Birds of a feather at the San Antonio Zoo

Birds of a feather at the San Antonio Zoo

January 20, 2009 A beautiful, sunny, 70-degree holiday on Monday enticed us to spend the day outdoors, despite our itchy, cedar-fever-irritated eyes. So we packed up the kids and drove south to the San Antonio Zoo, where we fed these lovely Australian lories cupfuls of nectar. Aren’t they beautiful? Their ...
Why am I smiling?

Why am I smiling?

November 06, 2008 Why am I smiling? Because tomorrow I’m visiting Peckerwood Garden with a bunch of the Austin garden bloggers. Road trip!! And doesn’t the name “Peckerwood” just make you grin? Look for pics from the incredible Peckerwood Garden this weekend—on 10 or so Austin garden blogs. All material ...
Indian Pow Wow wows in Tulsa

Indian Pow Wow wows in Tulsa

August 12, 2008 Soon after crossing the Red River from Texas into Oklahoma, you notice a preponderance of Native American imagery on signs, license plates, and billboards. Turnpikes are named for tribes, and official signs along the highways announce when you’ve entered an Indian nation—for instance, the Creek Nation or ...
A visit to Chanticleer: Cut Flower & Vegetable Garden

A visit to Chanticleer: Cut Flower & Vegetable Garden

July 24, 2008 Our final stop on our early July visit to Chanticleer was the Cut Flower & Vegetable Garden. How sweet, green, and lush it appeared—like an April garden in Austin. Old-fashioned lovelies like hollyhocks (above) and sunflowers gave height to the rows of cutting flowers. Bent-twig arches also ...
A visit to Chanticleer: Gravel Garden and Ruin

A visit to Chanticleer: Gravel Garden and Ruin

July 23, 2008 Among all the beautiful, bold, and imaginative gardens at Chanticleer, why do I like the Gravel Garden best? It so resembles the dry gardens of west Austin that I feel a little sheepish to admit that in this lush, Pennsylvania garden I preferred the familiarity of home ...
A visit to Chanticleer: Pond Garden

A visit to Chanticleer: Pond Garden

July 22, 2008 The Pond Garden at Chanticleer lies at the bottom of a steep hill in a wide, open space backed by a stand of trees. Though manmade, it look completely natural thanks to its setting and the coarse plantings around its edge. Here’s an overlook of the Pond ...
A visit to Chanticleer: Hydrangeas & House Garden

A visit to Chanticleer: Hydrangeas & House Garden

July 21, 2008 I’m sure something shines brightly every month that Chanticleer is open (April through October). But I felt fortunate to see the hydrangeas in full bloom since I rarely see one in Austin. I can never decide whether I prefer the pink or the blue. The lacecaps are ...
A visit to Chanticleer: Teacup & Tennis Court Gardens

A visit to Chanticleer: Teacup & Tennis Court Gardens

July 20, 2008 If you haven’t been to Chanticleer, you must go. Hop on a plane or jump in the car and go. Now. Dubbed “a pleasure garden” in its brochure, it lives up to the billing. From the moment we arrived, just after lunchtime on a quiet Sunday in ...
King's Garden at Fort Ticonderoga

King’s Garden at Fort Ticonderoga

July 17, 2008 Fragrant lavender edges sunny paths in the King’s Garden at Fort Ticonderoga in upstate New York, which we visited at the end of June. The name “King’s Garden” is a bit misleading because this formal, ornamental garden did not exist when the French built the nearby fort ...
Magical history tour

Magical history tour

July 16, 2008 View Larger Map 4,650 miles. 20 days. One car. Two kids. A ton of luggage. We just returned from a three-week road trip—an early-U.S. history tour, you could say. We wanted our kids to learn about the colonial era, the Revolutionary War, and the Civil War, and ...
Hill Country scenery

Hill Country scenery

June 09, 2008 Despite those crazy pink bluebonnets still blooming in my garden, Texas wildflowers in summertime favor orange, yellow, and red, with a few white prickly poppies and yucca blooms thrown in for good measure. Yesterday we drove our son to summer camp in the Hill Country west of ...
My sister's Houston garden

My sister's Houston garden

March 18, 2008 Front porch vignette Last Friday we drove three hours east to Houston to visit my sister and her partner in their house in the Heights. Despite unseasonably hot and humid weather on Friday and Saturday, we had a wonderful time kicking around at the Houston Rodeo, shopping ...
My sister's Houston garden

My sister’s Houston garden

March 18, 2008 Front porch vignette Last Friday we drove three hours east to Houston to visit my sister and her partner in their house in the Heights. Despite unseasonably hot and humid weather on Friday and Saturday, we had a wonderful time kicking around at the Houston Rodeo, shopping ...
Crape myrtles in winter: Sculptural drama

Crape myrtles in winter: Sculptural drama

February 15, 2008 A glorious allee of crape myrtles leads to a whimsical toad fountain at the Dallas Arboretum, which I visited on Wednesday. Another view. I’d never seen a crape myrtle allee before, and their smooth trunks and twisting branches are well suited to this kind of display. I’m ...
Visit to Dallas Arboretum

Visit to Dallas Arboretum

February 14, 2008 Taiwanese pear in full bloom at the Dallas Arboretum After a 3-hour landscape design class at the Dallas Arboretum yesterday, and before the 3 1/2-hour drive back home, I took a quick stroll through the gardens, which I’d never seen, despite having stayed over in Big D ...
Lost in the beauty of Lost Maples

Lost in the beauty of Lost Maples

November 06, 2007 Bigtooth maple in Lost Maples State Natural Area Leaf peeping can be a disappointing pursuit here in central Texas. Absent the flaming oranges, yellows, and reds of eastern hardwood forests, our trees either stay green all winter (live oaks and junipers) or their leaves color faintly before ...