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Showing posts with label prickly pear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prickly pear. Show all posts

Saturday, April 26, 2025

YELLOW IS THE COLOR OF THE MOMENT

Two weeks ago we had friends visiting from Denver. We were so excited to show them our wonderful desert home but disappointed that the lack of rain this year was making the desert look very drab and dowdy.  Usually the desert behind our house is a sea of yellow, at this time of year, with flowering brittle bush, Encelia farinosa. This year their leaves are brown and dried up living up to their name. I wish our friends had come a couple of weeks later, as following a brief shower and a cold front passing through, all the trees burst into bloom. Maybe the shower and drop in pressure had nothing to do with it and the flowering had more to do with daylight hours and the natural cycle of blooming. The Palo verde, mesquite and acacia are now putting on a magnificent show. Just driving down the road with the trees in flower and the backdrop of the mountains is the most magnificent sight. 








This is the  Palo Verde, Parkinsonia x Desert Museum, in our front garden. Regrettably this tree was overwatered by the previous occupants and has grown very large. We have had to do some canopy pruning as well as root pruning as the roots were bringing up our driveway in several places. We were also fearful of them making their way into our sewers system. But for all these negatives we love the tree for the filtered shade it provides for the plantings beneath its canopy. It is the sterile hybrid of three palo verde species, P. aculeata, P. microphyllum and P. florida. Its attributes are that it is thornless, fast growing, drought tolerant and attracts many pollinators.

When the flowers drop the ground is a carpet of yellow  



Below is another common spring bloomer, the mesquite, Prosopsis sp.  producing long pods later in the season. These are a favorite of the javelina and can also be ground to make a flour as the Hohokam  lived did many years ago. For all their messy nature the trees both stabilize and being a legume, improve the soil.



Above the sweet acacia, Vachellia farnesiana, The desert trees and shrubs are competing for who is the most fragrant. 
Other shrubs like the hop bush, Dodonaea viscose, are also blooming. These reseed quite readily and I have a couple which seeded in a perfect place among the rocks and which I intend to keep. Yesterday, I collected the papery winged fruits, with the intention of sowing some behind the house in what we now call the hinterland. 


This tree loves dry rocky slopes so will be quite at home. 

In my limited space areas damianita,  Chrysactinia mexicana, is very much at home in fast draining desert soils. It is extremely tolerant of heat and drought. If I had one complaint is that the yellow color is just a shade too bright. It germinates quickly from seed but bringing it to even childhood even under controlled conditions is very challenging. The wiry roots are thin and easily damaged. I have had success with only one plant. It makes thousands of seeds but never produces seedlings naturally. 



In truth I think I prefer the gently sprawling nature of the yellow evening primrose, Oenothera primiveris. It is planted along the edge of the walkway between two rosemary bushes. 

evening primrose


The first of the prickly pear blooms are opening. 


The barrel cactus make up for having the smallest of blooms by making a bold statement with their structure. 


Flowers on the Blue barrel cactus, Ferocactus glaucescens


The blooms are barely noticeable on the golden barrels, Echinocactus grusonii, but they leave behind dry prickly pods with small black seeds. I don't know what the conditions are for seedlings to grow but I never find any. The quail are very good foragers.


Next time I'll introduce you to the saguaro. There is much of interest to share.

Monday, May 15, 2017

GARDEN BLOGGERS' BLOOM DAY, MAY 2017

It has been a while since I posted on bloom day. Suddenly it was upon me and I had no time to gather the photos.

Surely the opening photograph for this month's Bloom day post has to be the Monarda 'Peter's Purple' He's certainly King of the garden at the moment.


And Queen of the May garden is the blanket flower, Gaillardia pulchella. Not so easy negotiating the pathways at the moment.



And we have a princess too,  Clematis texensis 'Princess Diana'. What a beauty she is. Just a few weeks ago there was no sign of growth and I was sure I had lost the plant over the winter. In less than a month she has grown to almost cover the trellis.


So many bloomers. The spineless prickly pear, with two different blooms on the same plant.


I wonder why that is?


And all the day lilies.






All but the tiny orange one without names.
Echinacea purpurea, just coming into bloom.


The larkspurs, love-in-a-mist and poppies have finished already but blackfoot daisies, Melampodium leucanthum,  still keep going.


Among the other natives, the purple skullcap, Scutellaria wrightii.


Which pairs well in a rock garden setting with the square bud primrose, Calylophus berlandieri, and pink skullcaps.



Square bud primrose with ruby crystal grasses

Pink skull cap seeded in the dry creek
Scabiosa back for the third year. A rescue plant.


And Texas betony, Stachys coccinea, not a showy plant but the hummingbirds love it.


Another native, horsemint, Monarda citriodora.


The native chocolate daisy, Berlandiera lyrata, with its delicious chocolate fragrance.


And for the first time in a while success with Cleome.


These are just a few of the flowers that are blooming in my rocky Texas garden in mid May.

Thank you Carol at Maydreams gardens for hosting Bloom day. Find out what is growing in other gardens this May Bloom Day.

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

CELEBRATE NATIONAL WILDFLOWER WEEK, May 1-7

Do you have wildflowers growing in your garden? I do. Let's see what is blooming out there this week as we celebrate National Wildflower Week.

I'll begin with Colorado Venus' looking-glass, Triodanis coloradoƫnsis. (A)What a lovely name.


And where did it come from because I have never seen it before? It came inside a hole in a rock I brought into the garden when I redid the dry creek along the garage wall.


The plant is annual so I shall watch carefully for the seed pods ripening. I would like to have more next year.
A final blooming of the lace cactus, Echinocereus reichenbachii.(P) Even after the blooms die it remains a tidy addition in the rock-scape.


And the blousy Engelmann's daisy, Engelmannia peristenia, (P) opening with new flowers every day from a winter rosette of leaves.


The pathways in the vegetable garden are crowded with blanket flowers, Giallardia pulchella. (A) Goldfinches feast on their seeds but always leave plenty to bloom next year.


And Mexican bush sage, Salvia leucantha,(P) blooming months ahead of schedule this year. Will it bloom again in the fall as the hummingbirds begin their long winter flight to SouthAmerica?


The trailing wine cup, Callirhoƫ involucrata, (P) spilling over the dry-stone wall. Always everyone's favorite when they visit the Wildflower Center.



The flowers on the Texas prickly pear may only last for a day but they may leave behind some nice fruits. These fruits, call tuna, ripen to a burgundy red and can be used to make jelly.



Wooly stemodia, Stemodia lanata, (P) makes a good ground cover and is deer resistant.


It has tiny blue flowers.


Our native Lantana, Lantana horrida (P) is also deer resistant and blooms through the hottest months of the year with little water.


Purple skullcap,  Scutellaria wrightii,(P)  can be pruned into a tidy clump and blooms all summer.


Echinacea, Echinacea purpurea, (P) a summer bloomer and another favorite of the birds when it goes to seed.


The Blackfoot daisy, Melapodium leucanthum, (P) another deer proof summer bloomer.


The columbines are among the earliest of spring flowering plants. here the Hinckley's yellow columbine, Aquilegia hinkleyana, (P).


and the more delicate smaller flowered Aquilegia canadensis,(P)


Damianita, Chrysactinia mexicana,(A)is both drought and deer tolerant but does best when given occasional waterings.


All these plants are blooming in my west Austin, rocky landscape, with minimum watering.

If you would like to learn more about wildflowers for you area you can get information on the Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center website. There are all kinds of programs going on this week in Celebration of National Wildflower week.