Diana C. Kirby

About Diana C. Kirby

Diana Kirby is a lifelong gardener and longtime Austinite, who loves the Central Texas climate for the almost year-round opportunities it offers for active gardening and seasonal splendor. Known as an impassioned and successful gardener, Diana began by helping friends design and implement their landscapes. Soon, she was contracted as a professional designer by a popular local landscaping installation firm, where she designed landscapes for residential and commercial clients for several years. In 2007, her new passion blossomed with the launch of her own firm, Diana’s Designs. ... Diana is a member of the Association of Professional Landscape Designers, the Garden Writers Association of America, and she writes a monthly gardening column for the Austin American-Statesman. Diana teaches the Landscape Design classes for several county Texas Agrilife Extension Service Master Gardener certification programs and speaks about gardening and design for garden centers and other groups. Learn more about presentation topics, availability and speaking fees.

Welcome new friends …

The cooler temps last week had me itching to get into the garden and dig in the dirt. I made the rounds to 5 different local nurseries and almost checked everything off my list.

My goal: to fill in gaps in the garden where I have lost plants or where I have had ongoing difficulties, like the part sun, part shade area off the driveway and the woods where there isn’t enough sun to make the Lantana happy and the ferns that I planted last year didn’t even bother to show up again this Spring.

And I was bound and determined to shift my focus to more xeric plants, so I went in search of agaves, grasses and sedges.
Here you see one of several new Variegated Flax Lilies – Dianella sp. var. Flax Lily
This is a beautiful Squid Agave, Agave bracterosa, with a Dichondra argentea ‘Silver Pony’
Some chives to join the thyme in an herb pot.
Agave victoriae-reginae
A beautiful Mangave ‘Mucho Macho,’ passed along to me by Pam, of Digging. I thought he was so handsome that he needed a pretty pot in which to show off.
Carex hachijoensis ‘Evergold’
An Artichoke agave — Agave parryi v. ‘Truncata.’
Firecracker bush, or Bouvardia ternifolia with it’s tiny red blooms.
An Agave americana I didn’t quite know where to put, so into a pot it went.
Miscanthus sinensis ‘Gold Bar’
Some Mexican Oregano spilling out of the pot.
A Pyramid Bush
I tried to get some morning glories going in here, but to no avail. So I broke down and bought a Mandavilla.
Some little Mexican feather grasses. They always look good, no matter how hot it gets.
This is a Crape Myrtle that I’ve been lusting after for years. It’s a ‘Dynamite’ with deep burgundy blooms and it doesn’t get very tall.
Next to the Crape Myrtle is a new Knock Out Rose ‘Radrazz.’ We’ll see how truly deer resistant they are…
And a Pentas and Helenium ‘Dakota Gold’— in a pot for some color.

We’re still under Stage 2 water restrictions — sprinklers only 1 day a week. Hand watering any time. And it was 95 today — feels much better than 105, but for the plants, it’s still darn hot without water. So, I will be spending hours outside about every other day trying to keep things alive with very strategic and efficient hand watering.

Even though it’s still pretty hot, mornings are just a tad cooler and the days are a little more tolerable…fall will find us, we just have to be patient!

By |2016-04-14T02:42:40-05:00September 7th, 2009|Blog, Sharing Nature's Garden, Uncategorized|0 Comments

Happy Labor Day!

THIS is what I hope to be doing tomorrow for Labor Day! See what I’m reading there? It’s an old copy of Texas Gardener — what better reading for a HOT summer day when you can’t possibly be gardening?

Notice how nicely my DH managed to frame this shot so no unacceptable parts are showing? He knows the Austin bloggers’ photo rule = no butts, no guts, no double chins! (well, my chin might be a little bit of a third there, but it’s ok, I’m leaning.)

Enjoy your holiday.

By |2017-11-29T23:27:39-06:00September 6th, 2009|Blog, labor day, pool, Sharing Nature's Garden|0 Comments

Visitors

The deer are coming for food and water several times a day these days.

I put fresh water and some old lettuce out and two adult does watched me from the field and then came to eat and drink.

15 minutes later, I saw the babies peering over and realized the food and water was gone.

So I went back out and refreshed the supply and put down some bird seed (They eat it out of the feeders anyway!) and more water. They watched my every move from near by and then hurried over to have dinner.

I snuck back in the house and took these pictures. They’re not very good, but I got them.

They are all so thirsty and hungry that they are less and less skittish about humans.

I think they’ve figured out that I bring good stuff!

By |2016-04-14T02:42:40-05:00September 3rd, 2009|Blog, deer, Sharing Nature's Garden|0 Comments


Never ending warm to hot weather has its benefits.

These Cassia never died back last winter. They were snuggled in a corner of the house – protected on three sides by a fence, the house and the breakfast room wall.

And while the nurseries around here now have 2-foot tall plants to sell, mine are a towering 10 feet tall.

I can barely see the beautiful flame-like blooms that give the Candlestick Tree its common name.

There are several more plants along the driveway, but they died back and are now just about 4 feet tall and blooming.

They get less water, too, and less hot sun, which they love.

If you look closely, you can see the drought stress on them and the plants around them. Many plants in the garden are turning yellow and losing leaves from the heat and the lack of water. And insects have set in, sensing that the plants are feeling peaked.

But even with the stress, these statuesque plants bring real drama to the garden.

By |2016-04-14T02:42:40-05:00September 1st, 2009|Blog, candlestick tree, Cassia, Sharing Nature's Garden|0 Comments

More of the wet stuff!


Wow. Rain, twice in three days.

It’s a beautiful thing. Literally.

Not much today, just .12, but every drop helps when it’s this dry.

And it’s amazing how everything really is relative. The littlest bit of rain can make me so happy. I know the plants are so glad to get even a little wet, with the “real” thing instead of chemically-treated city water.


We opened the blinds and watched it while my daughter and I were eating dinner and talked about how happy the deer and the birds and the plants would be.

And here’s the official proof. I’m such a weather geek. I love measuring it.

And yes, I left these somewhere where they got rained on. Who knew it would rain? So, this is kinda like the “don’t tell anyone I let my vegetables get too big thing.” (So, don’t tell anyone I did this…again.)

By |2017-11-29T23:27:40-06:00August 27th, 2009|Blog, drought, pruners, rain, Sharing Nature's Garden|0 Comments

Be careful what you wish for…

With 65 days of temperatures over 100 degrees and a disaster-level drought, we have been wishing and praying and yes, dancing, for rain.

We got it.

Imagine my surprise when I went to put out the trash last night at 7:15 and it started to sprinkle…then rain…then blow. I got inside just as walls of water began coming down sideways.

Moments earlier, the umbrella in the photo above was upright. It was really scary as I watched chairs and tables scoot and fly in the back yard. And then the lights went out!

Thanks goodness I am a candle fanatic. I’d planned on going to bed early to keep adjusting to the new school-year schedule, but with no light and no air conditioning, there wasn’t much else to do. I did discover that my iphone makes a great flashlight, though.

Things are back to normal this morning. The power was restored around midnight and the air came back on.

And we got .24 inches of rain.

Yeah!

By |2017-11-29T23:27:40-06:00August 26th, 2009|Blog, rain, Sharing Nature's Garden, storm, weather|0 Comments
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