Garden stirrings

Garden stirrings

February 27, 2023 The freeze-damaged aloes (Aloe maculata) may have lost most of their fleshy arms, but check this out: they’re sending up flower spikes for spring anyway. Go, aloes, go! Here’s another one with just a couple “limbs,” but look at the size of that flower spike. These plants ...
Organic sculptures by Steve Tobin at Houston Botanic Garden

Organic sculptures by Steve Tobin at Houston Botanic Garden

February 22, 2023 When I fled to Houston during Austin’s ice storm aftermath earlier this February, I made a visit with family to Houston Botanic Garden. Even in Zone 9 Houston, winter had not spared palms, grasses, and many other plants. Still, an art exhibit by Steve Tobin called Intertwined: ...
Late-winter flora and fauna on my 17th blogiversary

Late-winter flora and fauna on my 17th blogiversary

February 14, 2023 ‘Fireworks’ gomphrena gone to seed On Valentine’s Day 2006 I hit publish for my very first blog post. Back then I saw blogging as a way to document my garden through the seasons and to join the online conversation about gardening in Austin. Boy, was it ever! ...
Enjoying fall color and a mellow garden

Enjoying fall color and a mellow garden

December 07, 2022 By the time I hang red Christmas balls from the agave’s spines, the Japanese maple finally blushes red too. Fall comes late to Central Texas, but I’ll take it, even at Christmastime. Last week was peak color for the Acer palmatum. Today, shriveled tan leaves cling to ...
Autumn gardens and biking at Biltmore House

Autumn gardens and biking at Biltmore House

November 17, 2022 During our visit to Asheville, North Carolina, earlier this month, we spent one day at Biltmore House — but not to see the castle-like chateau erected by the New York-based Vanderbilts as their summer place. We’ve toured the house before, and it’s interesting, but I didn’t feel ...
Native plant landscaping at ACC Highland Campus, the new home of Central Texas Gardener

Native plant landscaping at ACC Highland Campus, the new home of Central Texas Gardener

October 26, 2022 Teri Speight doing a Central Texas Gardener studio taping Last week, when author Teri Speight was in Austin to give a Garden Spark talk, I accompanied her to a taping at the new Central Texas Gardener studio at Austin PBS. Producer Linda Lehmusvirta had announced CTG’s move ...
Walking the rails at Santa Fe Railyard Park and Farmers' Market

Walking the rails at Santa Fe Railyard Park and Farmers’ Market

October 17, 2022 Back to Santa Fe! During our stay in late August, we hit the farmers’ market at The Railyard one morning. A tree-studded green space caught David’s eye on the way over, so we stopped to check it out. We found ourselves in Railyard Park, where train tracks ...
Ojos y Manos at Santa Fe Botanical Garden

Ojos y Manos at Santa Fe Botanical Garden

September 21, 2022 The Ojos y Manos: Eyes and Hands Garden hadn’t opened the first time I visited Santa Fe Botanical Garden. So during my return visit last month, I was happy to be able to explore it. (Here’s Part 1 of my recent visit.) Ojos y Manos, an educational ...
Beautiful flora and fauna at Santa Fe Botanical Garden

Beautiful flora and fauna at Santa Fe Botanical Garden

September 19, 2022 During our stay in Santa Fe at the end of August, I spent one morning at Santa Fe Botanical Garden. I first visited in 2016, three years after it opened and right before the opening of Phase 2, Ojos y Manos: Eyes and Hands. My 6-year absence ...
Planted plaza, fountains, and rose garden at Olbrich Botanical Gardens

Planted plaza, fountains, and rose garden at Olbrich Botanical Gardens

August 15, 2022 For Part 2 of my visit to Olbrich Botanical Gardens during June’s Madison Fling, I’ll show you the Rose Garden. I confess the words “rose garden” never perk up my ears. Sure, I like roses OK, but so many rose gardens are really rose ghettos, planted in ...
Green-roof prairie and fantasy gardens at Epic Systems, Part 2

Green-roof prairie and fantasy gardens at Epic Systems, Part 2

July 30, 2022 The fanciful, theme-park landscaping and architectural design of Epic Systems‘ corporate campus made for a one-of-a-kind tour during the Madison Fling in June. While I’d read about Epic’s imaginative design, I had not heard about its ambitious efforts at sustainability. According to the company’s website: “Epic’s buildings ...
Hot summer garden before it got super hot

Hot summer garden before it got super hot

June 29, 2022 I returned yesterday from the Madison Garden Bloggers Fling, and I’m already missing Wisconsin’s cooler summer climate. But dark clouds greeted me when I got home and then RAIN! An inch fell on my parched and heat-stressed garden, refreshing everything and sparing me from having to do ...
New pipe planters create a focal point in front garden

New pipe planters create a focal point in front garden

June 20, 2022 Me and my pipe planters! I have three new pipe planters in my front garden, which I installed last fall (pre-house painting) but never got around to sharing, thanks to all the New England-down-to-Virginia travel posts I slathered on the blog. (My fellow heat-wave sufferers, click the ...
In the night garden

In the night garden

June 06, 2022 The night garden in early summer glows with spires of creamy, bell-shaped blossoms. ‘Bright Edge’ yucca sends up these towers of flowers, perfect for a moonlight garden. Paleleaf yucca (Y. pallida) gets in on the act too, sending up its own tall flower spike over powder-blue leaves ...
Heart of stone: Tait Moring's garden

Heart of stone: Tait Moring’s garden

May 18, 2022 Amid the flurry of gardens I had the pleasure of visiting in late April, landscape architect Tait Moring‘s garden stands out, as always, for its evocative stonework and a magpie collection of found objects, boyhood collections, and castoffs from clients’ gardens, which Tait assembles into art for ...
Coleson Bruce's crevice garden in spring flower

Coleson Bruce’s crevice garden in spring flower

May 04, 2022 Two weeks ago Coleson Bruce invited me back to his garden to see it in spring flower. I’d first visited Coleson’s garden last fall — a garden unlike any other I’ve seen in Austin or even Texas. Colorado-style crevice gardens are unusual here, and Coleson’s is not ...