Houston Botanic Garden brightens the holidays with Lightscape

Houston Botanic Garden brightens the holidays with Lightscape

December 27, 2021 Space City finally got its own botanical garden last fall, the terrific new Houston Botanic Garden, which I visited right after it opened. Since then it’s survived an unprecedented freeze during Texas’s February snowpocalypse and appears to have bounced back with vigor. But my return visit, on ...
Yucca and palm fantasyland at John Fairey Garden

Yucca and palm fantasyland at John Fairey Garden

December 17, 2021 I’d been to The John Fairey Garden (formerly Peckerwood Garden) a half-dozen times before my late-October visit with Loree Bohl of Danger Garden, who was in town to give a Garden Spark talk. Frustratingly, I’d never toured the dry garden, though I’d glimpse its bristling yuccas and ...
A plant-collector's jungle garden of palms, sotol, and more

A plant-collector’s jungle garden of palms, sotol, and more

December 14, 2021 Like a Mayan ruin — except not crumbling and with a fresh coat of white paint — John Ignacio’s house near Bull Creek in northwest Austin stands amid a jungle-evoking garden of palms, bamboo, and other bold foliage. I’d been introduced to John by a mutual friend, ...
Reds for fall and foliage power

Reds for fall and foliage power

September 21, 2021 Ah, end of summer in Texas, and fall only a few weeks away. It’s still a bit too early for the fresh flowering of our “second spring,” but festive reds blaze among the ferny foliage of cypress vine (Ipomoea quamoclit) on the deck railing. Everyone warns me ...
Polynesian Austin weekend vibes

Polynesian Austin weekend vibes

July 18, 2021 A summer evening visit to Hula Hut netted us with zero tubular tacos or pu pu platters, due to an unexpected early closure. But it did provide beautiful, tropicalesque views of Pride of Barbados flowers and palm trees releafing after the February freeze. And we had sunset ...
Climatron tropical house, origami sculpture, and more: Missouri Botanical Garden, part 1

Climatron tropical house, origami sculpture, and more: Missouri Botanical Garden, part 1

June 22, 2021 A week ago today I road-tripped with my mom through Arkansas up to St. Louis to visit Missouri Botanical Garden, which I’d long wanted to see. I’d always thought of St. Louis as being not that far away from Austin. After all, Missouri is part of the ...
Bee balm, daylilies, and fawn season

Bee balm, daylilies, and fawn season

June 13, 2021 I’m grateful for the past two weeks of off-and-on rain, which helped my garden rebound from the epic February freeze. Early June may be hot and muggy now, but the garden is full and flowery. And the driveway border is back, baby! ‘Peter’s Purple’ bee balm (Monarda ...
Heart eyes for heartleaf skullcap and more

Heart eyes for heartleaf skullcap and more

May 26, 2021 A blue haze has settled over the driveway-island bed, the silvery blue flowers of heartleaf skullcap (Scutellaria ovata). I find myself stopping to admire them every time I step outside. It fills in nicely around a ‘Vanzie’ whale’s tongue agave (Agave ovatifolia), ‘Vertigo’ pennisetum grass, Mexican oregano ...
A week of bloom spikes and rain

A week of bloom spikes and rain

May 22, 2021 We had such prolonged rain this week that I lost track of how many inches it came to — 4 inches for sure if not 5. The garden responded to the extra water and mild May temps with a profusion of growth, including bloom spikes on yuccas, ...
Pittosporums and palms zapped by February freeze at Zilker Botanical Garden

Pittosporums and palms zapped by February freeze at Zilker Botanical Garden

April 26, 2021 The damage and plant kills at Zilker Botanical Garden stunned me when I visited a week and a half ago. No garden in Austin was spared during February’s Big Freeze, and of course our public gardens weren’t either. But I still wasn’t prepared to see the ancient, ...
Early spring blooms and Athena the owl at Wildflower Center

Early spring blooms and Athena the owl at Wildflower Center

March 20, 2021 When they’re offered, I take advantage of late-admission hours to gardens. The light is better for photography in the early evening, and you have a better chance of seeing wildlife. On Thursday our local native-plant botanical garden, the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, stayed open late, and ...
Cowboy pool, colorful outdoor living: Lorie and Michael Kinler's Fort Worth Garden

Cowboy pool, colorful outdoor living: Lorie and Michael Kinler’s Fort Worth Garden

March 05, 2021 Last fall, during a weekend trip to Dallas, I was invited to visit the Fort Worth garden of Lorie and Michael Kinler. The Kinlers are the design duo behind Redenta’s Landscape Design Kinler Landscape Architecture (renamed in 2022), formerly affiliated with Redenta’s Garden nursery in Dallas. A ...
After the beautiful, terrible Texas snowpocalypse

After the beautiful, terrible Texas snowpocalypse

February 25, 2021 A 6-inch snowfall blanketed our street in northwest Austin. Not a footprint had marked it when I took photos that morning. You might have heard about a little snowstorm that happened in Texas last week. If you experienced it, you might still be reeling a little — ...
An icy garden on my 15th blogiversary

An icy garden on my 15th blogiversary

February 14, 2021 I started this blog 15 years ago today, a Valentine’s Day treat to myself as I joined the online gardening community. At first Digging was all about documenting and sharing photos of my Austin cottage garden, which I left behind 13 years ago when we moved to ...
Green texture in my live oak-shaded garden

Green texture in my live oak-shaded garden

January 31, 2021 At the end of a dog walk a few days ago, I ran my eyes along the streetside edge of my island bed, automatically checking for fallen branches, weeds, armadillo holes — as one does. Suddenly my perspective shifted, and I saw the plantings anew, as if ...
Tropical conservatory and origami sculpture at San Antonio Botanical Garden

Tropical conservatory and origami sculpture at San Antonio Botanical Garden

December 09, 2020 Rising Peace I’m not much for conservatories, as regular readers know. They give me mall vibes. But maybe I’m starting to come around a little, thanks to the Origami in the Garden exhibit of Kevin Box‘s sculptures at San Antonio Botanical Garden. This is Part 2 of ...