Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Our Garden in Panajachel

After several months of living in our new house, I finally got to meet our landlord! We had rented the house through Francesca at Mayan Lake Realty while the landlord was in Florida. He just arrived back in Guatemala for a month and came over to the house to meet me and check out how the property was doing.

It was fascinating to hear him talking about the plants in the garden. He knew them all, and also recognized that some had gone missing while he'd been away. I was sad to learn there used to be a six-foot rosemary bush in the garden that must have died sometime in the last year. Bummer! Luckily, I just recently got some rosemary starts from a friend here, and once they're hardy enough, I'll plant them in the spot where the old bush used to me, as now I know it will flourish there.

The landlord also explained the mysterious "alien tree". You may remember it from our Xmas party...
Our bizarre Guatemalan Xmas tree!
Well, the landlord told me it's frangipani and then casually said, "I planted this tree. I grew up around them in The Congo." Wow! There are stories to be told there, I'll bet!

The frangipani is also called plumeria and I found a neat article about them at Maya Ethnobotany. I'm now very much looking forward to when the tree blooms and produces aphrodisiac flowers! 😍

Another mystery tree in our garden was revealed to be a loquat. I noticed a gorgeous blue-grey tanager feeding off the small fruits the other day. Now I know they're tasty for humans as well! The common name is nispero. Read more here.

Just as I was finishing up this post, the blue-grey tanager showed up! So cute!
Much more blue in real life. The camera doesn't capture it.
I asked about our poor chopped up lime tree. The landlord was dismayed to see it had been hacked down, and then pointed out that there used to be another huge lime tree by the gate. All that is left is a stump. :( The chopped up one has some shoots coming off it so I will research how to prune a citrus tree and see if I can get it to grow up nice and strong.

Everything in the yard is super dry right now. When they talk about the "dry season" in Guatemala, they're not kidding! We haven't had a drop of rain in months. Bert spends hours in the yard watering everything to try to keep it alive. I'm more of the mindset that if a plant can't survive the dry season, it's not meant to be. Honestly tough to keep a nice green grass lawn in a place that turns to dust for months at a time. The plants that are doing the best in our garden are the native ones, of course.

I went out and did a video for you all. I think I should do another one in a few months when the rains come. Someone remind me, okay? 😁


If anyone knows the names of some of the plants in the video that I didn't know, feel free to leave a comment below. Thanks and have a sunny day!

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