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 ...
Gathering spaces in Ruthie Burrus Garden, part 2

Gathering spaces in Ruthie Burrus Garden, part 2

May 02, 2022 In my last post I hope I wowed you — as I was wowed — by the colorful wildflower meadow and textural spiky-soft shade garden of Ruthie Burrus. If you missed it, check out Part 1 of my visit to Ruthie’s West Austin garden. Today we’ll explore ...
Wildflower-palooza at Ruthie Burrus Garden, part 1

Wildflower-palooza at Ruthie Burrus Garden, part 1

April 30, 2022 I first photographed Ruthie Burrus’s garden 8 years ago, when she emailed an invitation to come visit. I was wowed by her wildflower meadow, textural foliage garden at the front door, giant rainwater cisterns, charmingly rustic garden haus, and skyline view. Here’s her garden haus in spring ...
Spring glow-up in my Texas garden

Spring glow-up in my Texas garden

April 20, 2022 Ah, April. It’s a beautiful month for Austin gardens — if you can ignore the live oak pollen catkins hanging off every surface and piling up underfoot. Which I can (just barely). Let’s take a spin through the garden to see what’s blooming this month. These photos ...
Texas mountain laurel bliss - and books! - at Barton Springs Nursery

Texas mountain laurel bliss – and books! – at Barton Springs Nursery

April 05, 2022 Last week Barton Springs Nursery was marinating in grape Kool-Aid fragrance thanks to a bumper crop of Texas mountain laurel (Sophora secundiflora) blossoms. Purple clusters of sweet-smelling flowers greeted me at the entrance to the nursery yard. More grapey trees — including a giant of about 15 ...
Houston Botanic Garden edibles, water wall, and end-of-winter gardens

Houston Botanic Garden edibles, water wall, and end-of-winter gardens

April 04, 2022 In early March, on a quick trip to Houston, I returned to Houston Botanic Garden for an end-of-winter visit. HBG is still a new garden — it opened in September 2020; click for my visit — and the culinary garden with its massive, aqua-tiled water wall is ...
I painted my brick house white for a fresh look

I painted my brick house white for a fresh look

March 12, 2022 Let me join the throngs of bloggers writing about painting dated brick houses white or off-white. After years of mulling it over, we took the leap of painting our brick a few weeks ago, and I’m loving the fresh, clean, more modern look. Before Since moving into ...
Gravel garden at Chanticleer reminds me of Texas

Gravel garden at Chanticleer reminds me of Texas

February 21, 2022 Whether you love plants, exciting planting combos, design and gardening artistry, or overlooks and hideaways to sit and enjoy a beautiful garden, Chanticleer has it all. Located near Philadelphia, Chanticleer dubs itself “a pleasure garden,” and it’s been my favorite public garden since I first visited in ...
Gardens galore at Paxson Hill Farm, part 1

Gardens galore at Paxson Hill Farm, part 1

February 09, 2022 Paxson Hill Farm’s crossroads, where inviting paths branch in every direction A friend asked me how I find gardens to see when traveling. Aside from online research a lot comes down to asking gardeners who live in the area. And it pays to build in time for ...
Water feature magic in Lori Daul's garden

Water feature magic in Lori Daul’s garden

January 24, 2022 My friend Lori Daul‘s garden in South Austin has evolved, over the many years I’ve visited, from a sunny, romantic space filled with roses to a shadier yet still lush paradise where bold blue agaves and black elephant ears get equal billing, where dry gardens meet water ...
A Texas-style crevice garden - and neighborly collaboration - brings midcentury Austin home to vibrant life

A Texas-style crevice garden – and neighborly collaboration – brings midcentury Austin home to vibrant life

January 18, 2022 At the end of October, when Loree of Danger Garden was in town for her Garden Spark talk, we finagled an invitation to the tropicalesque garden of John Ignacio. John in turn introduced us to his friend and neighbor Coleson Bruce, who kindly allowed a couple of ...
New Year's Eve hike at McKinney Falls

New Year’s Eve hike at McKinney Falls

January 01, 2022 Upper Falls pool at McKinney Falls State Park As the second year of the pandemic sputtered to a sour end, with covid rates skyrocketing yet again, I turned to nature for a spirit-soothing New Year’s Eve hike with my family. Around noon we arrived at McKinney Falls ...
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, ...
Looking inward at Innisfree Garden, part 2

Looking inward at Innisfree Garden, part 2

December 10, 2021 Today I’m continuing with part 2 of my tour of Innisfree, a public garden in New York’s Hudson Valley. Inspired by Chinese strolling gardens, the naturalistic garden rambles around a glacial lake, with small “cup gardens” to discover along the way. Click here to read part 1 ...