Sunday, June 21, 2009

Scent of the Rogue


One of the highlights of a raft trip down the Rogue River a few years ago was the glorious sight and scent of native azaleas that covered some stretches of the river bank. The azalea was Rhododendron occidentale, a deciduous shrub that occurs in a coast-hugging strip from Santa Cruz county, California to Coos County, Oregon, from sea level to 9000 feet.

Western azalea is one of only three native rhododendron species that are found west of the Rocky Mountains. Pacific rhododendron (Rhododendron macrophyllum) is the most familiar. This big evergreen is plentiful in the coastal forests of Oregon and Washington and on the western slope of the Cascades. It is easy to grow and makes a nice addition to irrigated gardens. Cascade azalea (Rhododendron albiflorum), is hard to cultivate and seems scarce even in its native habitat. I’ve hiked the Cascades for years and have seen it only a handful of times.

The gem among our three rhododendron species is Western azalea. Like many wild plants it is highly variable, growing from three to 15 feet in height and occasionally more. The flowers are generally white with a yellow blotch inside, but they are often tinged with pink or even red, and range in size from a little over an inch across to nearly four inches. This fabulously fragrant shrub has tempted hybridizers for 150 years, primarily in Europe, contributing its perfume to the famous Exbury line of deciduous azaleas and to hybrids such as ‘Irene Koster’.

Over the last century, here in the Northwest, a handful of collectors catalogued, selected and distributed some particularly fine forms of the species itself. Today these plants are relatively hard to find in nurseries, but Greer Gardens lists several varieties.
I have two plants I bought as babies from local plant sales. About ten years on, they are less than three feet high, with modest but shapely flowers just shy of an inch and a half across. One has particularly colorful buds, with a strong pink flush and a distinct line of color along the outside of each petal. This is a striking occidentale feature that comes through in ‘Irene Koster’.

It’s a thrill to encounter Western azalea along the Rogue or in the Siskiyous. It is pretty darn nice in the garden, too, blooming quite late in the rhododendron season when most deciduous azaleas are over. Wild inland and mountain populations grow near streams, rivers and springs, indicating a liking for moisture. But it tolerates periods of dryness between waterings in summer, especially with some shade. It also tolerates soggy soil in winter, and the leaves seem to be less susceptible to the powdery mildew that often disfigures other deciduous azaleas by late summer.
What is an azalea, anyway? Botanically speaking, all azaleas are rhododendrons, so what justifies calling them by another name? There are a number of features that separate azaleas from rhodies, although none seems to be completely reliable. The easiest to grasp is the number of stamens per flower: five in azaleas (occasionally six to ten), and ten or more in rhododendrons. This works most of the time. Interestingly, the Cascade azalea I mentioned earlier is sometimes called ‘white rhododendron’. How many stamens does it have? Ten.
EW June 2009

Saturday, June 6, 2009

BUZZ BUZZ BUZZ

Lots of people are keeping honeybees these days. That seems like a good idea, since wild honeybees have more or less disappeared. Keeping bees increases the bee population generally and provides pollinators for your own garden (and the possibility of your own honey).

Like most people, I am alarmed by colony collapse disorder, mites and the decline in honeybees. After all, much of the food we eat is dependant, directly or indirectly, on honeybees. Conventional mass production of tree fruit and almonds would be almost impossible without this colony-dwelling bee that can be driven about the country in hefty numbers and put to work wherever bees are needed to pollinate enormous monocultures. No wonder honeybees are stressed out.

Unlike a Central Valley almond grower, however, the average home gardener should be able to get by without the honeybee, which is not native. A healthy population of native pollinators could probably do the job. There are thousands of native bee species in the US, not to mention other types of pollinating insect. Sadly, many of the same factors that hit honeybees affect native bees as well. In fact pollinators of all kinds are disappearing.

One element behind this decline is undoubtedly the loss of pollinator-friendly habitat, through development, conventional agriculture and widespread pesticide application. Native bees are affected too; they are also becoming infected with diseases and parasites spread by honeybees. All the same, non-honeybees out-number honeybees in my garden. Bumblebees have been particularly conspicuous.

Like honeybees, bumblebees are social insects, forming small colonies. Other kinds of native bees (mason bees, for example) are solitary; that is, individual bees don’t interact with one another. There may be many about at the same time, but they don’t cooperate.
The value of native bees in agriculture is beginning to get some attention. Bumblebees, it seems, venture out at lower temperatures than honeybees and even tolerate a bit of rain - valuable traits if you have early-flowering crops to pollinate. And all native bees, adapted to their work by coevolving with the plants they pollinate, can be as much as 100 times as efficient at it.

While many native bees are specialists, visiting only a certain kind of flower, bumblebees and some others are ‘generalists’ that are happy to visit your apples, squash and so on. What can we do to encourage them? Solitary bees lay their eggs in bark crevices and hollow stems, and occasionally in man-made, purpose-built accommodations. Some bees need a certain amount of bare, uncultivated ground (without a thick covering of bark mulch!). Bumblebees nest in cavities in the ground, or beneath planks or inverted plant pots.

Slightly untidy gardens may have the edge here. Pesticides are out of the question, needless cultivation should be avoided, debris piles and weed patches are great. When it come to nectar sources, many of the plants that attract the honeybee also attract native generalists. Lavender and oregano, both from the Mediterranean, are magnets to both. Native plants, however, have been shown to support a larger and more diverse population of native insects, including bees. A quick internet search on ‘plants for pollinators Oregon’ will yield a wealth of information.

EW May 2009