fruiting bodies

Water fell from the sky, and there was no thunder. Amazing. As a result, these appeared in my neighbors’ lawn.

Someone who knows mushrooms told me these might be edible, but I don’t do much cooking these days. And anyway, “there are old mushroom hunters, and there are bold mushroom hunters, but there are no old, bold mushroom hunters.” I think these are in the genus Lepiota but I’m content just to gawk at them.

In fact my earliest memory has to do with mushrooms; I vividly remember everyone, including the doctor, standing over my crib looking down at me after I ate a poisonous mushroom. (Doctors still made house calls, and Eisenhower had just moved into the White House.) I guess I survived, and that was no doubt the beginning of my interest in plants.

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blathering about bulbs

Even though the garden center where I buy a lot of bulbs decided to raise its prices, I still sprung for several bulbs of Fritillaria persica, because I thought they would be a valuable addition to the garden, and make a dramatic statement.

There is a small colony of these already present in the garden; the bulbs have been there for over twenty years. If they could read, they would have been dead by the end of their first year.

Fritillaria persica, and the often sympatric F. imperialis, which grow on sunny, rocky hillsides in Turkey, Iran, and adjacent areas, are said to require “humus-rich, well-drained soil” in order to thrive. Need humus to retain water, but need drainage not to retain water. Just the sort of conditions you might find on sunny, rocky slopes. No wonder the things are said to be difficult to grow.

the bulb

The top of the bulb. The hole is from last year’s flower stalk, and people recommend planting the bulb at an angle so that water doesn’t lodge in the hole. Or not. Not, in my case.

 

The bottom. Where the roots emerge. In fact, knowing which side is up, or down in this case, really does matter.

Some people would use a bulb-planting tool for the planting operation. I use a planting spear from Way Cool Tools instead.

planting spear

 

the right kind of soil for Fritillaria persica

 

perfect texture

Looking down into the planting hole, with camera strap accidentally included, and shaft of sunlight symbolizing sudden enlightenment. Fruit of Opuntia macrocentra var. violacea just happened to be teetering on the edge of the hole, indicative of the kind of companion plants suitable for this bulb.

the planting hole

 

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