Monday, February 24, 2025

Walking through the collapse at Jungle Music

During our trip to San Diego last month a friend recommended Jungle Music as a possible nursery visit. A quick look online wasn't confidence building (what a horrid website) and I learned they were in the middle of moving locations. However we had time, and so we stopped by...

Burly men were loading plants in trucks (above), while large pots were grouped nearby waiting their turn. 

I wondered if we hadn't made a mistake and should just get back in the car and head on to the next stop.

But I do love wandering through a decrepit greenhouse, wondering what I might find.

Especially when (as I soon discovered) there were still a lot of plants!
Blushing bromeliads.


Elegant Asplenium nidus...

And platycerium... (to call out a few)





The further in I went, the more things started to fall apart.



Wowsa!

I think these are Tillandsia secunda.






At some point Andrew and I crossed paths, after roaming on own for awhile. The former factory manager in him was horrified. How do they even know what they have here? 





Check out that spore-laden pyrrosia...

Everything was covered in spore.

In a couple places the ceiling trusses were collapsing.



I actually did find someone to ask the price on a couple of things (a bromeliad and tillandsia), thinking maybe they'd cut a deal so they wouldn't have to move the plants. Ha, no. The prices were higher than I expected, even at a nursery that wasn't falling down around me. It was terribly fun to wander though, for that I am grateful.

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All material © 2009-2025 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.

Friday, February 21, 2025

Greenhouse fun continues; Raintree Tropical and a bonus drive-by garden

Knowing I'd need a winter "pick me up" (yes, even after a visit to San Diego), I planned an outing to Raintree Tropical with friends Tim and Evan. This nursery is south of Portland, in Silverton, and features a nice warm indoor plant shopping experience (earlier visits here and here).
This palm was completely enclosed in a tall plastic protective structure during my last visit, but that visit was right after a record breaking period of cold last January. This winter had been quite mild when we visited on February 1st. 

Raintree is known for their palms, so it's only fitting they've got them planted all around the property.


Okay, let's go inside...

I miss my Pseudopanax 'Sabre', it was a good looking plant (winter death).

P. 'Sabre' with friends...

Ensete ventricosum 'Maurelii' (I might need to plant one of these again this summer).

Mangave some somebody...

Graptopetalum?

A nice sized Dicksonia antarctica.

The upper part of this cycad is shown in the next photo, I was rather taken with the base however, it was so mossy spectacular. 

Plant chaos of the best sort.

Adiantum hispidulum

Pteris vittata (a big container with a label even, $40).

I've bought so many Pyrrosia linqua here that I wasn't even tempted by these. Okay, maybe just a little...

This however... I was on the hunt for some underappreciated Phlebodium aureum.

Check out the climbing nepenthes...

An excellent Phlebodium aureum, but it was rooted into another much larger pot.

If you forget to look up in a place like this then you'll miss quite a lot.

Layers and layers of plants.

Abutilon 'Tiger Eye'

I loved this gorgeous creature.

Ditto for this one.

This one kind of gives me the creeps though.

One last glance before I pay for my purchases...

They're all weeds! Mine are the five greenhouse weeds (so called by the fellow who took my money); three containers of Pteris vittata (on the left) and two of Phlebodium aureum (on the right), he was so happy to see me taking the weeds away that he charged me weedy prices! The two containers at the top of the photo are Evan's purchases.

And here are Tim's a palm (I neglected to ask him what it was) and that terribly cute cactus.

Just a few more photos in this twofer post. Enroute to Raintree Tropical, Tim and I drove by by this Silverton garden that I've written about in the past (here). 

I hadn't been back by since I took photos for that post in 2022.

Everything was looking great, although the ginormous Agave ovatifolia that originally caught my eye driving by (back in 2022) is gone, it bloomed (I think that happened last summer? Doug mentioned it in a comment he left on a post). 

I spy a replacement agave, behind the rock, in front of the monkey puzzle tree (Araucaria araucana).

Thankfully the garden is not A. ovatifolia free, this big guy is still looking pristine.

As are the plants the large steel planter.

It was great to see this garden again after a few years! (love the saxifrage)

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All material © 2009-2025 by Loree L Bohl. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited and just plain rude.