It is springtime in Central Texas! Here is what I have blooming in the garden:
Antelope Horns:
Apple blossoms:
Blue Bonnets:
Blue Flax:
Yellow Flax:
Blue Dwarf Morning Glory:
Red Corn Poppies:
Byzantine Glads:
The first Cactus bloom:
Cedar Sage and Columbine:
Texas Betony and Columbine:
Gulf Coast Penstemon and columbine:
Big yellow globs of Damianita:
Golden lead-ball tree and blue salvia:
Golden lead-ball tree yellow flower puff-balls:
Hill country Penstemon:
Jerusalem Sage and Hot lips salvia:
Lions Tail:
Nasturtiums along side my drought-ridden peas:
Snow peas:
Guara:
Orchid tree blooms:
Passionflower:
Pink Skullcap:
Hail-pummeled pomegranate blooms (they are a bit raggety):
Spanish Lavendar and a garden friend:
Yellow Texas Star:
-The Sun is Killing Me or To There and Back Again.- A Garden Journal about leaving Seattle to live and garden in Central Texas and returning home a decade later to once again garden in my beloved Pacific Northwest.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Sunday, April 5, 2009
Byzantine Glads, etc...
Last fall I purchased some Byzantine Glad bulbs from the Southern Bulb Company. These were NOT cheap bulbs mind you, but I had a terrible time finding them anywhere for much cheaper, so I took the plunge and bought 3 bulbs (12 bucks a bulb - holy be-jeezuz!!). TOTALLY worth it!! These are bea-u-tiful!! Out of 3 bulbs, I got 5 big ol' bloom stalks in the first bloom since planting. Looky:
And closer:
I am absolutely loving these gladiolas. They are a wonderful magenta and they stand up all on their own - I don't need to stake them. I am so buying more of these next year. They are supposed to naturalize, but I am impatient, and I want more, right now. I saw some other on-line bulb stores had something they CALLED byzantine glads for super-cheap, but when I did the research, these turned out NOT to be the same thing - they are impostors. Still pretty, but much lighter in color and much, much smaller. Several people tried these ones and they were very tiny - not at all the same thing. You have to get the ones from Texas, NOT the imported ones. The imported ones are a different thing.
And other things going on in my garden...
The bees and butterflies are loving the Eve's Necklace blooms:
Funereal Duskywing:
Poppies:
Can you tell I love poppy-type flowers? Corn poppies, California poppies, yellow flax:
I planted my Texas bluebell starts around the fountain.I hear they do well around stock tanks and I thought, well I will plant them near the fountain then:
Hill country penstemon (Penstemon triflorus):
I planted my new tulips in the fountain flower bed also:
The Texas tuberose (Manfreda maculosa)are getting bloom stalks:
And a garden friend:
And closer:
I am absolutely loving these gladiolas. They are a wonderful magenta and they stand up all on their own - I don't need to stake them. I am so buying more of these next year. They are supposed to naturalize, but I am impatient, and I want more, right now. I saw some other on-line bulb stores had something they CALLED byzantine glads for super-cheap, but when I did the research, these turned out NOT to be the same thing - they are impostors. Still pretty, but much lighter in color and much, much smaller. Several people tried these ones and they were very tiny - not at all the same thing. You have to get the ones from Texas, NOT the imported ones. The imported ones are a different thing.
And other things going on in my garden...
The bees and butterflies are loving the Eve's Necklace blooms:
Funereal Duskywing:
Poppies:
Can you tell I love poppy-type flowers? Corn poppies, California poppies, yellow flax:
I planted my Texas bluebell starts around the fountain.I hear they do well around stock tanks and I thought, well I will plant them near the fountain then:
Hill country penstemon (Penstemon triflorus):
I planted my new tulips in the fountain flower bed also:
The Texas tuberose (Manfreda maculosa)are getting bloom stalks:
And a garden friend: