Today we have some plant photo sent in by Rik Gern of Austin, Texas. Rik’s captions are indented, and you can click on his photos to enlarge them. I have left the numbering of the photos to identify them since there is only one species.
I recently transplanted some Common onions (Allium cepa), and was thrilled to see them starting to bloom, but soon learned that a blooming (or bolting) onion has stopped growing the bulb and has put it’s energy into seed production. I guess that makes these onions food for the eyes rather than the stomach.
Prior to blooming, the stem (1) develops a bulge, and as the bulge gets larger it becomes translucent and you can see the umbel, or flower cluster starting to show thru (2). This made me think of the old Jiffy Pop popcorn pans!. Sometimes the flowers emerge with the petals closed (3 &4) and sometimes they seem to emerge in full bloom (5).
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Photo 5:
I don’t know what the deal is with this little yellow flower (6), but I thought it looked pretty. Here is a flower prior to blooming (7), and another that is a little further along (8). The blooming flower reveals the fruit capsule (9).
Photo 6:
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Photo 9:
No sooner do the stamens emerge to attract pollinators than spiders lay out their silk in order to trap and feast upon the unsuspecting pollinators (10). Here is the inflorescence in full glory (11).
Photo 10:’
Photo 11:
These plants have a deep emotional significance for me, since they are transplanted from the garden of a dear friend who passed away recently. I’ve never gardened before, but I started this garden in his honor and as a way to continue the spirit of his friendship. I hope you will indulge me in a tribute to my friend.
Ron Akin was a one of a kind human being (Homo sapiens) who was a free spirited cosmic cowboy, Texas hippie, and an old fashioned Southern gentleman. He dropped out of the naval academy in Annapolis to spend years hitchhiking around the country, picking fruit, performing odd jobs and starting Just For Fun parades in various locations. The parade he started in San Marcos, TX just celebrated its 49th year, and was held in his honor. He also played bass with garage band par excellence, The Callous Taoboys. I met Ron at The Dell ‘Arte School of Mime and Comedy in Blue Lake, California in 1982, and after that we spent five freewheeling summers performing as clowns at the Schlitterbahn water park in New Braunfels, TX. We remained friends for the rest of his life, and I used to visit him at his home in the country where he had a garden full of onions, garlic, and all sorts of peppers. We’d spend days smoking the harvest from his garden on his grill, as well as all sorts of meats, and sit on the porch until late at night stuffing our faces and enjoying life. I never met a more free spirited, true-to-himself human being.
Here is Ron as The FreeDumb Fairy (alter ego of the lowly janitor Freiheit Gazoontite) at Schlitterbahn, participating in the Just for Fun parade, and down home on the porch. You can also see his prodigious onion harvest!:
Ron:
I call my new garden a friendship garden, though I have to admit that it feels a little lonely right now. Hopefully the onions will be the bridge to new friendship.












What beautiful plants, and what a wonderful tribute.
Friendships like these are one of the things that make life worth living, IMO. I would say that you should treasure his memory, but your tribute and garden are ample evidence that you are doing so.
Hi Rik! Gorgeous photos! I really must go work in the garden . . .
Thank you for being the link to Dell’Arte and keeping us informed. Ron+onions=ronions? Stay cool down there in TX.
You guys are gonna have to come here and help me with the garden. I don’t know what I’m doing!
It doesn’t matter. What matters is the effort!
Stunning photos and a wonderful and fitting tribute to our dear friend. A perfect way to stay feeling connected. We are going to come and consume some of those onions with you in his honour so keep nurturing them.
ANY time!!!
Nice onion pictures and tribute to your friend! Thanks!
Nice pictures! Our garden is now full of allium cultivars, so the floral growth pattern you picture is very familiar. Most interesting is our Egyptian Walking Onions, which grow “bulblets” in their flowers. The heavy bulblets nod down to the ground and sprout to form new plants. Hence, the onions “walk” across the garden. Everything is edible: the hollow leaves (like giant chives), the bulblets, and the bulbs.
Thank you for sharing the story. I really must plant some onions next year. I forget how beautiful the flowers are.
This is lovely. Thank you.
This is lovely in so many ways. Thanks for the post.
Excellent photos and nice tribute to your friend.
We have chives in our “garden” but so few that I clip the flower buds so we can continue to harvest the chive leaves through the summer.