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 ...
Brand-new Houston Botanic Garden showcases tropical and subtropical plants - part 1

Brand-new Houston Botanic Garden showcases tropical and subtropical plants – part 1

September 24, 2020 Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, and San Antonio all have botanical gardens, but until now, the biggest and most international city in Texas did not. Last weekend Houston finally got its due with the long-anticipated opening of Houston Botanic Garden. I road-tripped with my daughter three hours east ...
Otherworldly trees and rocks at Joshua Tree National Park

Otherworldly trees and rocks at Joshua Tree National Park

August 03, 2020 Oh hi! Let’s pop back into the national park road trip. From the central coast of California, back in late June, we headed home to Austin via a more southerly route than our outbound one. We zipped through Los Angeles — regretful that the pandemic prevented any ...
Mexico City: Day trip to Teotihuacán pyramids

Mexico City: Day trip to Teotihuacán pyramids

April 01, 2020 One pleasure of travel is the opportunity to marvel over monuments built by earlier civilizations: Stonehenge, Roman arenas and bridges, castles — and, most recently for us, Mesoamerican pyramids at Teotihuacán, about an hour’s drive northeast of Mexico City. We hired an Uber driver to take us ...
Mexico City: Jacaranda purple haze, Centro Histórico, and native plants

Mexico City: Jacaranda purple haze, Centro Histórico, and native plants

March 27, 2020 A romantic, violet veil brightens Mexico City each spring, when jacaranda trees unfurl a profusion of purple flowers on bare, sinuous trunks lining parkways, park paths, and residential streets. Jacaranda trees I caught sight of the purple haze from the airplane as we descended over the smoggy ...
Urban landscaping along Austin's 2nd Street

Urban landscaping along Austin’s 2nd Street

February 18, 2020 While downtown recently for dinner, we walked along 2nd Street and the arched Butterfly Bridge and visited Austin Central Library, first stopping to admire the native-plant landscaping along Shoal Creek. Purple trailing lantana cascades over rock walls to brighten the late-winter garden. More trailing lantana, which blooms ...
Tree of Life, architecture, and jazz in New Orleans New Year

Tree of Life, architecture, and jazz in New Orleans New Year

January 11, 2020 We rang in the new year in New Orleans, the U.S. city at the top of our Italian exchange student’s list of places to see, after New York and San Francisco. NOLA is only a 7-1/2-hour drive (with no stops) from Austin, so we rented an Airbnb, ...
Kempelen's Owls and more public art in downtown Austin

Kempelen’s Owls and more public art in downtown Austin

December 27, 2019 Looking for free family fun over the holidays? Why not burn a few calories on a self-guided walking tour of public art in downtown Austin? My daughter and I did just that a few days before Christmas. I was eager to see Kempelen’s Owls, a pair of ...
Sculpture worth visiting at Rice University

Sculpture worth visiting at Rice University

December 07, 2019 Rice University is my alma mater, and if the weather’s nice when I’m in Houston I’ll often take a walk around campus. It’s not all for nostalgia’s sake, though. Rather, Rice has really upped its sculpture game in recent years, and much of it is open to ...
Casa Neverlandia and sculpture by James Talbot keep Austin delightfully weird

Casa Neverlandia and sculpture by James Talbot keep Austin delightfully weird

October 10, 2019 Never pass up a chance to see something creative or unusual. Seeing how someone’s passion gets turned into art fascinates me. So when I heard about Casa Neverlandia, the home of fellow Rice University grad, artist, architect, and free spirit James Talbot, I knew I had to ...
Sightseeing in Austin with our exchange student

Sightseeing in Austin with our exchange student

September 16, 2019 We have a young exchange student from Italy living with us this school year, and part of the fun of that for us (and hopefully for her) is dragging her around Austin to see, well, everything. The pink granite dome of the Texas Capitol beckoned us one ...
Lyon botanical garden and architecture

Lyon botanical garden and architecture

August 26, 2019 After Provence, we drove north to Lyon, where we would catch our flight home from France. But first we enjoyed a day of sightseeing. Of course that included a garden! Lyon’s botanical garden is part of Parc de la Tête d’Or, a large city park that also ...
Roman (ruin) holiday in southern France

Roman (ruin) holiday in southern France

August 23, 2019 I can explore a garden or busy market all day long, but I have a low attention span for cathedrals and museums, no matter how stunning. I joke with my husband, who loves the history and culture of such spaces, that I prefer places that are alive, ...
Sunny southern France vacation, part 2

Sunny southern France vacation, part 2

August 22, 2019 Dodging the heat waves that plagued France this summer, my husband and I day-tripped through Provence for 5 days in late July after meeting up with our daughter following her study abroad program (she did not manage to dodge the heat waves). In my last post I ...
Provence lavender fields and rosy Roussillon

Provence lavender fields and rosy Roussillon

August 14, 2019 Summer in Provence — what do you think of? Fields of lavender and sunflowers, sun-washed hill towns, buzzing cicadas, hot days and cool nights, a glass of wine at a small table along a cobblestone street? Yes, yes, and yes. Years after falling for the region’s rugged ...
TatTopia garden embraces stonework and sustainability: Denver Garden Bloggers Fling

TatTopia garden embraces stonework and sustainability: Denver Garden Bloggers Fling

July 09, 2019 When the construction dust settled at Tatiana Maxwell’s new energy-wise home, studio, and guest house in Boulder, Colorado, in 2010, the yard was just an expanse of bare dirt. Her first thought was to build an English-style cottage garden. But after brainstorming with stonemason artist Thea Alvin ...