Spring Plant Swap

Spring is in the air and you can bet that plant swaps are a big part of spring gardening fever. This Saturday on April 1st, the Hancock Native Plant Swap will once again grace the grounds of Mother’s Cafe and Gardens, at 4215 Duval Street, Austin, 78751.   The community event will start at 8am and last until all the plants are swapped!

As its promotional information states: In its 5th year, Austin and surrounding area gardeners converge on Mother’s Cafe and Garden, bringing baby plants to share with others. The spirit of this free event is to promote the sharing and use of a variety native plants in our landscapes. Master Gardeners and Habitat Stewards attend and love to help you find plants that will work well in your yard. Wondering if a plant in your yard is native or not? Bring a sprig from it and one of the experts will be able to identify it for you. Don’t have any natives? That’s okay, nobody goes home empty-handed! A fun, lively event, but it doesn’t last long, so come early!

There will be a variety of native plants, but also herbs, tree saplings, as well as hardy non-natives appropriate for the Austin area.  Here’s a by-no-means complete list of plants available at the swap:

beauty bush
lavender phlox
western daisy-fleabane
wild arugula
tulsi (holy) basil
Spiderwort
Lyreleaf sage
Tropical sage
Zexmenia
Frostweed
blue mist bush
datura
climbing rose
greggs mistflower
flame acanthus
Purple Heart
passion vine
little periwinkle shade flower
engleman’s daisy
purple iris
fall aster
red rain lily
artemisia
white yarrow
shrimp plant
golden groundsel
parsley
dill
basil
tarragon
sage
Live Oak saplings between 3-4 feet tall
Chinquapin Oak saplings
pecan saplings
redbud saplings
snake herb
anacacho orchid
bur oak
live oak
fall obedient plant
cedar sage
Texas Poinsettia
heartleaf skullcap
Rosemary

Though I won’t be there in person, some of my plants are making an appearance and looking for new homes.   I’ve donated some of my own prolific pretties like Tropical sageSalvia coccinea:  the white blooming,

Honeybees and native bees love these flowers.

 …and/or the red blooming.  You never know which color you have until the plant blooms.  Surprise!

I’ve seen the tiny metallic sweat bees at these brilliant crimson blooms.

I have plenty of Giant spiderwortTradescantia gigantea  to share.

Spiderwort are an early spring bloomer and nectar source.

Trust me–I’m glad to dig some up and spread the purple glory!

I normally have plenty of seedlings of stately FrostweedVerbesina virginica.  Alas, I only potted up one, but I’ll should have more for the fall swap.

Frostweed blooms in late summer and fall, and is a prized by the southward-migrating Monarch butterfly nectar source.

I have scads of the now-in-bloom Lyreleaf sageSalvia lyrata known for its ruffly foliage,
 

 

… and stunning blue flowers.  Some can be yours, if you come to the swap!

 

Zexmenia, Wedelia texana is a stalwart performer in my garden and I hope the ones I donated will be so for whomever takes them home to their gardens.

Plant swaps are fun!  Plant swaps are community events! Plant swaps encourage plant-geekiness and enables gardening addictions–and those are good things!  If you live in Austin, check out this biannual plant swap (they’ll be another in the fall).

 

Arrive early–the plants go fast!

 

Plant Swap Time!

If you live in Austin and are in a plant-y sort of mood this coming Saturday,  April 16th, you might want to mosey over to Mother’s Cafe and Garden, 4215 Duval Street and E 43 Street, where the Hancock Native Plant Swap will be happening.   You’ll need to get there early because the plant geeks will be there between 8-9:30 am.  Plants, Habitat Stewards, and Master Gardeners will be in abundance!

Some of the plants available for swapping include, but are not limited to, Gregg’s mistflower,  Conoclinium greggii,

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Monarch butterflies and their kin, Queen butterflies, LOVE Gregg's mistflower.

Monarch butterflies and their kin, Queen butterflies, LOVE Gregg’s mistflower.

White avens,  Geum canadense,

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White avens is a pretty, evergreen shade-tolerant ground cover with sweet spring blooms.

White avens is a pretty, evergreen shade-tolerant ground cover with sweet spring blooms.

 

Rock rose,  Pavonia lasiopetala.

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A native shrub with a long blooming cycle, Rock rose blooms from May to November. Best in sun, it also works well part-shade.

A native shrub with a long blooming cycle, Rock rose blooms from May to November. Best in sun, it also works well in part-shade.

 

Some of the plants that will be for sale ($3 each) include, but are not limited to:

Four-nerve daisy or HymenoxysTetraneuris scaposa

These cheery daisies bloom in the cool season and sport a tidy evergreen foliage.

These cheery daisies bloom in the cool season and beyond,  and sport  tidy evergreen foliage.

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…and Flame acanthus, Anisacanthus quadrifidus var. wrightii.

A pollinator magnet, this large, deciduous shrub is tough and hardy as well as pretty, pretty!

A pollinator magnet, this large, deciduous shrub is tough and gorgeous!

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All of the plants available are either water-wise or wildlife friendly–or both. The National Wildlife Federation’s Wildlife Habitat program promotes beautiful home gardens–big or small–that attract and support local wildlife.  The Hancock Native Plant Swap also supports the mission of making “yards more beautiful and easier to maintain, while consuming less water.”

Worthy and easily attainable goals, indeed!

Austin plant swappers-n-gardeners come on out  to Mother’s Cafe and Garden this Saturday between 8-9:30 am where you’ll find some lovely plants for your garden and meet some lovely people to hang out with for the morning.