With unsightly appearance and peculiar habits, this List of Ugliest Birds will surprise you to the core! However, do note that we have only outlined the bizarre features of these birds, which may, indeed, hold a certain appeal to many.
12.07.2023 - 05:13 / balconygardenweb.com
The fruits on this list are considered strange due to their unique features, taste, and unusual growing habitat. These are healthy, and their strange look adds to their appeal. This article lists some of the Most Strangest Fruits.
Botanical Name: Salacca zalacca
USDA Zones: 10-11
Also known as snake fruit, this fruit from Indonesia gets its name from its scaly, snake-like skin. It has a crunchy texture and a sweet and sour flavor, similar to pineapple. It is one of the Most Strangest Fruits on this list.
Botanical Name: Hylocereus undatus
USDA Zones: 9-11
This fruit, native to Central and South America, has vibrant pink or yellow skin and white flesh with tiny black seeds. It’s often called “dragon fruit” because of its spiky appearance. It has a mild, slightly sweet flavor and is commonly used in smoothies and salads.
Botanical Name: Cucumis metuliferus
USDA Zones: 9-11
Also known as Kiwano, it is one of the Most Strangest Fruits and has a strange spiky orange exterior and green jelly-like flesh with small seeds. It is native to Africa and is a good source of vitamin C and fiber.
Botanical Name: Citrus medica var. sarcodactylis
USDA Zones: 8-11
This is the strangest fruit that resembles a hand with its long, finger-like protrusions and is a type of citrus fruit. It has a fragrant, sweet aroma and is often used as a decorative element in Asian cuisine or candied and used as a flavoring agent in desserts and cocktails.
Botanical Name: Nypa fruticans
USDA Zones: 11-12
The fruit of the Nipah palm, native to Southeast Asia, produces large, kidney-shaped seeds that are a popular ingredient in local dishes. The seeds have a nutty flavor and a jelly-like texture and are often used in curries, stews, and desserts.
Botanical Name: Blighia
With unsightly appearance and peculiar habits, this List of Ugliest Birds will surprise you to the core! However, do note that we have only outlined the bizarre features of these birds, which may, indeed, hold a certain appeal to many.
No other plant native to South Carolina has such fragrant and beautiful spring blooms and stunning fall color as the witch-alders. Fothergilla was named after Dr. John Fothergill, an English physician and gardener who funded the travels of John Bartram through the Carolinas in the 1700’s. These beautiful shrubs have been planted in both American and English gardens for over 200 years, including gardens of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson.
Are you frustrated because there are dandelions and other weeds in your lawn? Did you know that dandelion flowers provide one of the first springtime sources of pollen for bees, butterflies, and other pollinating insects?
There are approximately 15 species of hellebores that are perennial, and the majority are native to southern and eastern Europe. Other common names for this plant are Christmas rose, and Lenten rose. Most of the hellebores readily available today are hybrid crosses of nine species giving us a wide variety of flowers in both their form and color. In addition, the variation of the leaf color and texture will add year-round interest in the garden.
Growing up, I was one of the many kids who loved rolled-up fruit snacks. Even today, I can eat one and think fondly of playing outside as a kid. Now, I make my own tasty, chewy, dried fruit snacks called fruit leathers.
MY GARDENING LIFE STARTED with a hedge—cutting one back hard, specifically. It was the threadbare, tall old privet surrounding my childhood home, and I was determined to “rejuvenate” it, after reading about the process in a book. No artful hedge has ever been created by my hands, though—a fact that feels all the more lamentable after watching Sean Conway’s video tour (above) of designer and nurseryman Piet Oudolf’s garden in the Netherlands. What magic.
THE LATEST BOOK GIVEAWAY–which was a smashing success–ended at midnight Sunday, but there’s a “win” for everyone, it turns out. Collaborator and author Katrina Kenison and I asked commenters to tell us about books they’d relied on in times of transition…and wow, did they ever.
I was already thinking about succulents, after writing a story about succulent-wreath how-to with Katherine Tracey of Avant Gardens. Remember? (That’s another of her creations up top: a box of succulents, meant to be hung vertically, like a framed mini wall garden. Here’s Katherine’s how-to on making a mini-wall garden.) Then during spring garden cleanup, I noticed that some Sedum ‘Angelina’ (a gold-colored, ferny-textured groundcover type) had fallen out of a big pot I’d placed on the terrace last summer, and planted itself in the gravel surface, and the surrounding stone wall. (Again, those succulent voices: “Hint. Hint.”)The next nudge came when I spontaneously pulled into a garden center last month—one I’d never been to—only to find an irresistibly low price on overstuffed pots of hens and chicks. I brought home a bunch.And then the final push: At Trade Secrets, the big annual benefit garden show held in nearby Sharon, Connecticut, it was as if someone had announced a theme: Every vendor seemed to be featuring succulents in one way or another.Dave Burdick (remember him?) of Daffodils and More in Dalton, Massachusetts, whose specialties include not just rare
IMARCHED UP THE HILL and stuck my face in a stand of twig willows and dogwoods the other day, starved for some color in this relentlessly mud-toned non-winter. The world looked really bright and shiny through their gold and red twigs, and then I remembered the giant pussy willows (Salix chaenomeloides, cut and stuck in a vase, above) down by the road and went to pay them a visit as well. Time to sound another cry in favor of these easiest of plants–and offer a new source of an incredible variety of willows, in particular.
WHAT I HAVE ON MY HANDS HERE is an outright coup d’etat, with all control of the garden being wrested from me even as I sleep, I swear. Do weeds *ever* stop growing, ever take a coffee break, even, or whatever their weedy equivalent of that is? Thanks, Andre Jordan, for commiserating about this shared reality: weed uprisings everywhere.
You can order the plan, a pdf, from Wave Hill’s shop. My pairs were adapted from there–made in cedar, not pine; the arms slightly longer; the wood slightly thicker and so on–and a savvy carpenter can adjust the angle of the seat and back before screwing everything together, to be more upright or less so. Follow the plans to the letter…or have some fun with them. Order the Wave Hill chair plan by calling the Wave Hill Shop at 718.549.3200 x 249, or email jenahb at wavehill dot org.Want them painted? My expert woodworking neighbor recommends using Benjamin Moore Aura exterior on top of an oil-based primer to help stop any tannin bleed (assuming that the material is cedar, which is the best choice if you plant for long life of the chairs, or to leave them outdoors in winter). If there are knots, use oil-based Binz primer on the knots only.You may recall my recent interview
IF YOU DON’T HEAR FROM ME for a month or three, don’t worry: I simply got lost on a magical mystery tour of the Horizon Herbs website and catalog, a global collection that the Cech family of Williams, Oregon, has been growing organically and selling since 1985. I’ve purchased some gift certificates to share with you—but most exciting, I had the pleasure of a Q&A with Horizon founder and herbalist/seedsman Richo Cech, on matters ranging from the world’s basils to medicinal Eastern woodland wildflowers.