A Last Look at El Charco del Ingenio

Let's see. That leaves the plants. I mean, since El Charco is a botanical garden, I should be discussing the plants, no?
Much of the grounds contain natural plantings. In some places, gardeners have pruned, improving the esthetics of small trees such as this Huizache Chino, a native of central and northern Mexico.

Huizaches have yellow, ball-shaped flowers, creating a heady fragrance in the spring. The fuzzy seed pods appear in the summer. I love sitting in the shade of these plants on a sunny day, breathing their scent.
An apparently related plant—tough and woody, feathery leaves and ball-shaped pink and white flowers—blooms in the summertime.

I don't know what it is called, nor the names of the blooms pictured on the right and the bottom. I include them because they're interesting, and sooner or later, I will learn their names.
All the above are dryland plants. In the wet canyon, the flora changes.

A mat of algae grows on the surface of a pond, wildflowers grow at its edge. There seems to be a lot of nutrients in the water—a subject I'll cover in a future post.
Duckweed colonizes the surface of water standing in a granite crack.

I fondly remember rambling beside ponds in New jersey's well-watered countryside. I was pleasantly surprised to find I could do it here in arid Mexico, too.
Many of El Charco's plants were collected and placed in grouped plantings.

Yucca, agave, cactus and succulents combine to make an eye-pleasing landscape. Artificial, yes. But you'd have to travel for years to see all the varieties gathered here.
Golden Barrel Cactus were rescued from a canyon which was flooded when a dam was built. They're thriving in their new home.

Another large type of barrel cactus was rescued from the same site. These visiting children give it scale. (Also a little awwww value.)

A tiny fraction of the plants growing here are pictured. You simply have to come and see them for yourself.
And doing it soon would be a good idea. Development on its borders is affecting the park. Instead of vistas of a natural countryside, we're beginning to see new, large houses.

Some were built in violation of zoning ordinances, but in Mexico, the law is a flimsy reed when attempting to block entrenched interests.
But for today, the park remains a magical place, attracting botanists, tourists and photographers.

Here, Paul (El Guapo) peers through his battered Nikon FM2, attempting to capture the wily Ocotillo. El Charco is indeed a blessing, in that it keeps him off the street.