Wildflower Wednesday, May 2014

Here in Austin, Texas, May is quite pleasant and we’ve enjoyed some rain.  Yipppy!  Even better, our lakes have received some of that rain.  Double yippy!  We’re still in drought and the lakes are low, but at least we’ve had some relief.  Central Texas wildflowers continue their seasonal segue into summer bloom.  Thanks to Gail at clay and limestone for hosting Wildflower Wednesday to encourage and celebrate gardeners utilizing regional wildflowers in their home gardens.

My Yarrow, Achilliea millefolium, is especially beautiful this year.

20140508_29.new

Yarrow is an excellent perennial for Central Texas.  It sports pretty white flowers which will fade to an attractive tawny brown as summer progresses.

P1040764.new

PigeonberryRivina humilis, is a small, delicate looking ground cover with sweet flower spikes at the top of the stems.

P1040787.new

20140508_32.new

Luscious red berries will develop after the blooms fade and those berries are favorites with many birds, including their namesake pigeons.

The combination of  pink Hill Country Penstemon, Penstemon triflorus,  sunny Engelmann’s (or Cutleaf) Daisy, Engelmannia peristenia, and deep blue ‘Henry Duelburg’ SageSalvia farinacea, continues its happy riot of color this spring.

P1040010.new

Heartleaf Skullcap, Scutellaria ovata ssp. bracteata,

P1040332.new

P1040333.new

is a gorgeous, cool season ground cover.   It spreads prolifically, but is easily controlled by pulling up individual plants as needed.  With beautiful blue blooms and soft, grey-green leaves,

P1040333.new

it fills in the late spring/early summer garden.  By mid-to-late July, Heartleaf Skullcap will be dormant, reappearing with cooler fall temperatures.

And always in my gardens: Purple Coneflower, Echinacea purpurea.

P1040004.new

I don’t think a garden is complete without some variety of this endemic American perennial.

Planted with Engelmann’s Daisy,

P1040315.new

or Heartleaf Skullcap,

P1040340.new

or Zexmenia, it is a perfect companion plant in full-to-part sun conditions.

P1040809.new

It’s a favorite flower for pollinators.

P1040682.new

P1040685.new

Purple Coneflower is the bomb.

The xeric  Zexmenia, Wedelia texana,  begins its long bloom cycle in May.

P1040810.new

It’s another wildflower that pollinators prefer.

P1040620.new

P1040753.new

Even without a dinner companion, Zexmenia are lovely and tough perennials.

P1040812.new

Planting native plants and wildflowers is the easiest and a beautiful way to a fabulous, regionally appropriate perennial garden.  Rip out your grass, plant native wildflowers and perennials and celebrate your sense of place in our world.

P1040807.new

Happy Wildflower Wednesday!

 

Permanent Impermanence

Recently I read the delightful biography about and  chronicle of Beatrix Potter and her life as a gardener and naturalist: Beatrix Potter’s Gardening Life, by Marta Mcdowell. Most people know Beatrix Potter through her “Peter Rabbit” series of children’s books, but she was also an important conservationist whose land comprises most of the Lake District National Park in Great Britain.  In one chapter of Beatrix Potter’s Gardening Life, McDowell is discussing Potter’s penchant for a garden “makeover.”  McDowell called that need for change in the garden “a permanent impermanence.”  Those  who garden understand that gardens are journeys, not destinations. We continually amend and refresh sections or entire gardens and for many different reasons.  We augment our gardens because of overgrown plants or development of too much or too little shade or sun. We refine our gardens as our aesthetic choices evolve or because we want plants appropriate for the changing needs or conditions of our gardens.

Earlier this spring, I decided to remove all of the Berkeley Sedge, Carex divulsa, that I had planted in my gardens.

20100911_1.new

I discovered  Berkeley Sedge while employed at the  Green Garden at Zilker Botanical Garden  and liked its hardiness, evergreen growing habit and attractive seed-heads. I bought small pots and planted them in various places on my property.

20120327_24.new

20120327_39.new

P1020658.new

20100911_4.new

In the first few years, I was pleased with the sedge; it added structure and foliage interest  and Berkeley Sedge is drought tolerant.

P1020836_cropped_3174x2539..new

There is a garden space in the Green Garden titled “Hill Country Shade” in which scads of  Berkeley Sedge seeded out.  Aside from the fact that I philosophically disagreed with the non-native Berkeley Sedge  planted in a garden touted as “native,” I also found I was constantly weeding out the seedlings produced by those sedge plants.  It was one of the more persistent chores of that job–pulling one seedling up, it seemed as if six more appeared.  One winter day, I met a California landscape designer and we visited about that plant.  She mentioned that the Berkeley Sedge was labeled as invasive in California and asked if it was labeled so here in Texas.  I later checked and according to TexasInvasives.org Berkeley Sedge, Carex divulsa, is not considered an invasive plant in Texas.  San Marcos Growers in California originally tagged Berkeley Sedge as a native, later concluding that it is not a native sedge.  A quick Google search shows two different sites, Pacific Horticulture and californiabotany.blogspot.com  which state definitively that this plant is an invasive non-native and spreading throughout California.

Back to my gardens. After several growing seasons in which those attractive seed-heads developed and dropped seed, I noticed baby Berkeley Sedge everywhere.

P1020803.new

Obviously, the density of seedlings was greatest near the spots where the sedge was growing, but I’ve found rogue seedlings in all parts of my gardens.  I water my gardens infrequently and for several groups of  Berkeley Sedge, the only water received comes from the sky.  And still, lots of seedlings.

P1030981_cropped_2231x1940..new

P1030983.new

I’m in the process of pulling those seedlings as I see them and as new seedlings develop, but it will take some time.

To be clear, I have other plants that could be described as invasive:

Heartleaf Skullcap, Scutellaria ovata ssp. bracteata,

20100911_16.new

definitely qualifies as an aggressive grower and invader!

Yarrow, Achillea millefolium,

20100911_20.new

spreads magnificently.

I continually weed out the always obnoxious, except when beautiful,  Inland Sea Oats, Chasmanthium latifolium.

20100911_21.new

20100911_22.new

And the ubiquitous (in my gardens), Lyreleaf Sage, Salvia lyrata, appears throughout my property.

P1030142.new

These plants seed out or spread  and I don’t mind. Perhaps I’m more tolerant of these particular “invasive” plants because they are all native to this area–they belong here and I’ve cultivated a situation in which they thrive.   I use them as I see fit in the garden–pulling them up where I don’t want them and transplanting them where I do.  I am a practitioner of  the constant refreshing and reworking which is that gardeners’ creed of permanent impermanence.  I have no choice.  The garden is dynamic– an organism in perpetual, organic motion, responding to environmental changes and sometimes, gardener whimsy.

Or not.  I routinely pass plants which spread  to other gardeners or toss unwanted seedlings in the compost for future use as soil amendments. But with the Berkley Sedge, I decided that I didn’t want a non-native to become a pest plant in my gardens or possibly, surrounding landscapes.  Much like my decision to remove the Berkeley Sedge in the “Hill Country Native” space, I  removed a potentially aggressive plant because of my concern about its spread  and because I prefer to use mostly native and non-invasive non-natives in my personal gardens.  Taking out the sedge and adding “new” plants to the area will alter the feel of those spots–adding blooms and varying foliage.

One of my last projects at the Green Garden was removing the Berkeley Sedge in the “Hill Country Native” garden and transplanting as much as possible to a formal, rocked in space, located in deep shade, to serve as a demonstration of a low water lawn alternative to the water-hogging St. Augustine grass so common here in Texas.  Despite some misgivings about Berkley Sedge in a garden, I think it has value as a an alternative “grass” lawn–especially if the seed heads are kept in check and not allowed prolific procreation.  I haven’t visited ZBG since leaving that job a year ago, so I don’t know how that Berkeley Sedge lawn has fared, but I’ll bet it’s growing well.  I only hope it isn’t spreading too much.

Removing the Berkeley Sedge in my gardens allows me the opportunity to rethink some small sections of larger garden spaces. I didn’t run out and purchase anything new,  I dug up and separated favorites from my gardens and recycled them in place of the sedge.  I’ve planted Heartleaf Skullcap paired with a common, non-native pass-along day lily,

P1030920.new

…some lovely native Yarrow,

P1030921.new

…and native to West Texas, Mexican Feathergrass, Nassella tenuisima. 

P1030922.new

I love all of these plants and use them repeatedly in pockets throughout my gardens.  Each will require reining in at some point, but that will be another opportunity to observe, learn and experiment. And maybe, to garden with something new.

Permanent impermanence:  As the Berkeley Sedge established and multiplied itself, I wrest control of the developing problem (as I defined it) and revised the landscape to better reflect my desires for my garden.

I’m not a purest, I grow many non-natives in my gardens.  I transplanted a ‘Nana’ Nandina from a  garden  in which the signature plant, Barbados Cherry, froze completely this past winter. When I thought the Barbados Cherry died, I welcomed the opportunity to diversify  and redesigned the garden with a more varied set of native plants.  In re-imagining that garden, I understood how out-of-place the ‘Nana’ would be,

P1030045_cropped_2054x1116..new

so after I pulled up two more Berkeley Sedge in another section of the front garden, I transplanted the ‘Nana’ to that spot.
P1040064.new

Permanent impermanence: I augmented two gardens to better reflect their evolution and my desires.

Several years ago, the native Texas Sedge, Carex texensis, moved into my front garden, but inconveniently and stubbornly, in a pathway. As part of my recent garden reconfiguration,  I transplanted the Texas Sedge clumps to a different spot. They’ve struggled a bit, but  I think they’ll survive.

P1030996.new

The foliage is finer than the Berkeley Sedge and they aren’t as consistently evergreen– they were nipped by the last hard freeze on March 2. Texas sedge doesn’t spread rapidly, either.  I don’t find them quite as attractive as the B. Sedge (sacrilege!) and I suspect that’s why they’re not commonly found in the commercial nursery trade.  Pretty sells.

Constantly evolving, the garden reflects life and nothing is permanent.  Conditions change and the gardener responds. Gardeners follow fads and styles of gardening, always longing for that newest, cool plant to pop the palette of the landscape, sometimes regretting that decision and action.

Tastes change.  Styles change.  Needs change.   We learn as we garden and our gardens reflect our growth.  Nothing in gardening is permanent.

Foliage Follow-up, April 2014

Spring has definitely sprung here in Austin and though blooms may be foremost for most garden lovers, foliage loveliness deserves a shout-out.   Here are my foliage favorites for April.

The summer and fall blooming Gregg’s Mistflower (Conoclinium greggiisports deeply lobed foliage, giving rise to one of the common names for this hardy ground cover, Palmleaf Mistflower.

P1030173.new

 

Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) has beautiful foliage year-round.  It’s delicate, fern-like and spreads well (sometimes too well).  Yarrow is evergreen, hardy and drought tolerant.

P1030174.new

It brightens this shady spot.

A perennial favorite of mine and one I’ve profiled before, Mexican Feathergrass (Nassella tenuisima) is at the zenith of beauty in the spring.

P1030180_cropped_4282x2843..new

 

P1030223_cropped_4055x3253..new

The lone green Fennel (Foeniculum vulgare)  in my back gardens apparently wasn’t decimated by butterfly larva last year.

P1030181.new

With soft, graceful foliage, it’s a wonderful addition to the mixed perennial garden.

Globe Mallow (Spaeralcea ambigua)  is such a show-stopper with its combination of orange blooms and arresting, pale gray-green, fuzzy leaves.

P1030187.new

I like this combination of  Pale-leaf Yucca (Yucca pallida), Heartleaf Skullcap (Scutellaria ovata) and the bright green Autumn Sage (Salvia greggii).

P1030189.new

The Pale-leaf Yucca appears blue against the backdrop of the greener Skullcap ground cover  and the Autumn Sage’s is a bright green punctuation situated further in that same ground cover.

The Wild Red Columbine (Aquilegia canadensis) not only has beautiful blooms in spring, but interesting foliage year-round.

P1030206.new

New growth from a young American Smoke Tree (Cotinus obovatus), promises more beauty as it matures.

P1030126.new

Lastly, I can’t resist the photo of the Scarlet Tanager, Piranga olivacea, who has visited my garden this past week as he rests on the green branch of Retama (Parkinsonia aculeata).  Plumage and foliage–you can’t beat that!

P1030229_cropped_2397x2139..new

Thanks to Pam at Digging for hosting Foliage Follow-up for April.