Results tagged “texaswildflowers”

Purple coneflower

November 14, 2008

This flower needs no introduction. During my first-ever gardening escapade, I sowed Texas wildflower seeds all over my bare back yard (in January!), and native Purple Coneflower was among them. They never came up but the next year I sowed the seeds in a prepared bed in fall. By spring it seemed like hundreds came up. I discarded many and potted many others, giving some away to friends that summer. Since the seeds germinated in spring, it would most likely be another year before they bloomed (since many perennials take about a year to reach blooming stage from seed, a...…

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Bluebonnets are easy!

October 7, 2007

I am so excited to begin my second full year of wildflower sowing. I had to pull many plants out over the summer before they went to seed because they were just growing in odd areas--like the 7-foot sunflower that grew right in the middle of the backyard. That was definitely not planned... I attribute it to one of the 'wildflower mixes' that i threw out in the summer before I knew what I was doing. I was sad to see it go because I never got to see it flower. It was nice, but a bit of an obstacle...…

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latest wildflowers

May 30, 2007

Too much rain! It created: 1. mud everywhere in our driveway, which 2. washed and eroded much dirt off of the already struggling slope that edges our lawn and once which was covered with St. Augustine and now is a few straggling runners, and 3. large 6-inch deep puddles that took a day to evaporate in our dog run. Which reminded me again how much drainage trouble my hard clay has. In spite of the problems it caused, as usual everything responds to rain like crazy. My purple passionflower vine is about to explode. There are buds everywhere, just waiting...…

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lovely, quirky columbine

May 30, 2007

I don't know much about columbines, other than that they are now famous for Colorado. But when I started hunting for seeds, I suddenly saw the name everywhere. In spring many nurseries were carrying small starter plants of columbines and I had no idea what the flower even looked like. I asked my favorite nurseryman about them and he said he'd always had trouble with columbines so this made me think right away that they were fussy plants from another part of the country, or the world. I was pleased to discover there are a few kinds that are native...…

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le grande wildflower experiment

May 17, 2007

What I wanted was wildflowers. I had no idea what it took to do something from seed, but I sowed them in January, then in March. No wildflowers came up. But I kept researching. And finally last fall, I decided to do what all the advice said, and that was to sow wildflowers in fall.

Some I sowed intentionally into beds. Others I tossed around the dirt that was trying to become a buffalograss lawn (still not exactly a lawn but I'm not giving up). Some, the ones I knew I absolutely wanted and would just hate to see not germinate, I bought as plants. (These included bluebonnets, California poppies, pink evening primrose and winecups.) But just for good measure I sowed seeds of those as well.

How excited it was when in February I started noticing green things start germinating. I wasn't sure what was weeds and what was wildflowers. But as March arrived, I saw that not only had I succeeded but more flowers had germinated than I suspected. Late March my bluebonnet plants bloomed, and also many came up from seed, some in total shade. Then came the Indian Blankets, which have just started blooming this month. Three days ago, the scarlet sage bloomed for the first time. I had forgotten I sowed these at all.


indian blanket

The planted pink evening primrose started blooming last month, but now the seeded ones are starting to bloom as well. The flowers are random, oddly placed and definitely going to need rethinking next year. Some are taller than I expected. I have one Indian Blanket plant that is nearly up to my chest. It looks quite odd right in the middle of the yard.

Purple coneflower were one of the plants I desperately wanted and although I could buy plants at the store, really wanted the native kind. I had a huge bag of these. During my research it seemed like they needed all these finicky conditions to germinate, but these had the most success. The purple coneflower seed, which I put in my herb bed and kept somewhat moist throughout the winter, poked its first little green leaves up in March, and the plants are now about 6" tall. I had to keep thinning them out (in other words, picking some of them out and throwing them away, which I think is probably one of the hardest things to do in gardening--all that work! all those seeds!--but a job that needs to be done or else other plants won't live).

As equally surprising were the Maximilian Sunflowers. I had a particular spot I really wanted them. I did nothing special to the soil, but scattered the seeds around and tried my best to keep them moist during the winter. They were among the first to germinate. Now I am worried that they are too big, too much for that spot. They are nearly 4 feet tall and have at least another foot or so to go.

What didn't germinate? Maybe because of wet soil conditions, or simply being crowded out by others:
White Prickly Poppy
Gayfeather
California poppies (the only non-native-to-Texas wildflower did germinate and started growing by Christmas but did not like the really wet soil I had them in)
Purple Prairie Clover
Obedient Plant
Blue Flax

Although oddly placed and, well, wild, the wildflowers have already turned my backyard into a bird and butterfly sanctuary. I'd love to say all the birds are welcome but the grackles decided to build a nest in our cedar tree and are now training all their little chicks how to swoop down and drink water and eat worms in my yard (and poop all over my deck). Wild is good but next year I'm going to tame things down.

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