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Showing posts with the label spring

Backyard Nature Wednesday: Waking up

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Plants that looked entirely dead in the middle of January are now waking up and showing signs of life once again. The old azalea didn't die back, of course, but it did lose some leaves. Now it is beginning its bloom cycle, which always starts at the bottom of the shrub and works its way to the top. The split-leaf philodendrons that were a pile of black mush after our January freeze are now coming back, putting up new leaves. The yellow cestrum lost all of its leaves, but now the new ones are coming on. The lemon grass clumps all died back to the ground and I pruned off all the dead leaves with a hedge trimmer. Soon you won't be able to tell that it was "dead" in January. Milkweed, slowly coming back. It can't be fast enough for the butterflies. I'm going to need to get some new plants from the nursery to fill in until my old plants can regain their growth and their blooms. White mistflower, coming back strong, after losing all of its leaves to the frost. Both ...

Almost Wordless Wednesday: Three signs of spring

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Daffodils Snowdrops Loropetalum

Has spring sprung?

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Maybe one daffodil doesn't make a spring.  Or one "snowflake." Maybe not even one camellia - even if it's a camellia that doesn't usually bloom until the first of April.  But how about the first rose of the season? Or the first redbud blossom? It's nearly three weeks until the calendar says it has arrived, but spring is definitely peeking over the windowsill. At least here in Southeast Texas.

April in the garden

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March showers bring April flowers - is that how it goes? Well, maybe not, but it seems to be working that way in my garden. Spring is, of course, prime time for wildflowers here, some of which bloom in my garden, like these bluebonnets.  Among the blue is the occasional pink bonnet. These dianthus plants were in bloom in early March and were weighed down by the ice storm we had them, but, even as it bent the plants, that didn't slow them down much. They are still blooming.  April is when my camellia, 'Mabel Bryan' blooms. Everywhere along the roadsides, the wild blackberries have been in full and glorious bloom this spring, promising a bumper harvest of berries later. Some of the wild plants grow as weeds in my garden along some of the fences. I mostly leave them alone - the birds enjoy the berries. The white loropetalum is full of these fringy flowers just now. Its fuchsia-colored cousin bloomed a few weeks earlier. Last Wednesday I showed you this allium with this butterf...

Spring at last!

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Spring arrived here right on schedule today at 11:57 A.M., Central Daylight Time, and it could hardly have been a more perfect first day of spring. Bright blue sky filled with golden sunshine, temperatures in the 70s F., a gentle breeze blowing - this was the day we have looked toward for the last three months. And on this beautiful day, I saw my very first Giant Swallowtail butterfly of the year. This wasn't it - the picture was taken last summer - but it looked just like this. I spent much of my day out weeding in the garden and I kept encountering these little guys. Green anoles - one of my favorite garden critters. They were out basking in the sun today. Just like the anoles, my plants, too, are waking up. The old azalea in my backyard is just about to be full of blooms, but this is the first. Nearby, the redbud will soon be full of these lovely blossoms. And, in a bed next to the patio, this pretty little allium has joined the pink bloom parade. It voluntarily seeded itself in...

The springtime garden

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Is it only me or has winter been going on way too long? It's almost enough to make me long for summer once again. Almost, but not quite. A much better alternative is spring and this week it seems as though spring is returning to my garden. And not a moment too soon! Nothing says "spring" quite like sweetly fragrant hyacinths. These bloom in a pot beside my front entry door. Well, the little Leucojum snowflakes run the hyacinths a close second in the spring department. I do love these little bulbs. One of the things that I love best about them is that they are so easy to grow. All around the garden, the shrubs and trees are beginning to put out green buds.  New growth from a mahogany Esperanza planted last year. Yellow cestrum bloomed right up until the mercury dipped to 20 degrees Fahrenheit in January. Then it lost all its leaves, but now it is putting on new growth. Soon it will be blooming again. Likewise, the almond verbena was blooming until our first spell of real...

Wordless Wednesday: Apple blossom time

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Nature: Red oak awakening

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Spring has come early to my yard this year. The oak trees are awakening, bringing promise of the season to come. After more than a year of extreme drought in Southeast Texas, we've had a very wet beginning to 2012. The trees that have survived the drought have drunk deep from all that water and restored themselves. It is a very hopeful thing to see.

Nature Sunday: The promise of spring

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The blueberry blossoms may not be completely open yet, but they offer the promise that spring is finally on its way. It has been a long, relatively cold winter, even here near the semi-tropical southern coast of America, and we are more than ready to welcome spring. We take our hope where we can find it - even in the promise of a half-opened blossom.