Viewing post #2845814 by Baja_Costero

You are viewing a single post made by Baja_Costero in the thread called Helia Bravo Hollis Botanical Garden.
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Dec 9, 2022 1:54 PM CST
Name: Baja
Baja California (Zone 11b)
Cactus and Succulents Seed Starter Xeriscape Container Gardener Hummingbirder Native Plants and Wildflowers
Garden Photography Region: Mexico Plant Identifier Forum moderator Plant Database Moderator Garden Ideas: Level 2
The Helia Bravo Hollis Botanical Garden in Zapotitlán de Salinas, Puebla (Mexico) is all about native plants. The area around the visitor center has been fixed up (plants added, red lava rock and paths and hardscape) but the rest of the garden, which is set on a hill, is all natural. The only thing they did up there was put a path through (and a lookout platform at the top), the rest is habitat. Mother nature's garden, as it were.

Some photos from the visitor center area here. The red lava rock is imported, the native soil is strictly limestone.

Starting with the most lovely Agave marmorata (word meaning marbled, and a small marble quarry very close to this location). This plant is used to make mezcal. Surrounding it, the candelilla (a Euphorbia).

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The tiny fruit of the Euphorbia

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Yuccas

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A Fouquieria (yellow trunk) with an epiphytic bromeliad

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Epiphytes galore

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Agave karwinskii (grows a couple feet of stem), used to make mezcal



A few older plants here and one that flowered and died, to give an idea about final size



Next to an barrel cactus (Echinocactus) with tetecho (Neobuxbaumia) plants in the background. This place is set in a tetecho forest.



Agave macroacantha and stricta



The symmetry of stricta is sort of intoxicating



Agave angustifolia (used to make mezcal)

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Agaves and terrestrial bromeliads side by side

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Below the red lava rock, the substrate is limestone. Fossilized coral from the area here

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Jatropha cinerea (sangre de grado)



Ferocactus robustus (the most multiheaded member of the genus) with fruit

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Some young plants gathered together. L to R in foreground: Neobuxbaumia tetetzo, Beaucarnea gracilis, Mammillaria, Agave marmorata

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Interesting details everywhere, like these Coryphanthas in formation (and a Mammillaria)

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Toothy agave

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That's all for now. As you can see, we were out of light by the end of this visit. Smiling

I will try to put together another post in this thread with the in situ garden up the hill.

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