And when I say Giant Mutant Bluebonnet, I really mean Freakishly Super-Ginormous, Clearly-Mutated-By-Some-Form-Of-Nuclear-Radiation bluebonnet. This is the biggest bluebonnet I have ever seen! Just look at the normal-size bluebonnets next to the big ones and you get an idea how large these flowers really are:
This photo was taken in Burnet County. A friend sent me the pic - these mutant lupine were growing on the street her mother lives on. Have you ever seen anything like this? The ginormous bluebonnets look more like giant bottlebrushes. So Cool!!
-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.
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Friday, April 23, 2010
Aztec Lily
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Bloom Day - April 15th, 2010
It is a big bluebonnet year this year, so I will start out bloom day with some of this lupine:
More blubonnets mixed with other pretties:
Blue flax:
Jerusalem Sage:
Red corn poppy. (This photo is awful as the wind was blowing and it was the best I could do):
Prairie Verbena:
Yellow Primrose:
Pink primrose (I had none of these last year due to the drought, but this year the garden is covered in them):
Damianita:
Four nerve daisy and some yellow flax:
Some late Narcissus:
Texas yellow star:
Pomegranate:
Eves Necklace:
Byzantine glads:
Orchis tree bloom:
Yellow Columbine and Cedar Sage:
Chocolate Flower:
And Freesia Laxa:
Happy Bloom day!
More blubonnets mixed with other pretties:
Blue flax:
Jerusalem Sage:
Red corn poppy. (This photo is awful as the wind was blowing and it was the best I could do):
Prairie Verbena:
Yellow Primrose:
Pink primrose (I had none of these last year due to the drought, but this year the garden is covered in them):
Damianita:
Four nerve daisy and some yellow flax:
Some late Narcissus:
Texas yellow star:
Pomegranate:
Eves Necklace:
Byzantine glads:
Orchis tree bloom:
Yellow Columbine and Cedar Sage:
Chocolate Flower:
And Freesia Laxa:
Happy Bloom day!
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Northern Bobwhite
As I was going about my gardening today, I heard a rustling and looked to my right to find a Bobwhite busy foraging about in the garden! Neat! Apparently, these guys are considered a Near-Threatened species as they have been shown to be in significant decline in most areas.
As I recall, quail and grouse are kinda dumb birds - they let you get real close-like before they take off. This guy fit that stereotype, and he didn't seem to mind me taking his photo:
Eventually, he had enough harrassment and jumped up on the fence to get away:
As I recall, quail and grouse are kinda dumb birds - they let you get real close-like before they take off. This guy fit that stereotype, and he didn't seem to mind me taking his photo:
Eventually, he had enough harrassment and jumped up on the fence to get away:
The Trumpet-Shaped Ones
The trumpet shaped flowers are dominating the garden right now. Here is a look at the entry-way simply drenched in trumpet shaped bloomage:
The Yellow columbines are simply ginormous this year and the pathway smalls heavily of their scent:
Closer:
With some coral honeysuckle:
Coral Honeysuckle:
Crossvine and coral honeysuckle:
The crossvine is stunning this year:
Closer:
There are more trumpet-shaped ones inside the garden gate. Here are the Snapdragon vines looking fabulous in all their hot-pinky-ness:
And Hill Country Penstemon (Penstemon Triflorus) also looking fab in their own shade of deep-pink:
The Yellow columbines are simply ginormous this year and the pathway smalls heavily of their scent:
Closer:
With some coral honeysuckle:
Coral Honeysuckle:
Crossvine and coral honeysuckle:
The crossvine is stunning this year:
Closer:
There are more trumpet-shaped ones inside the garden gate. Here are the Snapdragon vines looking fabulous in all their hot-pinky-ness:
And Hill Country Penstemon (Penstemon Triflorus) also looking fab in their own shade of deep-pink:
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)