task. Good for you and Dave for getting it done.
ReplyDeleteSometimes it's the only option!
DeleteWhen you said 'you went around the edge' I read that as you went around the hedge, and I had this vision of Dave pulling the tree (and by extension) you all around the garden, which made me giggle. And yes. I have had only two sips of coffee.
ReplyDeleteHa! No, we weren't THAT insane.
DeleteI've had the same problem when trying to repot something that would not come out! that yucca needs a much bigger pot that the one you put it in and if you but the tall stalks it will come out again with probably more than one new growth. the leaves on Manny two may be too far gone to revive so you'll have to wait for new growth.
ReplyDeletecuriously, I was having a dream this morning that I was at a nursery looking for three specific plants which either they did not have or the ones they had were too big and scrawny but I saw a tub with weird little tuberous stems in water; pink, white, and a tiny blue version, and the label said colchicum and I picked one of each to buy. as I was waking I was trying to remember colchicum and once awake I remembered that you mention them in your garden. I looked them up and, naked ladies. I've been wanting some of those. I guess I'll have to visit a nursery.
The new pot is bigger than it looks. Any larger and it would need to be a barrel -- and we don't want to encourage TOO much growth. Manny seems to be bouncing back! We don't have colchicums in our garden but I have photographed them out and about. They're also known as autumn crocuses.
Deletenot you. hmmm. must have been Joanne at Cup On The Bus.
DeleteYou're doing pretty well with back New Yorker issues. That one on Kenya was only a few weeks old. But, oh my lord - what's wrong with people? That article was horrifying.
ReplyDeleteI feel like I'm so far behind! Yes, it WAS horrifying.
DeleteIt's raining here in Chicago too. I just popped over to the Abbey Road site and I see it has stopped now and there were crazies stopping traffic for photos as usual.
ReplyDeleteIt was interesting to read that you have stayed at the Palmer House. For me and my museum attraction, it's a perfect location. I had no idea it was so big! I could get lost in the hallways.
I do remember that it's an immense hotel!
DeleteExcellent labeling! And good, tough work on Manny and the yucca (which sounds like a pretty yucky job.) I'm getting quite the mental visual of Dave pulling you and Yucca across the yard. Something very primal about that. On another note, I have London dates and hopefully we can connect while we're at Swiss Cottage. That would be great fun. I have your email so will send one off soon with dates.
ReplyDeleteYes! I would love to meet up with you. Definitely let me know when you have details!
DeletePlants require a lot of maintenance. I think I told you that I had plants in my classroom-42 according to one kid. Sometimes I got help with maintenance and trimming?
ReplyDeleteI didn't know you had THAT many! I think that's even more than we have in our house.
DeleteBut Olga WAS a big help! She provided silent encouragement without getting in the way!
ReplyDeleteHa! The cheering section. (Or sleeping section, more like.)
DeleteThat plant transfer sounds like a back issue waiting to happen--for me anyway. I have to be careful now not to bend over too suddenly or do too much yardwork in one day. Yesterday I trimmed, watered and mowed and that was a bit much. (lots of bending, twisting and stretching) Those who belong to cults seek them out (in my opinion) because they want to belong somewhere; they have a lack of security or confidence, thus the need for that connection, unhealthy though it might be.
ReplyDeleteI did feel very sore the next day, but mostly in my hands. Fortunately my back was fine!
DeleteMy back hurts just reading about all that hard work! Although I'm sorry, I laughed at the image of Dave dragging you around.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad that you're such a good citizen - even if it was for selfish reasons it benefits everyone.
It does make me feel better looking at the swept-up corner now!
DeleteAt least Olga knows how to spend the weekend!
ReplyDeleteThe same way she spends the weekdays!
DeleteGetting the Yucca transplanted was a huge project. You were lucky not to have to break the pot to remove the Yucca.
ReplyDeletePeople in cults are searching to fill a void in their own lives.
I also have no ability for blind devotion to anything.
I just can't imagine feeling that much of a void.
DeleteYuccas can be enormous. People plant them in their yards in Tucson, and they're huge!
ReplyDeleteYeah, we had one in Florida and it was as tall as the roof. I'm not sure this is the same species -- our Florida yucca had stiff, spiky leaves, but this one has floppier leaves.
DeleteI'm not a fan of yuccas but I don't mind at all if other people have them.
ReplyDeleteWatch out for kids named Steve who try to claim the airpods.
I think yuccas look nice but they are awfully vigorous. As for another Steve, fortunately that's not a common childhood name anymore!
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