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Saturday, March 30, 2019

THE SLOW SUCCESSION

This week we hosted a large group of visitors from the Garden Clubs of America. As usual there had been fretting for several weeks about how the garden was going to look, what would be blooming and what wouldn't. You know the gardeners' cry, "You should have been here last week, or even this morning." I do try hard not to say that any more. Timing seems to be all important when a garden tour is on the books. Constant checking the weather report and temperatures. If only I could say, "come over today" That may be the only kind of garden tour in our future.
Of course the bluebonnets were blooming beautifully as well as the mallows, freesias, iris,


Globe mallow


and lots of other unusual things like kale and cabbage....gone to flower in our strange Spring, but left for the pollinators.

Flowers of Napa cabbage
Lovely clumps of fragrant narcissus 'cheerfulness'


and clumps of native wild alliums looking at home between the rocks.


And Texas yellow star, Lindheimera texana, which has established itself in a dry corner of the garden.


And because this was an afternoon tour even the Gilia rigidula was on show. Growing on top of the retaining wall between the secret garden and the English garden where it is much easier to appreciate than if it was growing low down on the ground. You are not likely to see this for sale unless in a specialist nursery. I found mine on the property and moved it to this spot.


But days later some of these plants are fading and others making an appearance. The warm sun this week and the claret cup cactus, Echinocereus triglochidiatus started to bloom.


And another round of the ladyfinger cactus, Echinocereus pentalophus.


and more and more blooms opening every day on the Lady Banks rose , Rosa banksia 'lutea'


And last evening as I strolled around the garden, I noticed the blue eyed grass,  Sisyrinchium was blooming. My Monday visitors missed seeing these.


I am now asking myself if my next garden visitors will see them. Will they last another 8 days. But of course there will be something else in bloom. The poppies and penstemons for sure and maybe the mallows will keep going for another week. The skullcaps and blackfoot daisies should be coming into their own. Yes. Spring and early summer are a succession of plants that bloom, fade and are replaced by others, so what am I fretting about? Just my nature.

14 comments:

  1. I do so love your garden. I'm so glad I got to see it last summer. I just wish we were neighbors and could visit back and forth and trade plants. I wouldn't mind living in Austin except that my home is here. Spring is here even if it is blustery here today. Happy weekend. I hope the cold front doesn't mess with your plants. ~~Dee

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    1. Thanks Dee. I would have loved to have spent some time with you last summer but the weekend seemed to fly by but I am glad you got to visit-albeit nit on my favorite kind of tour day. Darn this cold front. I thought I had just got things set up outside and now I need to protect and pull in some stuff again. I think the weather had us fooled this year and we got moving far too early.

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  2. I'm betting a visit to your garden on any day of the year would be a moment to remember. It certainly was for me!

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    1. Thanks Loree. I'm glad you enjoyed your visit here.

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  3. I just stumbled on your blog. Your gardens are incredibly beautiful! Do you give tours to the public? I have an old farmhouse outside of Austin and would love to plant some romantic gardens...I thought it was impossible to achieve what I'm envisioning with Texas natives, but you've just proved me wrong with these photos!!! ❤️

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    1. Hoi Aubrey. We have had many tours in the past but I am slowing down on having visitors because they involve just a little too much time. Texas natives are wonderful especially in the spring bloom but there are other good plants that are adapted to our difficult conditions. If your farmhouse in east of Austin then you will have easier slightly ground to deal with than we have west. Very rocky here.







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  4. I agree with Loree, Jenny - a visit to your garden at any time would be a joy! I'm pretty impressed by the flowers on that bolting cabbage. It would be worth growing cabbages just for those. I'm also very envious of the Gilia.

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    1. That Napa cabbage does have a great flower unlike the kale which I will pull out today. But the bees like that one too.

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  5. WOW~ so much beauty!!! Thanks for sharing.

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    1. Such a wonderful time of year for flowers to showcase their beauty.

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  6. So beautiful to look at! Thank you for posting.

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  7. I think any time a visitor comes to a garden two things happen. First, the gardener is keenly aware of everything that did NOT get done in advance and/or every plant that is NOT in bloom at that moment, and second, the visitor is keenly aware and deeply appreciative of every lovely view and plant that IS in bloom. What we aren't seeing in somebody else's garden, we never miss! Or so say I.

    Technical question: Jenny, how in the world did you get your wild alliums to clump so prettily!? We have them but they are polka dotted around the property here and there, no large clumps. What could I do to encourage that?!?

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    1. I have no idea how this happened. Certainly not any of my doing. I will say that the soil there is very poor with no irrigation. First there was just one clump and now they have spread all the way along. I have similar clumps in the herb garden. They particularly seem to like the edges of beds although there are some scattered around.

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