Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day, May 2014

As we roll into our long warm season here in sunny Austin, Texas,  perennials segue from the early cool season blooms to heat-loving (or at least heat-tolerant) late spring/summer blooms.  Several different native yucca plants grace my gardens this May, such as a Pale-leaf Yucca, Yucca pallida.

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Another native yucca, Red Yucca, Hesperaloe parviflora,

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will bloom continually until fall.  The flowers are delicate looking and favored by hummingbirds.

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Another native yucca, Twistleaf Yucca, Yucca rupicola, shot up a bloom stalk this spring.

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Heat-loving ZexmeniaWedelia texana, begins its long bloom cycle in May.  This hardy perennial blooms prolifically throughout our hot summer and into the cooler October.

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A favorite spring and summer bloom  for butterflies, bees and people is the Purple Coneflower, Echinacea purpurea. 

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Here it resides across from patch of cheery Zexmenia.

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The Heartleaf Skullcap, Scutellaria ovata ssp. bracteata, is a beautiful, spreading ground cover which develops stunning blue/lavender flowers, blooming April through June.

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In the late spring garden, the Heartleaf Skullcap is stunning–in both bloom and foliage.

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The lilies in the pond are blooming as well. This pretty pink one is the ‘Colorado’ Lily,

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and the creamy yellow is the ‘Claude Ikins’ Lily.

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Both lilies bloom almost year-round in my pond, even occasionally in  winter.

Revel in your blooms, wherever you (and they) May be.  Thanks to Carol at May Dreams Gardens for hosting Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day for May.

Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day, April 2014

Joining garden bloggers from around the world, here are my picks for Bloom Day, April 2014 from Austin, Texas.  The Hill Country Penstemon (Penstemon triflorus), thrust upward its bloom stalks during January, but waited until March to unfurl its fuchsia beauty.

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My Spiderwort (Tradescantia occidentalis) has bloomed this past month and shows no signs of slowing down, much to the delight of the honeybees.

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The  ‘Brazos’ Blackberry   is in full flower now, with berries to follow.  I can’t wait to eat the berries from the vine in May and June.

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A beautiful cool season bloomer here in Austin is the Globe Mallow (Sphaeralcea ambigua).

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And there are lots of Columbine this spring.  The Hinckley (or Yellow) Columbine (Aquilegia chrysantha var. hinckleyana) is in full glory.
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Blooming alongside another native Columbine, the Wild Red Columbine (Aquilegia canadensis),

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these two will  rampantly hybridize to create lovely variations of themselves over several seasons.

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Lastly, the Crossvine (Bignonia capreolata) blooms are opening daily.

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Happy Spring!

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And thanks to Carol at May Dreams Gardens for hosting Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day.

Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day, March 2014

We appear done with our chilly winter winds here in Austin, Texas.  While our winter wasn’t the coldest, it was certainly one of the colder of the past 20 years.  All that’s blooming in my gardens are the earliest of the spring perennials.  The native Yellow Columbine ( Aquilegia chrysantha var. hinckleyana),  are beginning to open, though this one is probably a hybrid between my Yellow Columbine and my Red Columbine (Aquilegia canadensis)–there is a blush of pink that a Yellow Columbine wouldn’t have.P1020900_cropped_3059x2341..new

The native Coral Honeysuckle (Lonicera sempervirens) is full to bursting with blooms.

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Starting its seasonal flush, these buds will open over the next 3-10 weeks and throughout the year.

Another vine, native Dewberry (Rubus trivialis? Not sure as it’s a pass-along plant), is blooming.  No doubt, the birds are anxiously awaiting the berries that follow.

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My tiny patch of Golden Groundsel (Packera obovata), showcases its first bloom.

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The shock of yellow punctuating a still muted landscape.

And I must post a photo of the first Iris to flower in my garden this year.

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This Iris is a common, tough bulb with a beautiful flower (maybe Iris altobarbata?).    It opened two weeks ago, days before our last and coldest freeze.  Nine bloom stalks appeared during a bout of warm weather and when the front hit, three flowers were blooming and all the stalks had developing buds.There was nothing I could do to prevent damage.

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Mush. They all became mush. I counted 30-plus buds that will never flower.  Sniff.  All I can hope is that my other Iris will bloom as we move through our spring growing season.

Thanks to Carol at May Dreams Gardens for hosting Bloom Day.