Interview with Luci Baines Johnson about Wildflower Center's new Family Garden

Interview with Luci Baines Johnson about Wildflower Center’s new Family Garden

March 19, 2014 Water feature with streams, pond, rocks, and grotto in the new children’s garden Some of you already know this story. In early 2000, while visiting the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center with my baby daughter and 3-year-old son, I unexpectedly met Lady Bird and her daughter Luci ...
Interview with Luci Baines Johnson about Wildflower Center's new Family Garden

Interview with Luci Baines Johnson about Wildflower Center's new Family Garden

March 19, 2014 Water feature with streams, pond, rocks, and grotto in the new children’s garden Some of you already know this story. In early 2000, while visiting the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center with my baby daughter and 3-year-old son, I unexpectedly met Lady Bird and her daughter Luci ...
Chinese New Year? Remembering my Beijing visit, April 2005

Chinese New Year? Remembering my Beijing visit, April 2005

January 04, 2014 While the garden sleeps I thought I’d start off the New Year with a post about the most foreign place I’ve ever visited: China. (Tanzania in Africa might have won that distinction but for the fact that I was on a guided tour and mostly in national ...
Visit to San Antonio's Japanese Tea Garden

Visit to San Antonio’s Japanese Tea Garden

March 13, 2013 Day-tripping in San Antonio last weekend, my family and I made time for a stroll through the Japanese Tea Garden, located near the zoo in Brackenridge Park. Constructed in an old limestone quarry, the gardens are framed and accessed by fascinating and unusual stonework, including a pagoda-like ...
Visit to San Antonio's Japanese Tea Garden

Visit to San Antonio's Japanese Tea Garden

March 13, 2013 Day-tripping in San Antonio last weekend, my family and I made time for a stroll through the Japanese Tea Garden, located near the zoo in Brackenridge Park. Constructed in an old limestone quarry, the gardens are framed and accessed by fascinating and unusual stonework, including a pagoda-like ...
Visit to Denver Botanic Gardens: Plains Garden, Rock Alpine Garden & Dryland Mesa

Visit to Denver Botanic Gardens: Plains Garden, Rock Alpine Garden & Dryland Mesa

July 18, 2012 The more naturalistic, dryland gardens were my favorite parts of Denver Botanic Gardens, which I visited earlier this month. By naturalistic I don’t mean, of course, that these gardens are any less designed. They are beautifully designed, and the high-country plants growing in them sparkled in the ...
Outdoors at North Carolina's Chimney Rock, Sliding Rock & Lake Lure

Outdoors at North Carolina’s Chimney Rock, Sliding Rock & Lake Lure

June 30, 2011 Ever since my Carolina childhood, the mountains of western North Carolina have been one of my favorite weekend destinations. During a recent vacation I had the pleasure of introducing my children to some fun hikes and nature outings in the Asheville area. Pictured above is a view ...
Hartman Prehistoric Garden is cycad-delic

Hartman Prehistoric Garden is cycad-delic

March 31, 2011 One hundred million years ago, Austin looked a lot different. A shallow sea lapped across central Texas, and later, as the sea retreated, cycads, magnolias, ferns, reeds and other ancient plants colonized the humid marshes. A dinosaur like this one walked here, leaving behind footprints that fossilized ...
Laying a stone path

Laying a stone path

May 31, 2010 Having procrastinated on those grass paths in the back garden long enough, this weekend I hauled home two trunkloads of limestone pieces and got to work. Naturally, I ran out of stone while laying the path on Sunday, and I knew the stone yards would be closed ...
Achy-back gardening blues: It feels good!

Achy-back gardening blues: It feels good!

January 21, 2010 Like a blue eye, a glass bead stares up from a moss-covered rock—my daughter’s doing. She’s become quite the moss farmer lately, transplanting it, when she finds some, to a shady niche in the Lion King rock. She keeps it watered and enjoys the way it feels ...
Yosemite National Park, the most beautiful place on earth

Yosemite National Park, the most beautiful place on earth

October 12, 2009 The world is full of beautiful places, and proclaiming one the most beautiful is, I’ll admit, as capricious as crowning one person the most lovely. Still, Yosemite National Park has to rank near the top. My husband and I visited in October of 1995, on a side ...
Gardens on Tour 2009: Academy Drive garden

Gardens on Tour 2009: Academy Drive garden

May 10, 2009 On Saturday I joined Diana of Sharing Nature’s Garden, Lori of The Gardener of Good and Evil, and a friend of Lori’s from Arizona to visit four private gardens on the Wildflower Center-sponsored Gardens on Tour, an annual tour of gardens that predominantly feature native Texas plants ...
Jenny's flower-licious walled garden

Jenny’s flower-licious walled garden

April 28, 2009 After visiting Jill Nokes’s walled garden last Sunday, the Austin garden bloggers drove to fellow blogger Jenny/Lancashire Rose‘s walled garden. Although differentiated by geography—Jill gardens on black gumbo clay in central Austin, Jenny on thin limestone “soil” and gravel in southwest Austin—they have much in common, including ...
Jenny's flower-licious walled garden

Jenny's flower-licious walled garden

April 28, 2009 After visiting Jill Nokes’s walled garden last Sunday, the Austin garden bloggers drove to fellow blogger Jenny/Lancashire Rose‘s walled garden. Although differentiated by geography—Jill gardens on black gumbo clay in central Austin, Jenny on thin limestone “soil” and gravel in southwest Austin—they have much in common, including ...
A splash of color

A splash of color

October 26, 2008 Yesterday and today I moved rock. Not all day, but when I had a few hours to spare. I moved rock from the stoneyard to the car to the wheelbarrow to the back yard to the raised bed where I’m adding a low retaining wall to tame ...
Fatal Flower Garden: Open Days Austin

Fatal Flower Garden: Open Days Austin

October 10, 2008 After visiting the theatrical Stone Palms garden during the Garden Conservancy’s Open Days Austin tour last Saturday, Annie in Austin and I headed over to east Austin to visit the Tex-Asian garden dubbed Fatal Flower. As you can see, that’s a bit of a misnomer since there ...