Garden Bloggers’ Foliage Day, May 2015

Joining with Christina and  Creating my own garden of the Hesperides, I’m pleased  to showcase fab foliage for May from my garden today.  We’re water-logged here in Central Texas and while I’m appreciative of the rain, I wish it would stop.  Or at the very least, slow down a bit.  My soil is heavy and wet, but my plants are happy.  What I grow in my garden  can take the extremes of Texas weather: from scorching hot, bone-dry summers to frog-drowning floods.  Texas gardeners live with anything and everything.

The late May star of my back garden is the Heartleaf Skullcap, Scutellaria  ovata ssp. bracteata,  a cool season perennial which does spread.IMGP7787_cropped_3259x3268..new

A lot.  But I love this groundcover.  The flowers are a stunning violet-blue, appreciated by pollinators, especially bees. Its foliage is soft and beautiful–to view and to feel.  An attractive gray-green, the leaves are thick, soft, and scalloped, while set opposite one another along a hairy stem.

IMGP8198.new

Heartleaf Skullcap foliage is nice to touch, but imparts a slightly sticky residue and this trait is (supposedly) what makes it unappealing to deer. The bit of icky-sticky left on my skin when I pull up the plants at the end of Skullcap’s growing season is its most objectionable quality to me.

Skullcap is a favorite of mine: it waves a fetching blue/gray throughout spring and early summer and combines beautifully with many other perennials, each with their own interesting foliage.

IMGP8195.new

Below, it contrasts with  Purple Coneflower, Echinacea purpurea, and its bright green foliage,

IMGP8204.new

…and here, it’s planted with tiny-leafed Pink Texas Skullcap, Scutellaria suffrutescens,IMGP8228.new

…and the maidengrassy Miscanthus sinensis ‘Adagio’. Hiding underneath the Skullcap is a clump of Kelly green, aromatic, and fleshy Garlic ChivesAllium tuberosum.

A brighter, lacy green is found with Common YarrowAchillea millefolium.   IMGP8165.new

This stand provides a nice backdrop for the Protector-In-Chief.  Doesn’t he look happy and content?

IMGP8205.new

This fun grouping fills in the northern, shady border of a little back garden bed.IMGP8167.new

It’s a  mixed-bag of foliage characters, including white-stripey Dianella/Variegated Flax LilyDianella tasmanica ‘Variegata’, Katie’s Dwarf RuelliaRuellia ‘Katie’, and ColumbineAquilegia. This particular Columbine is one of the natural hybrids of my A. canadensis and A. chrysantha.  Photobombing on the far left is a containerized Yucca filamentosa, ‘Color Guard’ and some Iris straps, and spreading its succulence in the remainder of the bed is a creeping Sedum, probably Sedum diffusum ‘Potosinum’, though it’s a passalong to me from a friend, so I’m not positive of its identification.

And a bird’s-eye view….

IMGP8175.new

 

Isn’t Columbine foliage  pretty?  Especially so, when adorned with raindrops.

IMGP8168.new

This young Goldenball LeadtreeLeucaena retusa, glows in the late afternoon west sun.

IMGP8180.new IMGP8181.new

Its fragrant, powder-puff flowers are done for the year, but the foliage will flutter in the breeze until the first hard freeze.

IMGP8182.new

The happy pairing of the structural and evergreen Sparkler SedgeCarex phyllocephala ‘Sparkler’ and white-blooming, herbaceous Four O’Clock, Mirabilis jalapa, is garden serendipity. IMGP8226.new

The ‘Sparkler’ sports jazzy stripes in the razor-thin leaves and paired with the Four O’Clock’s lush, smooth leaves–it’s a handsome combination.

IMGP8227.new

There are many shapes, sizes, and colors of gorgeous leaves in gardens–mine and others. Take a look at the lovely Creating my own garden of the Hesperides and see interesting foliage from all over the world–and Happy Garden Bloggers’ Foliage Day!

IMGP8193.new

Bloom Day, August 2014

Celebrating August blooms,  I’m thanking Carol at May Dreams Gardens for hosting this fun flower meme.   With sporadic rains and relatively mild temperatures this summer, there are fewer burnt-toast blossoms in Austin’s August.

My Mexican Orchid Tree, Bauhinia mexicana, has bloomed on and off all summer.

P1060665.new

Elegant, snowy blossoms cool a shady spot on hot Texas afternoons. These flowers are  a favorite of Black Swallowtail Butterflies.

In stark contrast with the white Mexican Orchid, but also favored by butterflies, is the Pride of BarbadosCaesalpinia pulcherrima.  Tropical-hot orange and yellow,

P1060674.new

… these drama queens thrive in the heat.

Royal SageSalvia guaranitica, blooms stunningly in early and mid-spring, but not as commonly though summer.

P1060224_cropped_2175x2691..new

This year though,  a smattering of midnight blue gorgeousness has graced the two royal specimens in my gardens.

With multiple flowers opening everyday, the Lemon Rose MallowHibiscus calyphyllus dances through August.

P1060297.new

Flouncing her petals open in the mornings, sashaying during afternoon breezes and bowing to heat at the end of the day, this mallow is a consummate performer.

The  blooms of Coral VineAntigonon leptopus, form on lacy loops along climbing tendrils.

P1060394.new

P1060619.new

I’ll replace its trellis next winter when this tropical, but hardy-for-the-Austin area herbaceous perennial freezes to the ground.

P1060398_cropped_2500x3176..new

The trellis is a bit wonky, even for me.  The honeybees and I eagerly await the apex of Coral Vine’s blossoming period–soon, very soon!!

A close-up of a coral  Autumn SageSalvia greggii, flower,

P1060415.new

…it belongs to a woody shrub native to Texas which produces a variety of colors.  I like this soft coral pink–it’s the best blooming salvia in my gardens this year.

The bright red Martha Gonzales Rose, Rosa ‘Martha Gonzales’, flowers throughout summer.

P1060637.new

I wish mine received a little more sun–it would bloom even more.  This is a terrifically tough antique rose for Central Texas.

The Mexican HoneysuckleJusticia spicigera, returned full-force after our hard winter.

P1060648.new

It’s orange clusters await early fall visits by butterflies and the occasional hummingbird.

P1060646.new

The shrub is covered in tubular goodness now and that’s likely to continue into the fall months.

This pairing of pink and blue is too sweet!

P1060417.new

The creeping groundcover, Leadwort Plumbago, Ceratostigma plumbaginoides, produces sky blue florets,

P1060422.new

…which beautifully complement the small periscope blooms atop the stems of Pink Skullcap, Scutellaria suffrutescens.

P1060420_cropped_2235x3281..new

And still screaming: Summer! Summer! Summer!–is the sunflower de jour.

P1060660.new

Or rather, sunflower de l’ete.

P1060668.new

While new flowers open daily,

P1060387.new

…those spent blossoms that have gone to seed are providing yummy munchies for the local finches.

P1060115.new

Happy finch!

Visit May Dreams Gardens for more blooming beauties this Bloggers’ Bloom Day.

Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day, June 2014

It’s June and that means warm and sticky, but full of blooms here in sunny Austin, Texas.  Thanks to Carol at May Dreams Gardens for hosting the June jubilation for blooms in the garden.

The pretty, small flowers of the ground cover  Leadwort Plumbago, Ceratostigma plumbaginoides,  lend a sprinkling of blue in my gardens.

P1040729.new

P1040730.new

I planted four-inch pots of these several years ago and they’ve been slow to develop and spread.  I think this will be their year.

P1040731.new

I’ve grown another ground cover,  Pink SkullcapScutellaria suffrutescens, for several years as well.

P1040734.new

P1040735.new

A hardy, evergreen perennial, it’s unknown whether this plant is a native to Texas.   It’s a great perennial in my gardens though as it sports its bright fuchsia blooms throughout our long, hot summers.

The native shrub Autumn Sage, Salvia greggii,  is a staple in my gardens.

P1040881.new

P1040882.new

P1040883.new

There are a variety of bloom colors for this perennial shrub, but the red is a favorite of mine–and of the hummingbirds as well.

The spring and early summer blooms of  ZexmeniaWedelia texana and Purple Coneflower, Echinacea purpurea, continue showing off–both have a long bloom cycles.

P1040900.new

Another beautiful red-flowering perennial is the Rock Penstemon, Penstemon baccharifolius. 

P1040898.new

There are several types of penstemons in my gardens, but the Rock is the only summer flowering penstemon that I grow.

P1040899.new

The Mexican Honeysuckle, Justicia spicigera, died completely to the ground this past winter, but is resilient in foliage growth and blooms.

P1040902.new

Finally, there’s nothing that shouts “summer!” like the common sunflower.

P1040904.new

I don’t know which one this is and I don’t care.  It grows from the sunflower seeds that I feed the birds throughout the growing season. As I’m weeding up the seemingly millions of spring seedlings in my pathways,  I  curse myself for setting out the sunflower seeds,

P1040906.new

but I’m always glad that I allow a few seedlings to mature.  Pollinators like the flowers and finches like the seeds.

Happy June Blooms! Pop over to May Dreams Gardens to see what gardeners around the world have blooming in their gardens.