Sunday, April 15, 2018

New plants from the Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center!


Arrangement of a few agave poking out of a sea of Mexican feathergrass and fall aster
Another beautiful spring weekend, with a few storms and wind thrown in. Friday I took a half day to attend the Wildflower Center's Spring Sale. I love getting my plants here. First, I know they're all native plants suited to this area. Second, it benefits a good cause, as the Wildflower Center does so much to preserve and educate the public about native plants. Third, it's pretty affordable. I renewed my membership and got a coupon for 3 free plants. I also got 10% off my purchase with my membership. And of course, Friday is members' only day, so I can beat the rush and get plants before they sell out, although several plants had already sold out when I arrived Friday afternoon.

The Wildflower is my zen place. I love coming here. I was happy to see the mama owl is back at her nest by the front entrance. A curious baby owl was sticking its head out to check on all the gawkers below. The entrance is so peaceful, with ginormous wind chimes and a little pond with a fountain and native water plants.

I didn't have time to do the full walk around, but the new meadow they opened a year or two ago is always pleasing, especially in spring with all the wildflowers in bloom. I did a quick spin through the shady garden. I wish I had a little stream like this one in my garden at home.




So, I made it out with only 40... okay, 42 plants! Because I can never have enough plants! 
This time I'm working on that bed out front that is brand spanking new. I should probably wait to plant until the grass is good and dead under the cardboard-mulch topping, but I am impatient (not a great trait in a gardener). Some photos from my Sunday in the garden:

Adding some mealy blue sage, coneflower, Berlandier's sundrops, black foot daisy, among many others 
Arranging my new plants















I was able to get a few in the ground.

Time for everyone's favorite game, find the sleeping cat! 

Sunday, April 1, 2018

Creating new garden beds

Ventured into the garden today. I'm expanding the bed in front to create a more unified appearance for the front yard. It has been a slow process - I started trying to kill the grass last summer by solarizing it with clear plastic. I think, however, the pecan tree provided too much shade, and so it didn't really work. So I had ugly plastic out there for most of the past year. I love to garden, but I am slow at it. Someday, 20 years down the road I'm sure, my garden will look expertly tended and planned out. But for now, it just seems like a hodgepodge.

And of course I ran out of mulch, so I still need to finish the far corner, but now that probably won't happen for another two weeks. 

I love watching for the little surprises spring brings. Sometimes the plant that I had thought was dead comes back to life, or a plant that hasn't bloomed in a few years all of sudden sets out a bloom. That's what happened with my prairie penstemon or wild foxglove. I have bought these every year at the Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center sale, and every year they've died off. This one specimen didn't, but neither did it create any flowers. This year I noticed a lot more growth, and saw flower stalks shoot up. I have been watching for its blooms every day, and here's the flower, just before blooming. I will have to take more photos after it opens up. And now I'm wondering what my next step should be. Buy more cobaea penstemon at the Wildflower Center sale in a couple of weeks? Collect the seeds and try to grow them? I don't have much luck with seeds typically, but that could also be due to my impatience and lack of proper care/cultivation. 
Penstemon Cobaea 
Same thing with the Wright's penstemon, or Wright's beardtongue. These seem to die back on me every year, but they re-seed prolifically. I have found these growing in random corners of my yard ever since I first introduced about 2-3 plants a few years ago. They transplant pretty easily. I transplanted this bad boy last year and it seemed to hold its own, but no major growth. Now it's got these beautiful blooms. Another one I transplanted in the back yard at the same time has done even better in a shadier spot.


Nature often drops a few unexpected surprises for my garden as well. One year I got some volunteer bluebonnets, which was serendipitously deposited next to a prickly pear and Berlandier's sundrops. There's nothing lovelier than the contrast between the deep blue of the bluebonnet and the bright sunny yellow of the sundrops. But, for whatever reason, that was the only year I got the bluebonnets. A year or so ago some stiff greenthread also found its way to my garden, and it's taken off like mad. 

Its delicate foliage and blooms are gorgeous in the xeriscape, interspersed among the yucca and agave. 

Finally, look at this little surprise I found. Grady likes to be in the garden with me, though she's not so actively engaged in work. She prefers to find a nice bush to hide behind and take a nap.





Sunday, March 18, 2018

I haven't entered anything into this blog in a while. Two years, in fact. But now spring is back and I've got my eyes on my garden again. It demands a lot, in part because I ask a lot. I'm not content with an empty yard, perfectly mown and fertilized. I need life and energy in my garden, a small oasis of nature. But I still want it to look nice too. In short, I want it all, and that's a lot of work. Happily, it's the kind of work I can do all day and feel a sense of accomplishment, along with the ache in my hands and legs.

So, one must start with cleaning up after the winter. A whole bunch of weeds grew up in the grass in the backyard, so I took my weed remover and dug and dug and dug and dug. When I removed a dandelion with roots intact... Victory! A sense of jubilation washed over me. I only managed it about 1 in 3-4 times, so I imagine many of those bastards will be back.


Every once in a while you get a weed you love, if you can call it that. A weed by any other name... a weed is in the eye of the beholder. I found this volunteer as I was mowing:

Spiderwort
It is a stunner. I wonder whether I should plant even more next to this one, so he won't be lonely. I would say I'd try to collect and plant seed, but I don't see very skilled at that. I spread a bunch of wildflower seeds last fall, but I haven't seen any plants emerge from the ground this spring. Are they waiting? Will they pop up when I'm least expecting it? Or did they get washed/blown away during the winter? What did I do wrong (**shaking my head sadly**)???

bed sans stickywilly
This morning I tackled the sticky weed, aka Stickywilly. Two hours and scratched arms later, I removed almost all of it from my backyard woodland area.

















And as I was cleaning up, look at the beginnings of spring I have discovered: Columbine beginning to bloom and the first little flowers on the Mexican Buckeye.
Yellow Columbine
Mexican Buckeye 





















I'm also going to start a new garden bed in the front. Whenever I start a new bed, I've found it most effective to lay cardboard with about 3 inches of mulch on top. I've tried solarizing with clear plastic, but that took months and didn't seem to kill the grass completely. Cardboard works like a charm, then I might squirt some grass killer on the few blades of grass that attempt to push through.
 

The other joys of gardening in the spring - I love this view of the xeriscape I created a few years ago. All these plants used to be so small! Look at the damianita starting to come into bloom. I love the colors and textures at play - the spiky sotol and agave, wispy Mexican feathergrass, sturdy prickly pear and the burst of yellow damianita. Couldn't have planned it better if I tried. And the coral honeysuckle is blooming like gangbusters, with lots of small bees and flies busily enjoying its offerings. 
 


 Another stunning bloomer - desert globemallow. I have two of these, the one closest to the driveway (pictured) has done the best, the other has struggled. They're native to Mexico and southwestern deserts (duh), so I don't give this any supplemental water and I planted it in the xeriscaped patch of the garden. You can see the flame acanthus behind it, beginning to put out new leaves.

Desert globemallow