Winter Wanderings to Joshua Tree National Park

It has been many years since I traveled to the desert in winter, and I’ve been missing out.  The landscape is austere, beautiful, the sun is plentiful, and the temperatures are pleasantly warm to my cold Vermont bones.  This was a trip I was not expecting- we were traveling to LA for a wedding and had two days to kill after it. The first morning we hiked Nix Nature Center near Laguna Beach, which began and ended with 3/12 foot white sage brush, with a rich middle canyon full of  enormous prickly pear cacti of several species, many types of sagebrush, cholla cacti, and blooming shrubs of which I wish I knew more about. Reduced again to a plant novice.

There for a wedding, we had initially thought about going the city route, but at the last minute I started thinking about all of the vast and unique parks that might be within a short drive, and we charted our course for Joshua Tree National park.  Last minute rentals and relief at getting back to nature greeted us as soon as we left Topeka Canyon

The winding road from Topeka canyon through the mountains moved us quickly into high desert, and the large mountains in the distance were capped in snow.  Every valley was flat, salty and sparse. Absence of abundance seems to make each sign of life that much more special. As we wound our way through Yucca valley the distinctive Joshua trees began to appear slowly along the highway until they became the predominant large vegetation.

Entering the park is like entering a dream from 10,000 years ago

Entering the park is like entering a dream from 10,000 years ago

There is something so surreal and alien entering a Joshua Tree woodland.  Tall, twisting shapes, spread apart with large teddy bear cholla cactus and sagebrush scattered underneath them, and impossibly large red granite boulders and rock formations distributed through this surreal open valley.  Aside from the obvious large formations, the ground is sandy, and many types of rodents and reptiles make their home in the roots and holes of the tough vegetation.  


Such a brief but amazing visit makes the desire for an extended spring visit so much more appealing.  Perhaps this is the start of a new desert obsession……


Until the next installment- Much love and happy growing


Hattie

Le Jardin Botanique de Montreal

Platycerium superbum mounted on the wall in the fern room. 

Platycerium superbum mounted on the wall in the fern room. 

A magical pathway to warm winter delights at Le Jardin Botanique de Montreal at the end of January

One of my absolute favorite wintertime pilgrimages is the Botanical Gardens of Montreal.  Less than two hours by car from Burlington, VT Montreal is a surprisingly close Metropolitan area with all of the attending cultural diversity.  Food, art, music and museums we would have to travel four hours to reach in the US are close at hand north of the Canadian Border.  

Over the course of several visits over the past few years I have discovered several gems that I continue to visit regularly.  Sometimes I think that I should make it a point to do something new every time as there is so much to explore in the city, but one spot keeps me coming back, particularly in the colder months.  This gem is the Botanical Garden of Montreal and its attending exhibition greenhouse, a lush world of green and color encased in glass.  It is one of the premier Botanical gardens in the world, founded in 1931 by a local botany professor and a horticural associate, with the exhibition greenhouses opening in 1956.  With its longevity and the vast renovations of the 1980’s, the Montreal Botanical Garden contains many rare and exotic specimens in their mature state.

The exhibition greenhouse consists of a long chain of glass rooms separated by doors and all supporting different themed groupings of plants.  There is uninterrupted green, humidity and such a diverse collection that it is easy to spend a good chunk of an afternoon meandering through, and getting a heady dose of oxygen and warmth.  Each room has a different humidity and temperature setting, ideal for the winter state of each biome grouping.  Orchids, tropical plants and the edible plant room are divinely moist and warm, while the desert, bonsai and fern rooms are much cooler and austere this time of year.  It is fascinating to see which plants depend on a period of dormancy for optimum growth while others thrive in year round warmth.

The red doorway in the Hacienda Room at the Botanical Garden 

The red doorway in the Hacienda Room at the Botanical Garden 

The arid biome room has one of the most diverse collections of cacti, succulents and small trees that I have seen.  Barrel cactus, saguaro, aloes of every description, agave, and many more all stand out on the carefully raked sandy soil.  Some take many years to achieve full size, and it is a testament to the care and longevity of this world class institution that many of these cacti are so large.

 

I absolutely love this composition- prickly pear, saguaro, barrel cacti and a crown of succulents for the cattle scull.  Magnifique! 

I absolutely love this composition- prickly pear, saguaro, barrel cacti and a crown of succulents for the cattle scull.  Magnifique! 

 

Some of the other rooms in the greenhouse contain collections of succulents, ferns, begonias (I had no idea the variations in their growth forms!), and tropical fruits and spices from across the globe.  Of course my favorite room was the orchid and bromeliad room, as most of them are in their full glory in the winter months.  Some are rare cultivars and wild types, and the bromeliads join with their lush vegetation and showy flower spikes.  

Then there is the bonsai room at one of the terminal ends, with specimens ranging from 20 to 110 years old.  Most were bare, dramatic silhouettes, but a few were in the glory of their spring bloom. And the stark simplicity of the displays, joined with the soothing water garden running through the center of the room creates a peaceful feeling.  

Every time I walk through these gardens there is always something new to discover, regardless of the time of year.

Until next time!

Hattie