New fiends…
You read right, fiends, not friends.
I gave up on the pleasures of walking barefoot in the grass a quarter of a century ago when we moved to Texas (I was just a baby then – ha!). My family and I cannot enjoy summer picnics in the grass on a blanket — we have to sit on the driveway.
With our heavy rains this week (for which I eternally grateful – thank you , thank you, thank you), the fire ants came up out of the woodwork to make their domes. The edges of every lawn along my dog-walking route is filled with mounds where they came up out of the ground in the deluge.Rain wreckage and a new day…lily, that is!
Today the first of my Daylilies opened in the lily bed. This is the Spider Miracle Lily — from Olallie Daylily Gardens.
Just another reminder that I am not in charge. I carefully researched color and bloom times to plan my daylily garden. This was supposed to be an AUGUST bloomer! Of course, it’s the first one to bloom in the whole bed.
These little yellow blooms are sad today, though. The torrential rains we got yesterday (1.5 inches — yeah!) were a little hard on the Euryops — they were all lying on the ground this morning when I got up.
And look at poor Maggie. Trashed. Looks like someone had a heck of a party in the garden last night. Since I don’t think Maggie drinks beer, I’ll have to give her the benefit of the doubt and blame it on the storms. But with this drought, we needed the rain, even if it means a little mess in the garden.Seed sowing in the cutting garden & more veggies
Boy — sprinkling a few seeds seems so simple, doesn’t it?
I even had a *PLAN* — ha ha. (I almost never make one for myself — it’s the old shoemakers children have no shoes syndrome.)
A tomato! We have several small ones, about golf-ball sized. This one is on the first tomato that I planted successfully from seed — so he’s near and dear to my heart.
And a bell pepper.
And, since this is Texas, we always have some jalapenos growing in our garden.Bountiful blooms and a bright day …
It’s a beautiful Bloom Day in Austin, Texas, full of bountiful blossoms bending toward the springtime sun.
These are my blooming African Hostas. Aren’t they cool? Drimiopsis maculata.
What precious little blooms they have on top of leather-y and speckled leaves.
Marigolds to protect the tomatoes in the garden.
The Cilantro has started to bolt here because it is so warm already. It’s almost impossible to grow it here in the summer.
Slightly sad Stock in the new Greenhouse bed.
Purple Penta.
I can’t remember the name of this little one for the life of me…ideas?
Texas Primrose or Sundrops — Calylophus drummondianus.
Sedum Mexicanus in the rock path — it likes being mistreated in the crushed granite!
Skullcap – yellow — Scutellaria.
Pink Skullcap – Scutellaria — this is very common around central Texas, while the yellow above is rare. I also have 9 new lavender plants that I put in a few weeks ago and they are just on the verge of blooming — they will have to wait for another post!
Wine Cup blooms dot the rock path, too — Callirhoe involucrata. Sssshhh- don’t tell the bunnies that they are there!
Two different colors in this little Lobelia – Laurentia – fucsia and periwinkle.
Maggie roses just a-goin’ to town! They have more blooms than I can even count.
Aren’t they precious? How I wish you could scratch and sniff your screen, too!
And as I rounded the corner to capture the Maggies, lo and behold, the first Canna bloom of the season. (Nevermind that I dug these all OUT last fall…they are coming back anyway!)
African Yellow Daisy, or Euryops love this spring weather
The potted Orange honeysuckle – Lonicera ciliosa – is happy with our recent rains.
These Chrysanthemums were in the greenhouse over the winter and are still blooming — totally out of season. I guess I thoroughly confused them!
Beautiful bougainvillea passed along from Robin, or Getting Grounded.
This precious little Vinca bloom is from a hanging basket given to my by my parents when Sierra died last March. I worked very hard to keep it alive in the greenhouse this winter and am so inspired to see it alive and blooming happily.
Mexican Heather, or Cuphea hyssopifolia loves our climate, but the deer love it, too, so I only have a little in the back yard.
This festive Texas Betony – Stachys coccinea – was a passalong from my neighbor. It is the sole survivor of three — thanks to our “deer” friends!
Prairie Verbena – Glandularia bipinnatifida — grows wild all around here, but I paid to plant mine!
More perky Daffodils — Narcissus pseudonarcissus ‘Yellow Fortune’
I’m cheating ! This is actually Kallie’s cactus with its pretty blooms.
She is so proud of it. And those are my little bug friends!
Thanks to a macro lens you can actually see this teeny-tiny bloom of the Grace Ward Lithodora – Lithodora diffusa – that I planted last spring. It’s peeking back out of the mulch, but it’s a struggle.
White Potato vine — Solanum jasminoides is so perky in the partial shade.
And the Japanese Quince — Chaenomeles japonica – still has a few lingering spring blooms on it.
Salvia Greggii is a staple here in the Southwest.
Clearly someone is happy that the Damianita — Chrysactinia mexicana – is in bloom.
Four-nerve daisy or Hymenoxys texana are blooming all around — my garden and all along the roadways.
Salvia Indigo Spires bring such beautiful blues into the garden.
Daffodils — Narcissus pseudonarcissus — I think this is ‘Dutch Master’
Verbena canadensis – ‘Homestead Purple’ (I think…)
More bees – I’m seeing lots of them these days – like this one in the Anacacho Orchid tree – Bauhinia lunarioides.
A few Bluebonnets – Lupinus — are still in bloom. And no, it is NOT against the law to pick them!
My Trailing Lantana – Lantana montevidensis – has been blooming all year long.
These Blackfoot Daisies – Melampodium leucanthum – are always a pick-me-up.
Some sort of Lavender — I have no idea what kind, though…
Society Garlic — Alliaceae Tublighia violacea — is always a reliable little bloomer.
Snapdragons and window box art in front of Kallie’s window.
A geranium keeping this dragonfly company.
Bi-color iris – Dietes (Moraea) is always happy here in our hot weather.*Easter Greetings*

Just a few quick shots from our grey day here in Austin.
I did have to bring in a few little pots that hadn’t been planted yet because we are supposed to get severe thunderstorms tomorrow morning.
So I battened down the hatches before the rain hits, and closed up the greenhouse windows and doors and picked radishes and parsley for tomorrow’s salad.
I still have several little daffodils blooming in various small clumps scattered about. It’s so nice that they don’t all come out at once. I like it better that way — it extends the smiling season!
Just a little decorative nest inside the house to welcome the Easter Bunny tomorrow.
The Angel Wing Begonia is beautiful and healthy. It loved the winter in the greenhouse and is enjoying the cooler weather of Spring.
And there are limes on the lime tree. They are about the size of cherry tomatoes, too! But the tree is full of dozens more blooms, so we may have some fresh limeade before too long.















