Agatha Christie's Greenway (Devon, England) - The House
I can think of two places that we visited where I enjoyed the house more than the gardens. The first was Greenway, not for the house itself, which was surprisingly small and cramped, but for the history behind it and the fascinating mementos on display. Agatha Christie and her husband Max Mallowan were enthusiastic collectors. You can see their collections on display throughout the house - European and Oriental ceramics, pottery, African tribal masks, Egyptian artifacts, Tunbridge ware, china, trinkets, and books. The Morning Room has a portrait of Agatha Christie as a child and her doll Rosie, sitting in a chair - The Drawing Room was where the family would gather in the evenings. Christie would entertain guests by reading chapters from manuscripts of her latest books. Agatha Christie's bedroom. Max always slept on a smaller portable traveling cot (you can see part of it in the foreground). It was his favorite bed and he carried it with him on all of his archaeological travels. N...
Pretty sure this is Red Apple, grown as a dry-tolerant GC in zone 10 aka mesembryanthemum aka aptenia -- not an easy name to remember! Red Apple works for me. Never thought of growing it as an annual but it is obviously vigorous enough to make an impact in one year -- great idea!
ReplyDeleteYes, the former name was Mesembryanthemum criniflorum. It is perennial in warmer climates.
DeleteI know this plant by the common name of variegated red apple succulent. My mother-in-law planted it decades ago around their house in Malibu. That house (and many others) was lost in Old Topanga Fire in November 1993 but, when we went there following the fire to see if there was anything left to recover, we discovered that although the red apple was scorched on top, it was still alive and well underneath. Unfortunately, that was pretty much all that survived but it demonstrated the resilience of the plant.
ReplyDeleteOkay, another vote for "Red Apple". I had never heard that before. Thanks Kris!
ReplyDeleteMust be a SoCal thing-- "Red Apple", or "Aptenia" are the names I know, too.
ReplyDeleteLooks good in your photo! I don't see it much here anymore.