Friday, April 10, 2026

My Hortlandia 2026 Spring Fling plant haul

As you might imagine, the 4-day Hortlandia 2026 Spring Fling extravaganza I wrote about on Wednesday meant I ended up with some new plants. It was inevitable! First the plants from friends; Gerhard brought this spiky Agave pintilla, which he grew from seed.

Also from Gerhard, Hechtia stenopetala.

From Max I received a Vriesea fosteriana ‘Red Chestnut’ cutting...

As well as a collection of tillandsia from his and Justin's garden. I guess I said no to a couple of these when I was there last spring, but back then I was bringing them home in my own (very full) suitcase, this time they came with Max... I love them! (Max told me the names, but like Sempervivum I just don't track the names of Tillandsia)

Caleb claimed he was bored with his Pleopeltis lepidopteris 'Morro dos Conventos' and so he passed it along to me. Wow.  

He also gave me a Salvia discolor. I haven't found this fabulous plant available in these parts for quite awhile, I am thrilled to be growing it again.

From Xera Plants I bought another Epimedium wushanense. I remember when this plant was hard to find and rather expensive. 

On to Little Prince. Here the group (L to R: Max, Gerhard, Ann, and Mike) are fern gazing. A completely respectable pastime.

Onoclea sensibilis is a fabulous fern. I didn't bring any home, I already have several.

That dark outline on the new fronds... fantastic!

Pinguicula, pings, butterwort. LPO grows a fine selection of these carnivorous plants. This one, with it's bizarre coloration, is P. cyclosecta. I came home with a couple (wish me luck keeping them alive).

Because we were touring Little Prince with my begonia obsessed friend Ann, we were sure to pause and admire the colorful begonia mounds...



Little Prince has a few Semponium available (a cross between Sempervivum and Aeonium, thought to be hardier than just straight Aeonium). I grew a few last year (thanks to LPO) and they did quite well, that is until a bunny decided to much them back to the roots.

There were Aeonium too!

And Saxifrage...

So as usual the generosity of my LPO friends was phenomenal. I came home with many gift plants. Lots of ferns (Pyrrosia linqua, P. linqua 'Undulata', P.  lingua 'Cristata', assorted Blechnum), a Martagon Lily ('Sunny Morning'), and the "maybe" hardy Begonia 'Harvest Moon'...

...a flat of mixed hardy succulent "plant poppers"...

...and a few of those Semponium (S. 'Sienna' and S. 'Destiny') and Aeonium 'Wheels of Captivation'.

Other LPO plant treasures included a sexy Saxifraga 'Black Ruby'...

Pellaea atropurpurea

Osmunda lancea

And Athyrium x 'Ghost'.

On to Hortlandia! Here's my rather subdued haul...

From Dancing Oaks Nursery, Podophyllum chengii 'Hunan'. My Podophyllum collection has really captured my attention this spring so why not add another to the mix?

Also from DO, a ginger; Asarum delavayi.

Smart nurserymen they are, there was a blooming plant on hand (NFS) that helped sell the non-blooming plants. Maybe mine will have this bloom next year?

Also from the Dancing Oaks booth, I had to grab one of these bumper stickers (no stickers on my car though, it will live in the garage where my plant tools and supplies are).

You probably spotted a strawberry in the mix and thought, what?!? Yep. this was a freebie from the owner of Broken Gate Farm, we got to chatting (I complemented him on his great booth, but noted the lack of signage... and it turns out not much of a website either) and he gave me this Albion strawberry, which sounds like a real winner.

Here's where he's selling this spring if you're curious.

At the far right of the Hortlandia haul photo (and hidden by the strawberry), Saxifraga 'Whitehill'. One can never have too many saxifrage...

One last Hortlandia plant, Rhipsalis pentaptera. Fun times, lots of new plants!

The Bit at the End
My friend Emily Joseph (Assistant Nursery & Retail Sales Manager at the Rhododendron Species Botanical Garden) recently penned a fabulous post for the RSBG called "Why williamsianum?". In it she looks closer at Rhododendron williamsianum, a plant some might dismiss as "common" but I happen to think is rather spectacular (I have three).

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Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Our Hortlandia 2026 Spring Fling...

When my friend Gerhard made plans to come up for the annual HPSO Hortlandia plant sale this spring I figured it would be a great excuse to plan a couple garden visits. Then Max (of this garden) said he was thinking of coming up. From there it snowballed and I ended up planning a "Hortlandia Spring Fling" over four days, April 2nd to the 5th...

Over the four days (depending on the day, time, and location) the group expanded and/or contracted from just the three of us (myself, Gerhard and Max) to include thirteen other fabulous plant people, including: Ann Amato, David Neumaier, Judith and Darren (friends of Max), Steven Garcia, Jerry Weiland, Marcia Donahue, Caleb Melchior, Ernie and Marietta O’Byrne, Jeffrey Bale, Riz Reyes, and Jason Chen

In addition to attending the epic plant sale that is Hortlandia, we visited four nurseries: Xera Plants (where I photographed that container above with the Selaginella), Little Prince of Oregon (wholesale, not open to the public), Blooming Junction, and Cistus Nursery. Here's the group at Little Prince, from left to right: Mike Hicks (Production Manager at LPO) Gerhard, Ann, and Max. Little Prince was our second stop of the long weekend, we kicked things off at Xera.

Even though it was only April 2nd, the Gunnera at Little Prince were already up and starting to look fierce.

The bulk of our time (and mileage) was spent touring local gardens. We saw ten total: James Andrew Gould, Dairy Creek Meadows, McMenamins Cornelius Pass Roadhouse, Jeffrey Bale, Bella Madrona, Kuzma/Halme, Hogan/Pew, my garden, Heather Tucker, and Felony Flats. Here are a few photos to give you an idea of what we saw...

Friday morning we started at James Andrew Gould's garden. Left to right here are: James, Gerhard, David and Max. I appreciate David wearing blue to coordinate with Portland's obnoxiously bright recycling containers which were curbside that morning.

James has a couple spectacular Echium that are fixing to bloom this spring.

And a freaky cool Arisaema sikokianum already in bloom.

Next stop, Dairy Creek Meadows, where there were Trillium blooming.

When I started asking around about the possibility of bringing a group of (mostly Bay Area) gardeners to tour Portland gardens at the beginning of April, I was pretty sure I'd hear NO. But you know what, not one person said no, even though it was really early in our gardening year (yes those Californian's said more than once that it still felt like winter at times, even though our weather was rather spectacular over the weekend). Here's the group in the meadow garden at Dairy Creek, which was largely still sleeping. Of course there were plenty of other things to see out there.


Marcia Donahue beads along with mossy, ferny goodness.
After a leisurely walk around Dairy Creek, we stopped at Blooming Junction nursery where I couldn't help but photograph the agaves in their display garden. I think this is an Agave parryi, joined by the chartreuse bracts of a Euphorbia wulfenii.

Their epic row of Agave ovatifolia 'Frosty Blue', showing no signs of blooming (thank god).

And another Agave parryi, I believe.

Lunch that afternoon was at McMenamins Cornelius Pass Roadhouse, it was near where Hortlandia took place and there was a garden to walk after we ate (not that I remembered to take many photos).


I'll share any photos I took at Hortlandia (not many) in my next post, when I document my weekend's plant haul, so now we're skipping right to Saturday morning when we visited Jeffrey Bale's garden. Jeffrey is a mosaic artist, this work at the bottom of the steps up to his home are his own eyes, watching, reproduced in rock.
While in Jeffrey's garden these amazing garden icons kindly posed for a photo, left to right: Marcia Donahue, Marietta and Ernie O’Byrne, and Jeffrey Bale.

Max and Jerry, with Jeffrey's bananas (Musa basjoo) in the background.

A detail from Jeffrey's garden (I'll share more in a future post).

After finishing up at Jeffrey's we headed down to Bella Madrona where I got in some pug lovin. Caper and Olive were there to great us.

They're both getting up there in years so they stayed inside while we wandered the garden with Geof Beasley. I used the bathroom in the house and snapped this shot of them keeping an eye on things through the screen door.

Out in the garden... (the weather was amazing!)

Caleb, Jerry, Geof and Max.

Next stop, the Kuzma/Halme garden. John and Kathleen were out of town, but kindly let us stop and walk the garden anyway. The winter covers I recently wrote about were all taken down and the plants were basking in the warm sunshine.

I wanted to hug the tree ferns, they were so fuzzy.

We ended Saturday out on Sauvie Island at Cistus Nursery and Rancho Cistus, the garden of Sean Hogan and Preston Pew.

I was pretty exhausted by then so spent quite awhile sitting and soaking up the view of their crevice garden.


On Sunday morning some of the gang showed up at my garden, where we had a casual walkabout, or make that a lay about if you're Jerry (thanks to Jason, aka @grevillea01 for sharing this photo with me).

After my garden we then headed over to Heather's garden, which was looking spiky-fantastic!

Gerhard said he'd seen this bent spike thing on other tissue cultured agaves.

The front garden view, facing the opposite direction.

The final stop on our Hortlandia Weekend Spring Fling was at Felony Flats Botanical Garden, belonging to Eric Peterson and Robert Brigham. Everyone was suitably impressed by Eric's labor of love, the amazing conservatory/greenhouse.

In case you're wondering the big agave from the Epic Agave Rescue didn't make it. But the smaller one lives on, that's it in the container.

So that's the weekend! It was a lot and many wonderful memories were made. A big thank you to everyone who opened their garden for the group. Plant people are the best! I'll definitely have future posts sharing more of the great gardens we toured, and yes, on Friday I'll share the plant haul.

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