Sharing Nature’s Garden

I’m baaack!


Ok–here are the long-promised Salvia Leucantha photos in full glory! I took these photos at two different times and was amazed at how different it looks in the changing light.

Sorry I’ve been remiss about blogging – we had family here from out of state and got to relax and actually enjoy our gardens and pool and plants all week without feeling compelled to weed or prune or deadhead. And how nice it is to listen to others appreciate the beds and comment on them. I realize I see them so differently than do guests. So, for a week, I’ve seen only the beauty and it’s been delightful. Next week I’ll be back to looking at them warts and all – and looking for leaf rollers and other pests!

And what a morning this morning was. I know it’s warm out there now, but there was that subtle hint of cooler air this morning as I walked the dogs and sat outside planning the new front bed. A lovely way to usher in the Fall — I sat in the Adirondack chair out back, listening to the gardening shows on the radio with Howard Garrett’s book and a pad of paper in my lap, taking notes on trees and shrubs for foundation plantings. I’ve decided not to buy the new plants until the dead oleander and others are all cleaned out, so I can look at if for while and get some perspective on it.


By |2017-11-29T23:28:02-06:00September 23rd, 2007|Blog, Sharing Nature's Garden, Uncategorized|0 Comments

Plotting, planning and pondering

Here are some shots of the bed I have to excise, and a sad view of the Oleander. I feel sorry for it. One of the most difficult things I ever have to do as a gardener is to take out live plants. Somehow, it just runs counter to nature and even if there’s only one measley little lingering leaf, you can bet I’m not going to want to rip it out by the roots until all hope is gone!

We’ll have company all next week, so these guys get a stay of execution for at least a week, and I’ll be hoping for some inspiration (and taking suggestions!) about what to put in the new blank slate.

By |2016-04-14T02:47:59-05:00September 14th, 2007|Blog, Sharing Nature's Garden, Uncategorized|0 Comments

It’s fall, it’s project time!

Just a little peak into Miss Kallie’s window through the bi-color iris and her windowbox of colorful plants. Wish you could see that the window on the inside is covered with a whole set of farm life clings, complete with cows and barns and chickens and hay! So, she has a lovely fantasy/floral view!

Here is a shot of my enormous salvia leucantha that I posted about a few weeks ago when the first late bloom popped out. I’ll post another this weekend, it should be in its full glory then!
I’m also about to call my big garden project help and cry while they tear out two giant (supposed to be) dwarf oleander, a primrose jasmine and two variegated privets. The entire bed – probably 20′ x 15′ – will be bare. I’m so sad, because the oleanders are diseased and terminal, and the other plants are giants as well, so they would not work any more without their enormous neighbors. But they are bird habitat for so many of our little feathered friends, so I am hoping to get some decent-sized plants back in there right away to by winter, they will have some cover to go to. They have loved these plants. Sometimes it’s like a little chirping city in there!

So, I am starting over. Which is fun, I’m just still working on the vision and all the layers because it is such a very deep bed and I need to mix perennials with evergreen structure and balance textures and colors. I love the Texas-adapted English garden tumbled and layered look. The bed gets good morning to noon sun, a little dappled around noon and shade until late afternoon when the sun peaks back around the other side of the house. So, wish me luck and send me your favorite planting/shrub suggestions!

By |2016-04-14T02:47:59-05:00September 12th, 2007|Blog, new bed, Sharing Nature's Garden|0 Comments

Nuance

I hope this post does justice to the beautiful color of these Gerbera daisies. They are in a rustic metal pot on my back porch and are the most stunning salmon color. Not pink, not coral, but a delicate shade that just makes you appreciate nature’s endless palette.
This little friend kept coming out onto the patio where Tanner (the tomato-stealing dog) kept eyeing him. I shooed him away into the garden twice before having to leave. I sure hope he stayed put, because Tanner’s taste for tomatoes is only second to bugs!!

By |2016-04-14T02:47:59-05:00September 8th, 2007|Blog, Sharing Nature's Garden, Uncategorized|0 Comments

Cycle of Life


Ah, seeds. The beginning and the end. The end of the bloom season and the start of new possibilities. These wisteria beans hang regally from the young vine growing in the back corner of our yard. I love the few little blooms that brighten up our Spring here, but I am in absolute awe of the wisteria growing along Lady Bird Lake and Cesar Chavez that completely covers the top of a city building along the lake. It’s hard not to start the day with a smile on your face when you drive by that every day!

Here are a few more pretty pictures of things in my garden today, like this Texas sage along the driveway.

Our magnolia blooms are just about to open up again. They are certainly happy with the cooler, wetter weather reminiscent of their preferred southeastern habitats

Lucky for me, I had the macro lens on my husband’s camera and caught this beautiful swallowtail having some lunch while I was browsing the garden in search of photos!

By |2016-04-14T02:47:59-05:00September 6th, 2007|Blog, Sharing Nature's Garden, Uncategorized|0 Comments

Sad Specimen

Say hello to my very sad, single agapanthus in the front yard. When I planted a bunch of them in the back, there was one much larger and different than the others, and since I was planting them in a line to create a curved river bed shape, I decided to plant this one elsewhere. Unfortunately, I didn’t think about the deer and the bunnies. They were very happy to see this Lily of the Nile, and ate it down to the nubbins within a week! But the agapanthus perservered and is blooming (albeit not particularly attractive!) in spite of its tough beginnings. I’m glad, because I find them to be beautiful, regal plants and I’ve got my fingers crossed for her!

By |2016-09-12T12:01:08-05:00September 5th, 2007|Blog, Sharing Nature's Garden, Uncategorized|0 Comments
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