Thursday October 1, 2009
After lunch in Encinitas, we drove inland a short distance to the
Quail Botanical Gardens.

This sign, which I superimposed on the picture, probably doesn't exist any more. The garden's name has been changed to the
San Diego Botanic Garden.

The
Torrey Pine (some call it the Del Mar Pine) is not endangered, it's not remarkable in appearance, the wood is brittle and doesn't even make good firewood, but it lives on the seaside cliffs in poor soil and survives drought and storms. It is the rarest native pine in the USA, growing naturally in just a small area of California from about La Jolla to Solana Beach, with a subspecies growing on an island off the coast of Santa Barbara.

I was also fascinated by these
Cork Oak trees.

Farther into the garden we go. There are several areas: Mexican garden, New Zealand garden, natural coastal habitat, herb garden, to name a few.

Does anyone know what the tree on the left is with the clumps that look like strings of peas?

By the afternoon it was baking hot - I think it got to 30°C but it felt hotter so this was not the best time to be visiting desert areas. I had to abandon the idea of trekking out in the open to the Children's Garden, which might have been interesting, and find some shade.

Glenn had found his favourite
Plumeria flower. He picked a fallen blossom off the ground and sat happily sniffing it in inside a shady, walled garden while I toured more of the gardens.

The nation's largest
bamboo garden is here. I never knew there were so many different types. (Bottom picture doesn't show much bamboo - I just liked all the green and yellow.) Info from their signs:
"Bamboos grow in 2 different growth patterns - runners and clumpers. Running bamboos have underground shoots that can grow thirty feet in one season." And,
"Unlike most plants, many bamboos only flower after long time periods, from 10 to 20, even 150-years intervals. After producing heavy crops of seeds most bamboos die."
The fruit orchard was a nice shady place to be. A sign with the banana plants says they're the world's tallest herb. (!)
Left: Natal Cycad. From the internet - Cycads are often referred to as living fossils... traced back as far as 160 million years.
Middle: I thought this might be a Pineapple Guava blossom but the leaves don't look right, so I don't know what it is.
Right: Olulu Brighamia. "This is one of the most unusual plants in Hawaii. Once common, they are almost extinct and grow only on cliffs in Kauai." It's also known as Cabbage On a Stick.
Victoria Amazonica. Plate it in silver and it would make a nice platter. Apparently the leaves can grow up to more than 9 feet in diameter! Google it and you'll see a picture of a baby sitting on one. I didn't even notice the frog in there until we saw the pictures at home.

This looks like the tree used in the garden's logo, yet I can't find any information on it. So I'm guessing it's a
quiver tree.
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