Seven Things (Plus some extra fun things at the end)

I’ve been tagged for a meme. I don’t typically do memes and i know this makes me a terrible meme not doer, but I swear my reasons aren’t bitchy, just awkward.

For example, this current meme requires that I list seven random things about myself. Dear god, the pressure! On the one hand, I do an awful lot of writing that is connected to personal experience, yet there is something about the invitation to, “Write seven random things about yourself” that seems impossible and draws a big blank. I’m growing tense just sitting here writing the prelude to the writing of the seven things I am yet to decide on.

Since I’ve been tagged for this particular meme twice, I’m stepping up to the plate and doing it. Alexa of Invisible Bees has more guts than me and did the meme as intended but with a gardening spin. Genevieve of North Coast Gardening altered the meme and wrote hers as a list of seven articles she has enjoyed in the last year.

Apparently, the seven things can be any seven things, but in keeping with this site I’ve decided to make it seven plants I love. This is of course a difficult topic because it is almost impossible to pick favourites in the garden world and my tastes and interests change constantly. So I’ve decided to try and just keep it with where I am right now. Today. This minute. And I’ve cut food plants out as a possibility to force me to talk about some favourite plants that often go without much fan fair.

Here we go. [Which as of today was started over a week ago. So clearly I have a huge block around memes and picking favourites. For real this time! Doing it…]

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved

Agave outside Big Red Sun in Austin, Texas.

  1. AGAVE

    Agaves are a long term favourite. Ours is a love that could never die. Thinking back, the interest really took off on our second trip to Oaxaca, Mexico in the spring of 2000. We had been to the coast of Oaxaca the previous year where there were many majestic agaves, but NOTHING like what I saw in the interior. It is there that I learned of the importance of agave to the Mexican people and its many ethnobotanic uses. I eventually wrote an article about this, and while I never did write the part 2, my fascination with them has not disappeared.

    As a gardener and a writer, I have focused more and more on food over the years, but when I think about it I can see that this interest stems from the fact that I am actually more generally interested in ethnobotany as a whole. Food and eating is only one large (and very integral) part of the overall connection between human history and the ways we use plants for survival.

    Despite my love for agaves, I was only able to see them in bloom (up close) for the first time two years ago on our first trip to Cuba.

    My new friend Barry is an agave collector. Meeting him and his collection has rekindled my interest in the plants specifically, beyond their socio/cultural usage. I’ve acquired two new plants this summer, Barry just gave me a third, and I have my eye on a forth spineless type. There are so many incredible agaves out there, one could devote themselves entirely to this genus without getting bored. Unfortunately, this type of devotion requires more space than I can provide as they grow awfully big and the spines are horrible when they stick you.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
Drosera spathulata

  1. SUNDEW

    Now here’s a plant whose size I can accommodate in the tiniest sliver of space. They may be small, but sundews (drosera) are infinitely fascinating plants that are both cute and slightly evil at once. I currently have three living in a small aquarium alongside several other equally fascinating (well, nearly) carnivorous plants.

    See more: Drosera adelae, Drosera spathulata, another sundew, cape sundew

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
Oxalis ‘Burgundy Bliss’

  1. OXALIS

    This is a new interest that had its start in the spring of 2008 when I found myself digging up clovers to put in little containers. Hmmm… or perhaps it has its start in childhood when I went through a brief but rabid four-leaf clover phase, spending hours at recesses and after school searching the lawns for four leaf clovers that I would then laminate between pieces of scotch tape.

    This past spring I bought two oxalis plants and one clover at the annual Parkdale Horticultural Society Plant Sale, making my new plant love official. And then I bought another, very vibrant burgundy one over the summer. To be clear, oxalis and clovers (Trifolium) are not the same thing; they do however look similar, hence the connection. Most oxalis plants are not hardy to the cold in my part of the world, while many clovers, being in the pea family, are. So far I am focused on oxalis with small leaves that look more like vibrantly coloured clovers and am not very interested in the larger-leaved plants. We’ll see where this goes. Hopefully not too far since I am already burdened with three plants to overwinter indoors.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
Epiphytic cactus growing down a tree trunk in Guama, Cuba

  1. EPIPHYTIC CACTUS

    Here’s another big category that I am fascinated by. In truth, this interest extends to all epiphytic (air) plants, but I find the idea of cactus that grow in trees particularly strange. What a marvel! I currently have three plants in my home but long for the space to house a really huge pencil cactus. Someday.

    I was very fortunate to finally see one growing on a tree this past year on our last trip to Cuba. We took a horseback trip (also a first which I will NEVER do again) into the mountains to visit a waterfall. The waterfall was nice enough, but it was the plant life that inspired me. I saw many average house plants growing in the wild, up along rock walls and creating thick brush along the edge of the forest. In that environment they seemed anything but average. Tillandsia (another epiphytic plant) filled a tree, but I’ve actually seen so many of those now in the wild that it is starting to become more common place (although never losing its appeal. I still cry like a baby when I see them). The real highlight was a tiny ephiphytic cactus snaking up the trunk of a tree. I’m sure my fellow horseback riding comrades were perplexed by what I was looking at so intently on that tree trunk, but I know y’all will understand [See photo above].

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
‘Yvonne Decelles’

  1. AFRICAN VIOLETS

    Here’s one you didn’t see coming. It still surprises me some days. I got into them in my first year of university and I know I had had some of them at least a year by that point (that made me 18 years old at the time. Take that “The kids don’t garden naysayers!!”) but I don’t recall actually buying them. Back then I worked at a dollar store in a mall and I often passed through a Woolworth on my way to my job. The Woolworth had an every-changing display of houseplants along that path, which inevitably lead me to take several home to my new apartment. I am fairly certain that the African violets were among the plants purchased there. I also got a few plants from my grade 13 biology teacher, so that’s another possibility.

    Needless to say, true love came to blossom (literally and figuratively) during the year I spent living in a very sunny and warm dorm room. My room was up on the 14th floor and a corner room that was literally wall-to-wall window. The environment was perfect for my African violets and they flourished there. Naturally, success with a plant was a big ego boost that fueled my desire to grow more. I’ve acquired several plants over the years and am most fond of the most ostentatious and outrageous varieties with ruffled leaves, double, ruffled flowers, and crazy variegation. All of my favourites were acquired as leaf cuttings bought from the Toronto Gesneriad Society booth at the CNE that I rooted and propagated myself. I should just break down and join the club, shouldn’t I?

    I also have a special fondness for dwarf varieties that are tiny enough to sit in the palm of your hand. I bought two on a recent trip to Montreal and they were only 2 bucks each! That’s the other stellar thing about African violets: they’re CHEAP.

    To date, my current count is 8. I’d have more but missed the Gesneriad Society table at this year’s CNE. Yes, I actively sought it out and was disappointed to have missed it. And I’m just going to put this out there, but it’s also a personal dream to enter a contest. I know my plants would never win because I’m not cut out for that kind of anal retentive devotion to form (my plants are a rag-tag mess by their standards), but it would be a great excuse to wear a giant soap opera style hat!

    See More: Growing African Violets from Leaves, ‘Yvonne Decelles’

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
Geranium phaeum ‘Samobor’

  1. GERANIUMS

    Here’s another that took me by surprise. I grew up with your typical red flower geranium. They were everywhere in my neighbourhood where there were gardens, probably because they practically grow themselves, are super cheap, and the kids often sold them as fund-raising items for softball teams and the like. As a result, I grew up with an extreme distaste for geraniums, believing in my mind that they represented the entire scope of the geranium world. That sad thing with a big red pom pom flower on top was a geranium. The end.

    Then, in 1997 I went to San Francisco for the first time and was BLOWN AWAY. That same red flower geranium grew into a wild, tentacled monster in a temperate climate. Not so bad after all.

    Eventually, I came to know that there were lots of other geraniums out there that are true geraniums and not tender pelargoniums like the red-leaved kind I knew. Some are dainty, yet hardy little things, and some grow wild and gnarled if you let them and produce the most amazing pine smell when you brush against their foliage.

    Then later, I got over my bias in a new way and came to appreciate scented pelargoniums aka scented geraniums, the nicer smelling siblings of that original red flower type. I’ve come to grow many over the years and am currently in love with a curly-leaved, variegated variety called ‘Prince Rupert’ that I picked up at a nursery sale for $1.99! It smells like lemons. We’re going to be good friends, I think.

Photo by Gayla Trail  All Rights Reserved
Begonia sutherlandii

  1. BEGONIAS

    This began as a plants I like list and has evolved into a plants even I am surprised are on my list, list. I’ve said it before, but I’ll say it again, I didn’t like begonias. In fact, I had some pretty mean things to say about them that should only be reserved for cacti with straw flowers glued onto them. And even that isn’t the plants’ fault but simple human crassness.

    Somewhere along the way, in what is a running theme, I checked my biases, humbly admitted that I didn’t know jack, was making some cocky, pompous assumptions without a proper education, and changed my mind.

    And now look at me: I’m growing begonias! And I’m really excited about trying to grow my own from bulbils harvested from the orange Begonia Sutherlandii plant above. There are still a lot of begonias that give me the dry heaves, but of those I do like, Wow.

PARTICIPATION

Look at you, making it all the way down here to the end. I feel like I lived an entire lifetime while writing this so I can only imagine what it felt like to read it.

Now comes the second part of the meme, wherein I am asked to share seven blogs I like. I equally hate doing this sort of thing because seven is a very finite number that inevitably leads to leaving someone out. Or worse still, I tag seven people who do not want to be tagged. So now I’ve tagged people who don’t want it, and not tagged those who do. Memes are supposed to be about spreading the love, but participating in them often feels like stepping onto a giant landmine of potential social failure.

So for that reason I’ve decided to open this up to everyone. Go over to your internet website and do the seven questions thing, if you feel so inclined. Come back here and link to it in the comments. If you don’t have a website, just write your seven things in the comments.

In two weeks (I’m giving you time because I know how hard these memes can be) I’ll randomly pick one from the list and send that person a copy of my first book and some buttons and magnets. Hooray!

Gayla Trail
Gayla is a writer, photographer, and former graphic designer with a background in the Fine Arts, cultural criticism, and ecology. She is the author, photographer, and designer of best-selling books on gardening, cooking, and preserving.

Subscribe to get weekly updates from Gayla

24 thoughts on “Seven Things (Plus some extra fun things at the end)

  1. Ah, thank you for that little link to African Violets. I bought two for my office, which had absolutely no light, so you can imagine how mopey they were. Like two emo teens, they were, all droopy, drab and listless. (No disrespect to emo teens intended.)

    I took them home, popped them on a sunny windowsill in the kitchen and – whoa! My two teens (affectionately called Winnie and Nelson) blossomed into go-get-em aid workers full of vim and vigour. There’s no stopping their blooms and soft velvety leaves.

    I’ve cut a few leaves to grow into plants that I can give for Christmas but I haven’t put them in vermiculite – whoops! – so I’ll have to correct that.

    I think my violets and the success I’ve had with them gave me the confidence to take the next gardening step and grow a few plants on my balcony. So, huzzah! for African Violets. I understand why you love them.

  2. i love this website. i read it all the time for inspiration. i’m also in love with oxalis. it began during an internship i had at a local botanic garden.

    i’ve never seen the small leaved variety that you have pictured here. what is it called? i would love to find in new york somewhere

    thank you for this beautiful website

  3. oh wow thats a cool post…and i agree the kids do garden! im 18 with a vege garden outside my little basement house and im starting to acquire houseplants to…i have developed an urge for orchids! :P

    here in New Zealand Oxalis is a much hated weed by many gardeners but it looks gorgeous in your picture!

  4. Chelsea: Good story. African violets: gateway plant.

    Jennifer: I was lazy and didn’t add captions with names but have since fixed that. The tag that came with that particular plant was not very good. Just said, Oxalis ‘Burgundy Bliss’

    Briar: Yes, I love that what is a scourge in one place is put in pots and given special treatment elsewhere.

  5. Epiphytic cactus!! I miss those. Worked at Selby gardens in Sarasota for a spring, and they had tons of cool cacti in the trees!

  6. Hi Gayla!
    Thanks for the challenge! I spent a lovely day reviewing this past year of gardening, going through my journal & photos & walking through the gardens in this awesome west coast fall we’ve been lucky to have.

    I’ve just starting my own garden blog, mostly as a way for my friends & family to see the transformation of a once bare-lot into a ‘tamed’ jungle, but did write up a meme for everyone to read & have a good chuckle over.

    You will find my ‘Seven Things’ at: bamfieldgreenthumb.blogspot.com

    I’m looking forward to the quiet winter months where I can spend some more time gathering more ideas & sharing them.

  7. A horticulturist friend of mine would always roll her eyes at my love of oxalis. It’s a weed, she’d say. My personal favorites are one I had with blue flowers against chartreuse foliage, and the dark purple foliage with yellow flowers. Such lovely color combinations, and so easy to grow!

  8. Susan Kelley: That blue flowered type sounds interesting. I’m going to look it up!

    Michelle: Heading over to your site now.

  9. Gayla, Yay that you did the MeMe! You’ve named a lot of my favorites here. I’m a particular fan of Droseras myself – I’m growing a staghorn sundew, plus D. adelae, D. rotundifolia, a Sarracenia and a venus flytrap. Love carnivores!

  10. i love to read about plants ,evrything with regards to botanical . i love trees ,flowering plants,garden plants especailly orchids ,rose. bougainvillae,attractive cactus,also green green grasses,like bermuda ,carabao grass so green and attractive,bomsai tress so lovable to add it more the singing birds around them , and colorful butterflies, and the buzzing bees flying all around them and i will not forget the dragon flies so pretty and colorful too.

  11. right this moment the article about the 7 plants presented i saved it on my computer . so that i could see a gain and again the beauty and the floering descriptions about the plants.

  12. When I moved into my house there were three agaves that I really have no use for, planning on swapping them at a plant swap. Funny how even boring red geraniums delight me because they’re not very common in Houston, while agave? Eh, I could take it or leave it. :-)

  13. Fascinating and surprising. In a true or false quiz guessing your favourites, I would have been lucky to score 50%. You’ve piqued my interest in all of them.

    My favourite is the oxalis. I don’t feel tempted to become a collector. I’d be satisfied with just one specimen, as long as it was ‘Burgundy Bliss’ (well named.) It’s the Daily Botanical today so I was treated to a double-dose. Yum.

    So…I decided to play along and wrote a post on the 7 things I love about my favourite autumn tree.

    Writing is hard and painful and writing a meme is doubly hard and painful.

    At the moment I’m experiencing cold feet (or cold fingers) about linking to it here….but it’s such a pretty tree, it can stand alone without my words so here it is http://greensandberries.squarespace.com/edible-balcony-garden-journal/2009/10/16/katsura-tree-in-autumn-colour-light-other-good-things.html

  14. OK, reporting to class with my homework :) Thanks for the good amount of time, Gayla… turns out I needed it. This was also my first meme, and it was hard to simply stop working on it.

    I’m excited… and a little shy about sharing my link. Maybe it’s kind of like looking in the mirror. Who am I really (as a gardener)? My current day-to-day interests tend toward succulents, but if you ask me to put together a list like this, it turns personal. It’s other plants… plants that I’ve had a long, long relationship with. I was a little surprised.

    http://saltteakandfog.blogspot.com/2009/10/7-planty-things.html

  15. I don’t have a website but here are 7 plants I love:

    1. Mint– love to make Moroccan Mint Tea (10-15 fresh mint leaves, 1 tsp of gunpowder green tea, a spoonful of sugar or honey– steep for 2 minutes)

    2. Cranberry Hibiscus is pretty AND delicious

    3. sleeping near a Bella Donna is reported to give you vivid dreams. I have had a pretty crazy dreaming experience dreaming next to this flower.

    4. Basil– especially eaten with fresh picked tomatoes

    5. various pine trees– because I grew up with them. The woods don’t smell like the woods without the scent of pine. Tamarac is my favorite.

    6. Aloe– this is my mositurizer

    7. lemongrass– it’s fun to look at, smells amazing and makes an excellent tea (put a handful in your pot of water and bring to boil)

  16. Seven things I like about my garden:

    1. It helps me get off my ass and out of the house.

    2. It’s one of my less expensive hobbies.

    3. It’s something my fiance and I can do together. And separately. And it’s something we can talk about at dinner or on car rides.

    4. The neighborhood cat has decided my garden rocks, spending a great deal of his day here. I’m one of the few in the neighborhood who not only gets to pet this cat, but he’ll come running up to me sometimes.

    5. I love that I can feed my fiance from my garden.

    6. He and I learn about biology, botany, chemistry and all sorts of sciency stuff through growing, harvesting, cooking, and storing things from our veggie-&-fruit garden.

    7. If the weather’s the least bit nice, my messy overrun, underpampered, slightly-neglected, well-loved garden is my Happy Place to be.

  17. Hi Gayla – I love your plants! Gorgeous, as always. My seven things are about How I Use My Yard:
    1. therapy – I feel incredibly better mentally after a hard day in the garden. No sitting on a couch and yapping could do more for me.
    2. entertainment – squirrel feeder + bird feeder + neighbor’s rather slow and fat cat = much better than tv. The ravens especially keep him in line.
    3. charity – I’ve expanded my garden so I can feed neighbors and food shelves, and still feed myself and family.
    4. sustenance – no better nutrition than from stuff I’ve pulled from the dirt 15 minutes before eating it.
    5. waste management – composting rocks!
    6. waist management – burning calories rocks!
    7. creativity – now how the heck am I going to thwart the bunnies this year?….

    xxoo, jenn

  18. No website, so here’s my entry. Love your site by the way. I check it a couple times a week.

    Seven things I love about fall.

    1. Leaves, leaves, leaves…to look at, to put in my compost, to mulch with.
    2. Waking up to a light frost. It looks like someone has glazed my back yard.
    3. Uncovering the paper wrapped tomatoes in the basement and savoring every last bit of these precious red jewels.
    4. Clearing out my veggie plots. By the end of summer they look pretty ragged. Cleaning them out helps me remember that spring will come again.
    5. Walking through the garden making notes about what worked, what didn’t, what needs to be moved, split, etc.
    6. Knowing that I won’t have to weed for at least 5 months.
    7. Loving the circle of the seasons, the circle of life.

  19. Ah, learning about more new plants!! Loves it – great meme :)

    I don’t have an active blog, and hope I didn’t miss the deadline (I”m right at the wire!!) but here are my 7 plants…

    1. Lemon balm – newly discovered this year, I love how easily it grows, how you can use it for everything from injuries to making iced tea to using it in salads.

    2. Zucchini – it grows like nuts here in rocky cold Newfoundland!! For a first-time gardener, it made me pretty happy.

    3. Lavender. Haven’t yet grown it, but the scent makes me so happy.

    4. Any kind of ivy really.

    5. Strawberry and raspberry plants! Yep that’s two in one…

    6. Blackberry bushes. I did a lot of blackberry picking in Newfoundland this year, lots of thorny cuts and scrapes, but somehow its more than worth it.

    7. Rose bushes that produce rosehips… yum. Full of vitamin C, good to make syrup, tea, jelly, jam with and they have more vit C than an orange does in just one teeny rosehip…

Comments are closed.