The Sun (San Bernardino)

Trees can be cool in more ways than you might think

- Please send garden questions, comments, and photos to joshua@ perfectpla­nts.com. For more informatio­n about area plants and gardens, go to Joshua Siskin's website, thesmarter­gardener.com. If you have been successful growing bromeliads outdoors, please sen

July is the ideal month to assess our need for trees. We may not even want to step out into the garden because of blistering heat, which could easily be mitigated by planting trees that cool the air, however.

It’s not only that trees provide shade, but they lower air temperatur­e through transpirat­ion cooling. Transpirat­ion has been referred to as botanical sweating. Just as the function of sweat is to cool us down on a hot day, transpirat­ion cools down leaves and the air around them. Transpirat­ion occurs when water passes from soil to roots all the way up to leaves. The final step in water’s transpirin­g ascent is when it exits leaves but hovers over them in vapor form. As heat passes through the vapor, there is a cooling effect. We experience this when we get out of a pool on a hot day and feel chilly because as the water on our skin turns to vapor, it cools hot air passing through it.

This also explains why plants can wilt on a cool day if a strong wind is blowing. If the thin, cooling layer of water vapor on leaf surfaces is dispersed, the air surroundin­g leaves dries out. As fast as water is taken up through transpirat­ion, it is immediatel­y lost to the ambient dry air on a windy day. Eventually the leaves lose turgidity and wilt since the rate of transpirat­ion or water ascent in the plant cannot keep up with the rate of foliar water loss.

Of course, the function of transpirat­ion is not merely to keep leaves cool but to bring the hydrogen in water molecules up to leaves where photosynth­esis, the process by which plants make their own food, takes place. Photosynth­esis uses solar energy to split apart the hydrogen and oxygen elements of water. Hydrogen atoms from water combine with carbon and oxygen atoms from carbon dioxide to make carbohydra­te, or sugar, the self-made food that sustains plants. When we apply fertilizer­s, we do not actually feed plants but rather provide minerals that make it easier for plants to engage in their photosynth­etic foodmaking process. Incidental­ly, the waste product of photosynth­esis is the oxygen we breathe (derived from the oxygen in water and half of the oxygen in carbon dioxide), which is discharged into the atmosphere to the benefit of all

Desert willows reach about 25feet and need scant water.

TIP OF THE WEEK

“Now Is the Time for Trees” singles out desert willow (Chilopsis linearis) as a small California native tree, reaching 25 feet in height, that is appropriat­e for planting throughout the Southwest. Desert willow is so named because of its leaves’ slender stature, which resembles that of a true willow’s leaves. Like the true willow, it also grows naturally along watercours­es even if, in the desert willow’s case, they are arroyos that go dry in summer months. Desert willow is extremely drought-tolerant and handles blistering direct sun as well as cold down to zero degrees. In its habitat, it grows in proximity to two other native trees: palo verde (Parkinsoni­a species) and mesquite (Prosopis species). The desert willow has the distinctio­n of being a monotypic genus, meaning it’s the only species belonging to its genus. (The pomegranat­e is another.) Desert willow’s trumpet flowers, which are mildly fragrant, attract hummingbir­ds, and the tree serves as a nesting site for a variety of songbirds. living creatures.

“Now Is the Time for Trees” (Timber Press, 2022) is a beginner’s guide to selecting, planting and caring for trees. It is authored by Dan Lambe of the Arbor Day Foundation and Lorene Edwards Forkner, a gardening columnist. Although the informatio­n provided is basic, it is definitive and bears the stamp of authentici­ty coming from the largest nonprofit organizati­on in the world dedicated to planting trees. Moreover, there is sure to be something here that is new to you, regardless of your experience with trees.

I learned that staking a tree when planting it is not desirable unless we are talking about “container-grown conifers or windy sites,” since trees establish themselves more quickly when they are not staked. Furthermor­e, you do not want to stake tightly, but leave slack in the straps looped between trunk and stakes, situated on opposite sides of the tree, so “the tree should be able to sway in the wind without the rootball moving.”

I was keenly interested in finding out which trees the authors recommend for planting in our part of the country. Several oak trees are recommende­d including the cork oak (Quercus suber), a mature specimen of which is growing on the northeaste­rn corner of Van NuysSherma­n Oaks Park on Hazeltine Avenue. Cork oak is noteworthy due to its spongy, hydrophobi­c bark.

The corks you may be popping tonight come from this tree, which is grown primarily in Portugal and Spain but also in France, Italy, Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia. Harvesting the cork, or outer bark, of these trees is a special skill done entirely by hand. Improper harvesting procedures can kill a tree.

Normally, a cork oak is allowed to grow for 25 years before the virgin layer of cork is harvested. When harvesting is done correctly, the tree is not damaged and will regenerate another layer of cork in about 10 years. There are approximat­ely 10 cork harvests during a tree’s productive life of 150 years, while a tree’s life span stretches to 250 years. Cork oak acorns are eaten for their nutty flavor in their native lands after being boiled like chestnuts.

Cork oak forests are in danger of disappeari­ng, but not due to overharves­ting or mismanagem­ent. The problem is that corks made of plastic and silicone are less expensive than real cork, and these stoppers are gaining wider acceptance, resulting in less demand for cork and subsequent neglect of cork oak forests. Still, nearly all premium wines continue to be stoppered with cork.

Cork oak itself is a highly drought-tolerant shade tree and may be grown in desert conditions from the Antelope Valley to Palm Springs, the only caveat being that foliage may yellow in highly alkaline soil. To overcome alkalinity, apply gypsum to the soil around the tree at least once a year. After two or three years in the ground, a well-mulched cork oak will not require irrigation unless winter rains all but cease to fall.

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In an email I recently received, Tamera Rooke asked this question: “How do you control the height of an avocado tree so that it does not get too high to pick the fruit?”

You can maintain an avocado or any other tree at a manageable height by keeping it pruned.

If the tree has already grown so tall that you would have to climb it to pick the fruit, Greg Alder (gregalder.com), the guru of avocado growers, suggests two options: you can cut the tree down to a stump or selectivel­y cut back two large branches each year until the tree assumes the desired harvesting height. In the first case, the stump remaining should be around 5 feet tall and will need to be painted (with a 50% interior white latex paint and 50% water solution) to prevent sunburn. In the second case, you will also have to paint newly exposed bark, which will be more difficult higher up in the tree — but by cutting back only two branches each year, you will still be harvesting fruit as you bring your tree down to size. By the way, there is an avocado fruit picking pole with basket device that reaches up to 14 feet, so with the help of a tall, sturdy ladder, you would be able to pick the fruit on a fairly tall tree without having to climb it.

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A decision has been made to provide space for a “California native of the week” feature in this column. Many California natives, after being in the ground for a couple of years, require little if any summer water. They also attract wildlife and do not need fertilizer or pesticide applicatio­ns to thrive. Certain California natives are also vanishing from their habitat, and so we can take an active part in their preservati­on by bringing them into our gardens.

Wreath madness: Although planting in July is not generally recommende­d, you can plant cactuses and succulents at this time. Succulents are excellent candidates for living wreaths. You can find doughnut- and heart-shaped sphagnum moss wreaths online. Take cuttings from your succulents of choice and let the stem ends callus or dry for one week. Soak the wreath overnight before inserting the stems of your cuttings — making holes in the moss with a pencil — into the wreath. During the summer, you will want to take the wreath down every two weeks and soak it for ten minutes in a tub of water. As temperatur­es cool in the fall, watering frequency will be reduced.

Crazy about daisies: Gerbera daisies bring happiness and smiles of glee as much as any other member of the plant kingdom. They are blooming now and are among the most robust of flowers when it comes to vase arrangemen­ts, where they consistent­ly stay fresh for a week or more.

For an arresting tablescape, you can also just cut the heads off of your gerberas and float them in a bowl of water. Do the same thing with gazanias and blanketflo­wers (Gaillardia), which are Gerbera daisy relatives. Gerberas are as drought- tolerant as any perennial flower you can grow. I have had a clump of gerberas growing for two decades in afternoon sun. Even in the hottest weather, they never need to be soaked more than once or, on rare occasions, twice a week.

Flower disempower: Coleus is easy to propagate in water from stem cuttings but a bit tricky to grow in the garden. It will burn up in full sun but flounder when it gets too much shade. Filtered sun is its preferred exposure in the garden. It’s important to mulch your coleus, since it does not thrive when watered too often but prefers soil that is consistent­ly moist, a condition promoted by the presence of mulch. Since you grow coleus for its intensely colored leaves, you will want to discourage its pale blue flowers from maturing. As soon as the flowers appear, pinch them off so energy needed for foliar growth is not siphoned off by flowers.

Deadhead ruthlessly: Removing faded flowers is known as deadheadin­g, and this practice is encouraged throughout the flowering season of every perennial, starting with roses. Prune a stem with faded roses back to a healthy five-leaflet leaf where the bud between leaf and stem points outward. To maximize rose flower production, apply rose fertilizer once a month until fall. Cut back penstemon stems that have flowered to two healthy leaves at their base. When a wave of gaura or wandflower bloom has subsided, shear the plant back so it stands a foot tall, and in another month it will bloom again. Star clusters (Pentas lanceolate), appearing in red, pink, lilac and white, will bloom for months on end as long as their spent flowers are removed in a timely manner.

Bro culture: Propagate bromeliads now. Bromeliads flower once and then die but, meanwhile, most will have produced offsets or pups, so you can keep their legacy alive for generation­s. Separate these pups and ideally place them in a fast-draining, acidic soil mix. In truth, bromeliads are a lot tougher than most people think and most can be grown in the ground outdoors, even surviving an occasional winter freeze. The UCLA Botanical Garden, at Hilgard and Le Conte avenues, is open daily with free admission and is home to a phenomenal collection of bromeliads. You will find them growing primarily in two areas: in the central, bottom part of the garden and in the droughttol­erant section in the garden’s upper northeast corner.

 ?? PHOTO BY JOSHUA SISKIN ??
PHOTO BY JOSHUA SISKIN
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