Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Stinky Plant!







About a month or so ago there was a 'big stink' on the news, in the newspaper and so on about a plant growing in a greenhouse at the Huntington Library & Botanic Gardens in San Marino called a "Corpse Flower". There was also one at the Cal State Fullerton Arboretum a few years ago but I understand that the plant died due to someone over watering it! While I was still living in Utah, I think I heard that they also had one at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.

These are unique plants that are pollinated by flies and other insects that are attracted to dead meat...so they smell like rotten meat! The big attraction to these plants is that they are very large, and if I'm not mistaken, the flower stalks are about 4 or 5 feet tall! It's funny to watch the news footage on TV because people actually come to see this phenomenon knowing that the plant is going to smell like rotten meat, but when they pass by the plant, they make ugly faces and hold their noses like it is a surprise to them!

When I was still in High School and living in Logan, Utah, one of the favorite stops on the way home from school, was to stop by the Woolworth's store on Main Street. Usually it was to buy candy to eat on the way home, but I always wanted to look at the tropical fish that they sold and also to look in the plant section to see if there was anything new or interesting.

One day I was surprised to find a display of what looked like some sort of a 'bulb' like plant, called a "Voodoo Lilly". I don't remember how much they cost, but being Woolworth's they couldn't have been more than a quarter or 50 cents so I purchased one and took it home. It was sealed in a little plastic bag with a paper label at the top with a photo showing what looked like a little palm tree growing out of the bulb structure. I believe it was labeled with the name Arum cornutum, but is now known as Typhonium venosum. How exciting it was to find such an unusual plant to grow! I can still remember how I hurried home to find a flower pot to plant my treasure in and then placed it in the window over the kitchen sink so it would get some nice morning sun.

As the days passed on I watched every day in anticipation of a new sprout popping out of the bulb. I wasn't dissappointed for very long as in just a week or 10 days, this little greenish/purplish stem started to grow out of the bulb. It was sooooo exciting to see this unusual plant begin to grow!

It grew faily fast, reaching a height of about a foot in just a few short days. It then proceeded to send out a ring of foliage around the top and looked like a little palm tree! The stem or 'trunk' was colored sort of an olive green with purple splotches all along it. It made a very attractive plant sitting in the window above the sink, and all of my family commented on what an unusual plant it was!


I don't remember how long it stayed in the 'palm tree' mode, but at some point I think that around the base of the plant, a new structure started to come up and as it grew, I think the 'palm' like part of the plant started to collapse and die off. The new part that grew up was all dark purple, and looked to be somewhat vase shaped. It also had a central stalk growing up through the middle of the vase. I was in absolute extasy with this marvelous plant that was doing so many unusual things that we didn't expect! This was almost better than Christmas Morning it was so exciting!

One morning I woke up and went into the kitchen and my Mother was very busy up on a stepstool cleaning out the cupboards above the stove. I noticed a faint odor of something spoiled in the air. When I asked my Mother what she was doing, she told me that when she came into the kitchen it smelled strongly of what she thought might be a dead mouse, and that it was probably in one of the cupboards. I noticed that the doors and windows were open to let the fresh air in. About that time my younger brother came into the kitchen and I saw his nose crinkle as he picked up on the fetid smell also. As he went to the kitchen sink to get a glass of water, he commented that he thought the smell was stronger near the sink, and then announced that he thought it was coming from MY remarkable plant! Mother got down from the stool and came over and put her nose in the middle of the plant and disgustingly announced that he was right....THE PLANT DID STINK! I just couldn't believe it, my beautiful plant, my unusual plant that everyone commented on and liked so well just couldn't be putting out that horrible smell! Mother pushed the plant in my direction motioning for me to take a whiff, and I did! What a horrible smell...exactly like a dead animal!

Well, needless to say, my wonderful plant was banned to the outdoors, in fact way out to the far side of the back yard so there would be no chance of the awful smell to find it's way back into the house. Along with that came a stern warning from Mother to never, and she emphasized NEVER to bring a strange plant home again!

I did though....while in college, I found some Fritillaria lilies that I planted in the yard. I had just seen how pretty they were and so I planted some not knowing that they too have an objectionable smell to them....but that will be a story for another time!

Have a good day, and thanks for visiting my blog!

Ron, the Plant Man


Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Another kind of 'Bird' Story

On Labor Day, most of the family (our kids and grand children) came over for some burgers and hot dogs cooked on the grill, along with Bonnie's delicious potato salad and baked beans.

On the Saturday before the holiday, I was cleaning off the patio and table and chairs a little bit when I noticed that the orange tree looked a little dusty so I proceeded to hose it off just to make it look better. I noticed something moving near the tree but didn't pay much attention to it until a few minutes later when I was closer to the tree and I saw two baby Mourning Doves huddled on the top of the block wall fence that surrounds the yard. They must have been in a nest in the orange tree and my squirting the tree chased them out of the nest!

As the hours and the day went on, the baby Doves seemed perfectly content to sit on the top of the block wall. Mom returned to feed them and didn't seem to be bothered by the fact that they were away from the nest. Throughout the day I noticed that the baby Doves would move along the top of the wall so they could bask in the warm sunshine as the sun moved through the sky.

That evening we were sitting in the living room watching TV with the French doors open to let the cool air into the house when all of a sudden we heard a fluttering noise come into the house. I was half asleep, but Bonnie said that something had come into the house, and Allie, our dog had jumped up and gone to see what it was. About that time something fluttered over our heads and landed on the floor across the room from us...it was one of the baby Doves trying out it's wings! Allie proceeded to chase it and I was trying to call her off and catch the baby Dove before it flew into the wall and hurt itself. After several attempts I was able to catch it and took it outside and set it back up on the top of the wall. I checked on it a few times throughout the evening and it was still there, although the second baby Dove was nowhere in sight.

The next morning I checked on the baby Dove and there they were, both babies sitting next to each other on the fence and I could hear the mother Dove cooing softly away nearby.

They stayed around for about a week and didn't seem to mind when I was working around them in the yard. The mother also didn't mind my presence and she continued to tend to them while I worked in the area. During the night they must have hopped up into the branches of the orange tree as when I would look for them, they were never sitting on the top of the wall after it got dark.

All who came on Labor Day got to see the babies sitting on the wall, and even when Mom came to feed them, a few who were paying attention to them got to see how she would regurgitate the food into their waiting mouths!

It was good to see that our backyard is still a haven for other birds besides the ever present Hummers that are constantly at the feeders hanging out there!

Have a good day, and thanks for reading my posts!

Ron, the Plant Man

Monday, September 14, 2009

The Birth of A Hummingbird



Two links to photos of hummingbird nests, eggs, and the baby Hummers hatching out and then growing to the point of them leaving the nests. Absolutely amazing!

http://community-2.webtv.net/Velpics/HUM/

htpp://community.webtv.net/hotmail.com/verle33/HummingBirdNest

Many thanks to a friend named David, who so kindly found these wonderful links and sent them to me. David is a classmate of my wife, Bonnie, and with whom we are going to travel across country to Alabama, to attend their 45th High School Reunion this year. Thank you David, the photos are absolutely beautiful!

I hope my readers enjoy these links as much as I did!

Ron, the Plant Man

Friday, September 11, 2009

Remembering 9-11

As many of you already know, Bonnie and I had the privilege to go to New York last summer and visit the site where the World Trade Center once stood. What an emotional 2 days it was to walk around the area and still be able to see the massive destruction that had taken place 8 years ago. Our tour guide informed us that even though it is not news anymore, they were still finding pockets of human remains as they are preparing the site for the future monuments to this tragic event. Only a couple of the 11 buildings that were destroyed have been re-built, and in them are beautiful monuments to employees that were killed on that day. Some have some very intricate messages in twined in the construction. One company lost 11 employees and they have a monument that includes a reflecting pool where 11 drops of water fall into he pool every hour to represent the 11 employees. I walked around for hours with tears streaming down my cheeks as I learned of the brave and the innocent people who lost their lives that day. Also little known by most people is that the area is surrounded by many apartment buildings containing thousands of apartments and all of these people who lived there were evacuated from their living quarters...some for as long as 2 or 3 years after all of this happened, and for the most part were not allowed to return to collect any of their belongings, photographs, legal documents, etc. until it could be determined that the buildings were considered to be safe from any damage. Imagine how torn apart their lives were for many months and years!

I hope and pray that we as Americans never forget this day! GOD BLESS AMERICA....WE SURELY NEED IT! Please take the time to carefully go through the photographic collections at the links below and remember the tragic events of that day 8 years ago. And after you do, say a prayer and thank God that you weren't one of those who had to experience this tragedy first hand.

http://www.gcfl.net/911/heroes.php
and
http://www.gcfl.net/911/remember911.php

Ron, the Plant Man