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Live In Los Gatos

Los Gatos, California

Los Gatos real estate, neighborhoods, condos, houses, homes, market trends, history, events, lifestyle, parks, events, businesses, home, Mary Pope-Handy

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Live In Los Gatos

Much of Los Gatos is in the Quarantine Zone for the Light Brown Apple Moth: What Does That Mean to You?

Aug. 6, 2008
Categorized in: Los Gatos Neighborhoods

Fruits and vegetables are the heritage of Silicon Valley or Santa Clara County, "The Valley of Heart's Delight"Recently I was suprised to learn that there is a quarantine map (click on the image to enlarge it) for most of Santa Clara County, and it includes most of Los Gatos, Saratoga, Monte Sereno and Almaden Valley too, for the Light Brown Apple Moth treatment plan.

What does the quarantine mean?

For most of us, it means that produce (your homegrown fruits and vegetables) can't move around within the zone. In Los Gatos, if you are northeast of Saratoga Los Gatos Road (Highway 9) or Kennedy Road, it means that you cannot share produce from your garden with your neighbors. (Please see the link above for the exact map boundaries.) That is, unless you've cooked or canned it or otherwise rendered it no-longer-fresh. In many neighborhoods, it's the norm for neighbors to share some of their excess fruits and vegetables with friends and neighbors, so this is counter-intuitive.

So don't share your garden fresh produce beyond your property boundaries this year if you're "in the zone". A recent
article
by the San Jose Mercury explains why this is so risky, so if this is news to you, as it was to me, have a look.

Your Garden, Prickley Pear, and the Wild West

Feb. 18, 2008
Categorized in: LG Lifestyle


Prickly Pear Cactus at Westhill Drive and Belgatos Road in Los Gatos, CAEver eat the fruit from a cactus bush? If you've tried prickly pear, then you have! 

Prickly pear used to be extremely widespread in the "wild west" and is still commonly found in the western U.S. today. In the Belwood area of Los Gatos, you can find it in at least three places: along Harwood Road, on Bacigalupi Drive and at Westhill and Belgatos Roads.

The fruit makes a nice jelly or can be eaten raw.  

It's more than just a hearty fruit on a formidable looking plant, though. Back in the days of settlers, this cactus had an extremely important use, it kept the bears out. It grows into something of a tall, thick wall and develops large, strong, sharp needles. You'd think twice before getting too close to it. So did the grizzlies.

So the settlers grew prickly pear around the perimeter of their homes like a tall fence or wall, and the cabins were much better fortified against hungry intruders with sharp teeth and claws. All the better that each year, the fruit would ripen and could be consumed or preserved too!

Next time you see this local cactus, remember the wild west, imagine how important it would be to you and be glad that today, we think of this plant for food and landscaping only and not for home protection.

Spring Fruits and Flowers

Apr. 16, 2007
Categorized in: LG Lifestyle
Grapevines from Mary Pope-Handy's yardBeautiful flowers and fruits are emerging all over town.  Spring is truly here in The Valley of Heart's Delight, the old moniker for Silicon Valley.

At our home, things are blooming too.  One side of our backyard has an herb garden (oregano, chives, rosemary and sage) and rose bushes.  Cherry tomatoes and strawberries will be nearby soon. The other two sides have fruit trees and vines.

Jim, my better half,  has been trying to grow grapes (Thompson seedless) for a few years (one year, our black lab chewed through the base of our sole vine, which was three years old and about to bear fruit at last - after that, he planted multiple vines to improve odds). He has five grapevines now, all thriving, and three of them will be giving us fruit this year (it takes awhile). 

Naval Orange Tree in Jim Handy & Mary Pope-Handy's  yard makes great juiceThe honeybees and huge, scary looking black bees are very busy around our orange tree in particular (we also enjoy a lemon tree, a peach tree, an apple tree, an apricot tree and Jim's now trying to grow a Bacon Avocado tree too).  When guests come to visit from out of state, they are led to the orange tree to pick the fruit from which their morning juice will be made.  Recently my sister was here from western Massachusettes for a few days.  They had three feet of snow back home while she was here. We had 75 degree temps and fresh squeezed orange juice! (Of course, she can gloat about the affordability of housing and I go quiet.)

Nondescript lemon tree in our backyard. Breed unknown, but not a Meyers Lemon.Something really nice about our neighborhood (Belwood of Los Gatos) is that the folks who live here are very friendly and often share (and swap) fruit. Yesterday Jim went up a block to Mike and Anna's home and gave them a big bag of our naval oranges. He came home, in turn, with a large bag of their tangellos.  In winter, folks just a few doors up, Rick and Sheena, come by with Persimmons. I think we owe them some citrus fruit, now that I think of it. 

Our roses are not quite up to speed, but as I walk Bella, our big black lab, up to Belgatos Park, I notice a lot of the neighbors' roses are looking good.  Here's one I took the other day of one on Bacigalupi Drive. Isn't it just gorgeous?  My grandfather used to have about 150 rosebushes at his home at Pasatiempo (near Santa Cruz, CA) and they always remind me of him. We have, I think, about 15 of them at our house.

The Los Gatos Creek trail is abloom too. My son found a site online with a lot of great photos of flowering plants there. Take a look!

Now I have to say that it's Jim, not yours truly, who takes care of all the plantlife. He's even an enthusiastic member of the Rare Fruit Growers Society. They swap branches for grafting and such. (I know when he's been to a meeting because I find sticks in my refrigerator.)  Jim does a great job. We don't have a large lot (8000 sf and our single story home takes up most of it so the backyard is tiny) but he gets a lot of fruit and so on out of it and he makes our roses gorgeous. 

My mom, Pat Pope, was a Realtor for 40 years and she was someone who would insist that it's better to focus on your strengths. One of her favorite lines is one I've adopted as my own where housework and yardwork are concerned. She used to say, with a smile and a glint in her eye,  "I'd rather sell a piece of dirt than scrub it."