11 July 2018

Plants and pots, and the current weather

Yesterday I showed the gray unglazed pots at the Atlier Bottani Dechauid on racks drying in the sun. (Atelier means "workshop".) Today here are some examples of the finished pots. I was tempted by these, but we really don't need any new pots for plants.




No only do we have too many pots, we really have too many plants. I've never counted them, but I know there are many dozens of them around the house, on the terrace, and in the greenhouse. Even outdoors. Someday soon I'm going to have to get rid of some of them. (I just did a quick count of the potted plants in the living room and on the terrace: there are more than 25 of them.)





Still. I was tempted. The other day when I went over to Thésée to try to buy some bottles of Chardonnay white wine, I noticed that the winery had a grapevine planted in a huge pot outdoors, and it was loaded down with bunches of grapes. I have two grapevines that have been growing in small pots for several years now. I need a bigger pot for at least one of them.





The pots in this post are probably about 18 inches in diameter. That would be 45 cm. I need one much bigger — a pot so big that you couldn't possible lift and move once it was full of soil. So I'd have to find a permanent spot for it and for the grapevine. Full sun is required.





Speaking of that, our weather remains sunny and warm. This morning's low is cooler than it has been in a week or more, but the lower temperature made this a good night for good sleeping. The high today is predicted to be around 21ºC — that's about 70ºF. Our heat wave has ended, at least temporarily. For comparison, the high temperature in my home town in North Carolina will be 32ºC (nearly 90ºF) today.




Despite a night of heavy rain last week, the ground here is very dry and the grass is turning brown. We were remarking a couple of days ago when we went out for a drive in the country about how much the landscape here looks like the California summer landscape right now. Brown grass, green trees. It's dry enough that weeds are not a problem in the vegetable garden. Walt waters the plants out there by hand, targeting the roots and avoiding getting unplanted spots too wet so weeds are not encouraged to invade.

9 comments:

  1. Aren’t plants supposed to be planted in unglazed pots so the roots and dirt can « breathe »? I think these are decorative cache-pots.

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    1. I don't think it matters whether a pot is glazed or not, as long as their is a drain hole in the bottom. But you might be right about these being cache-pots. I don't remember examining them carefully because I wasn't dong going to buy any. I have several glazed pots with plants that have been in them for years. And what about plastic pots? They don't "breathe."

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    2. Look at the fourth picture, the planter boxes. The one on the right definitely has a drain hole in it. And look at the first picture. Why does that saucer next to the pot have holes in it? I assume the pots have drain holes in the bottom because they have "feet" — that's a nice feature to encourage good drainage. A lot of plants don't like the live with their feet in water.

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  2. I especially like the designs on the oblong window-box shape pots near the end of the post, and the feet on the bottom one. Nice :)

    Hey, I had to do a triple take on that comment about the high temp in North Carolina... by mistake, you putF instead ofC next to 32 -- that gave me a chuckle. I thought, "What!? What is going on down in NC today?!" Ha!

    Judy

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    1. Thanks for catching that. Typos just happen at 5:30 a.m. Or other hours of the dax.

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  3. They are lovely pots. I always seem to have an over abundance, so after thinking for ten years that we would have a yard sale we did, and then when I was looking around for a pot we didn't have one, and in my minds eye I remembered what had been sold off. Was most upset with myself and refused to go out and buy one. Those brown earthenware pots would cause me great temptation.

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    1. Yard sales are American. Are you a Lilbitbrit or mostly Yank?

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  4. I like those oblong pots too. I love ceramics. My problem is that I live in a condo and have limited outdoor space! Still, I'd like to replace some of my ugly old plastic ones with nice ceramic ones. Once you see the prices, though . . .

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  5. Very nice looking pottery.

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