Gopher plant 'Winter Blush' is mini-hydrangea lookalike

Gopher plant ‘Winter Blush’ is mini-hydrangea lookalike

April 14, 2018 The best plants look as good going to seed as they do in flower. I’d put ‘Winter Blush’ gopher plant (Euphorbia rigida ‘Winter Blush’) in this category based on its passing resemblance to fading hydrangea blossoms. Mind you, they’re on a whole different plane than the Prius-sized ...
Bonnie bluebonnets and a polyphemus moth

Bonnie bluebonnets and a polyphemus moth

April 05, 2018 Who knew a patch of bluebonnets (Lupinus texensis) by the front door could bring so much joy? Well, probably lots of Texans. It is our state flower, and we all take pictures of our kids and dogs sitting in fields of them every spring. My own personal ...
Spring flowerings in my garden

Spring flowerings in my garden

March 27, 2018 The mountain laurels and redbuds and plums are done. Carolina jessamine is done. But ‘Tangerine Beauty’ crossvine (Bignonia capreolata ‘Tangerine Beauty’) is hitting its stride as we move into mid-spring here in Central Texas. It looks especially fetching alongside the burgundy leaves of Loropetalum chinense ‘Sizzling Pink’ ...
Meet Lucy, the red-headed screech owl

Meet Lucy, the red-headed screech owl

March 26, 2018 The female screech owl nesting in our owl box is a rufous, or red-feathered, owl. She gives me some funny looks when she hangs out in the doorway, and I’ve named her Lucy. Desi, her mate, hangs out in a stand of bamboo all day, and he ...
Owl'll be happy to see you!

Owl’ll be happy to see you!

March 18, 2018 For 5 years in a row, screech owls nested in our owl box every spring. Watching them raise their chicks was an annual delight. But then they stopped coming, and for the past 2 years, no owls, which bummed me out. It’s nesting season again, and I’ve ...
New leaves coming up, old leaves coming down

New leaves coming up, old leaves coming down

March 16, 2018 Spring looks a lot like fall in my garden, as this photo shows: fresh green leaves surrounded by brown live oak leaves. Live oaks stay green all winter, like an evergreen tree, but come spring they do actually drop their leaves and swiftly leaf out again. Casting ...
Abuzz over gopher plant, plus new plants!

Abuzz over gopher plant, plus new plants!

March 14, 2018 Honeybees are out in force, and gopher plant (Euphorbia rigida) is one of their early spring favorites. I’m abuzz over gopher plant’s chartreuse bracts and yellow flowers too — so sunny on these early spring days. Lemon-lime rules out front right now, with ‘Color Guard’ yucca, gopher ...
Fiddleheads and other unfurlings

Fiddleheads and other unfurlings

March 11, 2018 Fiddle-dee-dee! It’s looking ferny around here. River fern (Thelypteris kunthii) fiddleheads are popping up beneath the Japanese maple, right on schedule. Unfurling into shepherds’ hooks, the fronds will soon fill out and add springtime lushness to the shade garden. The spiraling fiddleheads are so freaking cute! They ...
The subtle beauty of Mexican buckeye in flower

The subtle beauty of Mexican buckeye in flower

March 09, 2018 One of the few things I didn’t plant in my garden, the Mexican buckeye (Ungnadia speciosa) came with the house. When I first saw the buckeye-shaped seedpods dangling from its branches, I was excited to realize I’d inherited this small native tree. That first fall, its yellowing ...
Loropetalum color bomb

Loropetalum color bomb

March 02, 2018 ‘Sizzling Pink’ loropetalum is still sizzling in the lower garden and knocking my socks off every time I look at it. Yesterday the sun was lighting up those fuchsia blooms like a stained-glass window. The fringey flowers look like the pom-poms of a thousand cheerleaders. So colorful! ...
Snake in the garden: Danger noodle or welcome predator?

Snake in the garden: Danger noodle or welcome predator?

March 01, 2018 Am I the only one who finds snakes rather fascinating, even charming, particularly if the scaly visitor is small and harmless? For every gardener who goes pale over a slithery shape in the grass, surely there are plenty of us whose eyes light up and who lean ...
Fringeflower benefits

Fringeflower benefits

February 27, 2018 Just when I’d begun to stomp around, impatient for a little spring color in my shady garden (no daffodils, no quince, no plums, darn it!), Chinese fringeflower (Loropetalum chinense) burst into fuchsia bloom and saved the day. Hallelujah! Throughout my garden (even out front; deer don’t eat ...
Spring pinks

Spring pinks

February 25, 2018 Spring is coming along ever so slowly, although of course it’s still only February. But still — I’m so ready! Stepping out of my car in the driveway with a bag of groceries, I spotted this blazing color echo between flowering loropetalum in the island bed and ...
Succulent pots set out for spring, but too early?

Succulent pots set out for spring, but too early?

February 22, 2018 A balmy breeze smelling of spring convinced me to move my cold-tender potted succulents back out into the garden over the weekend. It’s so nice to see them gracing a plant table on the deck again, after several months in which they sat packed in a wagon ...
Hungry garden visitors

Hungry garden visitors

February 19, 2018 High-pitched, whistling cries have filled the skies lately, alerting me to our cedar waxwing visitors. Flocking into berry-laden junipers (i.e., “cedars”), possumhaw and yaupon hollies, hackberries, and even invasive ligustrum to gorge themselves, these beautiful crested and masked birds can strip a tree clean of berries in ...
It's been a cold winter, but the garden's still got it going on

It’s been a cold winter, but the garden’s still got it going on

February 14, 2018 Thank heavens for evergreens, grasses, yuccas, and structural features like stock-tank ponds, big containers, and low walls. After this withering, frostbitten winter, my garden would otherwise be flattened. Of course I’ve been moaning and groaning about the damage anyway. (Isn’t that what we gardeners do?) But taking ...