Saturday, July 30, 2016

A Favorite for July: Caesalpinia pulcherrima

This is one plant it's hard not to brag about.  It boasts lacy, ferny foliage (and prickles on some stems)...
...and enormous, loose clusters of mixed yellow and orange (even red) flowers accented by long, bright stamens.
With a little supplemental water, it can grow quite large, often reaching six to eight feet (1.8 m - 2.4 m) tall even in desert conditions.

This is unequivocally a hot climate plant.  It is frost sensitive and is likely to be cut down by freezing temperatures, though it has a good reputation for coming right back from the roots in mild winter gardens.  But beyond that, both its growth and bloom seem to be triggered by high temperatures and plenty of sunlight.

My young plant went into the ground in June of last year (an unusually mild June!) from a 2.5 qt pot.  It grew a little, then suffered frost burn during winter and took months to begin growing again.  Sometime during this last June it began an impressive growth spurt.  At present it is upwards of three, perhaps four, feet tall and equally wide, with a healthy showing of flowers.  I am watering it occasionally, and of course it is still a young specimen needing a little extra moisture.  It is not quite as drought-tolerant as some natives, but it certainly is an excellent low-water-use plant.  And it blooms in July, which few native plants do!

Curiously, considering how successful it is in the low desert, it seems to have originated in the West Indies.  Precisely where is apparently open to debate since it has been in cultivation time out of mind, growing throughout tropical regions; but it is uniquely associated with Barbados.

It has quite a variety of common names.  In the southeastern US I find it listed as Pride of Barbados, but here in Arizona it often goes by the name of Red Bird of Paradise.  Despite the resultant potential for confusion with Strelitzia reginae, I rather like the Bird of Paradise cognomen as the flowers are nearly always airborne, fluttering on their long stems as the breezes move through.  They are, in fact, a good source of movement in the garden, as well as brilliant color.
Tropical though it is, it could almost be called Pride of Arizona.  Why it is not grown more widely elsewhere in the subtropical and tropical US, I don't know; but it is a hallmark of southern Arizona cities, used freely in street plantings, commercial plantings, and private landscaping.  Driving east in summer on I-8, the transition from California to Arizona is the transition from ocotillo in El Centro, California, to Red Bird of Paradise in Yuma, Arizona!  In short, it is one of the first plants one sees and falls in love with here.
It certainly seemed the best July choice for the monthly Favorites theme hosted by Loree at Danger Garden.  There were other plants I would have liked to include, especially Salvia farinacea and my newish white lantana, both of which have proven very reliable for bloom during this particularly dry summer.  But I only managed to take pictures of the Caesalpinia!
Tonight's weather diary is a report in itself: Our final dust storm warning appears to have ended at last.  We have had an ample amount of dust blowing on strong winds.  The last and worst of it concluded with a spattering of rain, but that is all so far.  Temperatures had dropped considerably when I went outdoors and began scouting for missing plants on the patio.  All (I think!) have been recovered, even the baby Melocactus azureus, whose plastic pot was over 60 ft away from its starting point, while the plant itself was wedged under a pillar on the patio.   So...
Weather Diary: Partly cloudy; High: 112 F (44 C); Low: 81 F (27 C); Humidity: 15%-70%

8 comments:

  1. Great colors, especially against the lacy green! How lucky that such a plant will grow in sw US cities. Also, it's neat to see a member of the Caesalpinoideae. I learned the subfamilies of Fabaceae 40 years ago when I lived in California, but since then I've seen few caesalpinoids. I definitely see a hint of pea flower structure.

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    1. That's an intriguing comment, Hollis! The pea family structure is certainly present in the foliage as well, extending to behavior such as the leaves closing at night. It seems strange that so many members of this subfamily grow so well here, but there are at least three or four members of Caesalpinia widely recommended for this region; and of course the Parkinsonia genus includes several very valuable native trees. If one expands all the way up to Fabaceae the prevalence becomes even more marked.

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  2. I love that plant, so much! The first time I saw one was at my brother's house in Phoenix. When he called it a Bird of Paradise I laughed...but of course have sense learned that's the way with common names, they can refer to more than one plant! Anyway, great choice and I appreciate your participating in the "favs" theme with such great info to share.

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    1. You're kinder than I was, Loree -- I about threw a fit over the confusion of names ;-) But it's a gorgeous plant by any name! I appreciate your "favs" theme now that I have enough plants in this garden to pick and choose a bit...! Thanks for hosting :)

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  3. I love that plant too. I think the only reason it's not grown more here is that the local garden centers seem to offer it only in huge containers with really hefty price tags. I was shocked to see that you bagged one in a 2.5 quart size! Maybe I'm shopping in the wrong places...

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    1. I read that sometimes it's a slow starter, so for a while I wondered whether that was why the nurseries there were only selling it large size. But watching this one bulk up nicely over 12 months... no, I don't think it can be that! I'd invite you out here to shop in a minute, but I think the CA live plant restrictions might still be an issue. Hope you can locate one at a reasonable size/price because I'm pretty sure it would grow well for you!

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  4. amazing colour which must glow in your hot sunshine! Glad the dust storm has blown over now - not a phenomena I have ever witnessed!

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    1. It certainly does -- a wonderful color to see at the end of the garden :) The dust storm was a nasty one, but temperatures are lower now. It's an ill wind as blows no one any good ;-)

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