The first of our Ohio Spiderworts from prairie moon to bloom! (That’s a dayflower leaf under it in case that’s confusing.)Turns out the mystery plant in with the Venus looking glass is a second kind of Venus looking glass! It just has narrower leaves. Both have milky sap. Last year’s plant (it might have lived two years? I’m not sure)Bigger babyTiny babiesMore babiesEven more babies The juniper leaf in the driveway. I have gotten it to sprout in small pots but it never stays alive. Cuttings ok too but I think it needs to be able to put down a long root. However, they sure love this one crack in the driveway.
I enjoy how tiny the baby Astragalus leaves are. This is one of two. The other is in the front yard. Sedum nutallii from Jeanne is thriving and considering blooming!This mystery seedling is in a container where I planted silverleaf nightshade. We shall see. One of the rescued Pyrrhopappus tuberosus is blooming!Assorted seedlings from this county. All mixed together so we’ll see what comes up!
Last year’s Datura is pushing up through the leaves!!This Solomon’s seal is considering blooming. The Strophostyles fuzzybeans are growing where I put them in compost pile wall blocks!These wild yellow Oxalis volunteers are really looking good this year en masse. This plantain came with the spike moss from Jeanne’s house in Nc TX. Ratidiba columifera seedlings. Top adult leavesSeed leaves remainingThis second individual isn’t growing as tall. Baptisia probably bracteata seedlings!Possibly green milkweed seedlings in that pot with the Baptisia. In the cactus tiered planter, a mystery seedling. Mystery seedlings in the rose/bluehearts planter. Still hoping for bluehearts!A brome grass. I need to key it. Not one of the common non native ones. Not sure if volunteers or I planted.
Oxalis violaceaCarrot leaf Lomatium now doneHot dog alreadyBaptisia bracteataBriar on a hillPrairie parsley bloomingSalvia azurea leavesEchinacea leavesMystery leavesOxalis violacea lives in sunnier spots than I expected!Arnoglossum species budsArnoglossum farther alongI think butterfly milkweedCalylophus primrosePenstemon cobea budsBriar enjoyed a big mud puddle then ran right towards us dripping wet.
We got 2.75” in less than 24 hours!Missouri Fluttermill primrose baby survived pouring rain even under the rain barrel! Left seedling is Winecup and upper right seedling is Astragalus crassicarpus!Two possible yuccas in the green section. Not a milkweedNot a milkweed?Maybe a milkweed Known milkweed (probably viridiflora)The skinny adult leaves of known milkweed. New book The Gardener’s Guide to Prairie Plants by Diboll and Cox mentions many milkweeds first adult leaves are skinny even if the eventual adult leaves are broad. Either that or I got the species wrong. One of two Blackfoot daisy survived earwigs and is now growing flower buds and a few new leaves!Perennial coreopsis begins!Briar was pretty miffed it rained HARD most of the day. So before our walk she curled up in disgust right on my big Liatris mucronata from home. Thanks. The Mexican Sage from Judy is up!A sedge?Partridge peaOldplainsmanMysteryCaliche planter babiesThe tomatoes have gotten a bit sunburnt from past rain with sunlight after, so this time I flicked water off and put them in a less intensely sunny spot. Trying to get them hardened off for planting. Like Briar, Shacks was disappointed by rain and not being out. Paula brought him some favorite juicy grass and he loved it.
Garlic scapes are the flower buds before they open. Here they are yesterday before I harvested them this morning. Harvesting them is supposed to make the garlic cloves turn out better as the energy doesn’t go all into the flowers. Last year we left the flowers. The Chef had a hankering to cook over fire. Here he adjusts a makeshift grill over the flames. An aluminum foil packet of potatoes is near his feet. Later he did the feral hog ribs over the fire too but finished a few of them off in the oven to ensure more even temperature for safety and convenience. The meal. The Chef topped his ribs with head country barbecue sauce. Potatoes (lower part of plate) came out perfect in spite of the packet seeming to catch on fire at some point. The garlic scapes were sautéed with onions and already cooked beans (upper left). I think we all agreed potatoes were good, scapes need something different, and ribs should have been slow cooked instead to be less tough.
Mystery green bit in caliche planter. Looks suspiciously like a grass but we’ll find out! Maybe something good!The yellow irises from Judy are in full bloom now!One of the two Camassia scilloides has TWO flower buds!The other Camassia scilloides has a much smaller flower bud. The angusta has a similar sized bud that is on a shorter stalk as of yet. The two leaf senna is coming back! This one got big last year and made a lot of seeds. The other smaller two leaf senna from last year is off to a great start this season!I put a lot of Missouri fluttermill primrose seeds in the yellow area of the rainbow garden )near the two leaf senna) and one is coming up! Yay!The dwarf spiderwort continues to bloom! This one has two flowers now! The other individual hasn’t flowered yet. This mystery grass has appeared in many areas under the oak tree. It seems wrong for millet but I don’t remember wheat in the bird seed mix? Any ideas are welcome. iNaturalist suggests the wheat genus but I don’t think there are any native ones here.