Low-water natives in front, party in the back

May 21, 2022

The southwest Austin home my friend Laura Wills and her husband, Eric, share isn’t in the country, but it feels semi-rural thanks to a 2-acre yard and out-of-sight neighbors. The front yard alone is enormous, and most people would sod it with turf grass and spend hours each week watering and mowing.

Not Laura. She’s been gardening here for 11 years, and in that time she’s turned her front yard into a meadowy garden of native wildflowers, grasses, sotols, hesperaloes, and salvias, plus well-adapted, non-thirsty cottage favorites like bearded iris.

She also loves metal garden art and has quite a few interesting pieces in her front garden. The sinuous, dark trunks of live oaks add an artistic element to the garden too.

Eric recently embarked on a second career as a welder and metal artist (find him on Instagram @willsmetalworks), and he’s been creating some cool pieces, like this crimped coneflower.

More recently he made this metal-and-glass ocotillo. I love the hammered texture of the stems.

Other garden art (not made by Eric) includes a bottle tree with telephone insulators instead of bottles…

…and a graceful iron gazebo with a chandelier hanging in the center. This view shows how big the front yard is. Deer? Of course.

Around the side of the house, a meadow of blanketflower stretches toward Eric’s welding barn.

In the fenced backyard, where Laura doesn’t have to be concerned about deer eating her plants, and where she’s willing to water more regularly, she cuts loose with flowering bulbs, perennials, groundcovers, and roses. And of course more garden art, like purple koi swimming through a garden bed. Notice how the ajuga’s purple leaves harmonize.

Lamb’s ear, purple heart, and catmint — a trio of pretty groundcovers.

At first glance I thought this was an espaliered fruit tree. But it’s actually Virginia creeper and a cedar stump in front of a fence post. Ha! It’s pretty though.

More garden art accents

One of several gargoyles I spotted

In early May, the amaryllis were in bloom.

Here’s a pretty pink-and-white amaryllis, along with one of the purple koi leaping over lamb’s ear.

Purple coneflower, golden columbine, and an armillary

In a sunny gravel garden, ruby crystal grass makes a rosy haze when it blooms.

A closer view

Another gargoyle with matching ghost plant in a blue pot

Laura used to grow a lot of roses around her swimming pool. But over time she realized that the roses bloom mainly in spring and fall, whereas swim season is in summer. So she pulled out most of the roses but kept this stunner, a ‘Peggy Martin’ climbing rose.

‘Peggy Martin’ happens to look terrific with yellow hesperaloe, which blooms all summer along with firecracker fern and other heat lovers.

Actually, this yellow hesperaloe is a hybrid, I think. Check out those rosy streaks on the yellow flowers. Beautiful! And a perfect pairing with the pink rose.

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Digging Deeper

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All material © 2024 by Pam Penick for Digging. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.

6 responses to “Low-water natives in front, party in the back”

  1. Lovely! I don’t recall Seeing Laura’s garden on your blog previously. Well done Laura!

    • Pam/Digging says:

      This is the first time I’ve blogged about Laura’s garden. And she’ll be on Central Texas Gardener sometime soon as well.

  2. Gaye Kriegel says:

    The only time I’ve ever seen Ruby Crystals (nursery or yard) is in my own yard and I grew it by seed. I could use a few more; do you know where Laura bought hers? Thanks.

    • Pam/Digging says:

      Gaye, I feel it’s pretty readily available in Austin nurseries. Call around to check with Barton Springs Nursery, the Great Outdoors, the Natural Gardener, Vivero Growers, and Hill Country Water Gardens & Nursery. There are many others as well. https://www.penick.net/digging/?page_id=31

  3. Patricia Hupp says:

    Would like to know how she keeps deer out of backyard? I’m still trying to master it! I feel I’ve tried everything.
    Beautiful!! Love the yellow hesperaloe, not ever seen one!

    • Pam/Digging says:

      The backyard pool and surrounding garden is fenced, Patricia, so no deer back there.