Briar enjoys laying in the prairie among the primroses and englemann daisies. Some of the grass in the new prairie (we’re calling it Leon’s prairie since it’s by Leon’s blackberry bushes) has turned out to be the native wild rye we seeded! Yay!Yellow Coreopsis looking bright with the tiny purple Verbena halei and the starry pink widow’s cross sedum!Shackleton had some thoughts. Briar says “walkies please??” (We did go walkies.)The showy evening primroses are looking lovely with their pale pink between the purple winecups in the back and the magenta Salvia greggii in the front. We didn’t even plant them on purpose, they were just in the soil Paula brought from the backyard berm. Coreopsis provides a nice yellow contrast at the end of the Salvia greggii row. More seedling winecups are coming up in the newer soil where we put seeds. Gram says it’s hard to use a dichotomous key for plant identification when the only numbers you know are “hello?” And “Doggie”. Shackleton somehow turned the pages and now says “I leave the identification as a trivial exercise for the reader.”We planted one Winecup in a tall skinny planter. It has bloomed now.
Cruising around! We heard an upland chorus frog sing from a pond as we drove by. It sounds like a finger running over teeth of a comb!I need to add captions and descriptions to the rest of the pics, but this Spiranthes sp was neat to see coming up!Briar and Paula in safety hunter orange. False garlic with tiny moths. Paula caught a Little Brown Skink!The skink did not want to stay for a visit. A prairie verbena!Armadillo!!! Briar ready, but actual briar vines kept her from following it far. First Lomatium of the day. Briar helped by putting her nose by it. Arnoglossum sp! LeavesBigger Arnoglossum species leaves!The lovely valley we walked around. Had some damp spots. Milkweed! Probably Asclepias verticillata??Echinacea probably angustifolia? Leaf and last year’s seed head. Thanks for laying down in the mud puddle, BRIAR.Nostoc algae and scale lichens!Paula found this great potter wasp nest!Eventually found a big patch of Lomatium blooming. Some Lomatium in light shade. Some Lomatium almost done blooming. Some Lomatium out in the sun. Another prairie verbena. A puccoon just opening!
Yesterday, 12/31, I finally glued on the rain barrel cap holders that the Chef 3D printed for me! I used epoxy after cleaning both surfaces with ethanol. Paula got solar powered outdoor lights for Christmas and has used them to make the path to the compost visible! Edit: thanks to Mom for inquiring if we can turn the lights out. Yes we can! It’s important not to pollute the dark with more light than we use at any given moment. I am hoping these tiny seedlings are the annual bluets that sometimes grow in this part of the yard. Keeping an eye on them. A tinier potential annual bluet seedling next to the comparatively large wild geraniums. These two pictures were 12/31/2022. 12/28/2022, the Ratibida columnifera rosettes survived the big cold!Two Verbena halei rosettes also exist and made it!Finally, and very thrilling, two potential Penstemon oklahomensis seedlings! They don’t appear to be hairy leaves like some other common seedling volunteers. Stay tuned. Shackleton enjoyed a leashed walk in the same excellent 12/28 weather. Jeanne kindly sent us some Salaginella riddellii- Riddell’s Spike-Moss. We put the biggest chunk in the rainbow garden (in green of course) on 12/25. We put a smaller piece of the spike moss in the cactus planter. 12/25 was so nice we also moved some volunteers. This is the big root of a poke berry! We moved those along the back fence where another pokeberry lives. We also moved several ampelopsis from random spots in the yard to along the south fence trellis. A blackjack oak acorn with a sprout on it! We planted this exciting find (12/24) into a pot on 12/25. Fingers crossed for a spring sprout. Judy gave us an adorable toad house! I have placed it near the veggie beds. Please come eat our earwigs, toad friends. 12/24 checking the pot containing Sedum nutallii from Jeanne. The sedums seem to have made it along with Verbena rosettes (V. Halei??) and other intriguing volunteers. Going somewhere! Wow!! Happy briar in the car. On 12/24 we visited the lake at Lexington WMA. This seasonal creek was frozen solid! The lake was too. Briar wears her hunter orange. After the deep freeze, only the top tips of the recently transplanted rosemary got frozen. They were pressed down by the sheets. But the sheets protected the rest of the plant!
The two leaf senna had at least two seed pods! The second plant doesn’t have any buds but is growing new leaves.This sprouted after another surprise rain this morning and I don’t know what it is. Cowpen daisies I bought are sprouting!The scurf pea (Psoralea/Pediomelium latestipulata) from Mom has its first adult leaf!Little seedlings sprouting. Could be what I planted (Scarlet globemallow), could be volunteers.More cowpen daisies in a pot where I put them and some Rosa sp from Mom from Fannin Co TX.Tiny seedlings in the soil from Jeanne that contains the annual Sedum nutallii!Little seedlings sprouting. Again, could be what I planted, could be volunteers. This hope is Verbena halei.
I wasn’t sure at first if this was a bit of debris on a bird seed sunflower stem.But I saw it walk!! It’s a plant hopper!I think it’s Entylia sp, possibly carinata if I understand bugguide saying there’s only one species and it’s quite variable. That’s the species shown in the new Abbott and Abbott Texas insects book.Spittlebug adult!The most special flower.A beautiful white lined sphinx visiting the non native verbena.I love the different wing angles the camera catches.Side view.Slime mold very happy after 3.46″ rain in the past seven days.Blurry but you can see two seedlings: the winecup above with three leaves and the lyre leaf sage with two seed leaves. Working on my ground covers out front around the raised beds.
A Fiery Skipper on lantana on campus.A native fleabane in the front yard.Another Fiery Skipper on the verbena at home. I need to replace this non native moss verbena with prairie verbena but I can’t get it to germinate. 😡A paper wasp on mealy blue sage. It looks weirdly purple here.Using my new copy of the social wasps book, I narrowed this down to Polistes fuscatus or Polistes bellicosus, based on not much black on legs, black tipped antennae, and the yellow ring around the abdomen.The Hedeoma is flowering!
Strawberries! Just a few left. They peaked back a while ago.Lemon balm is blooming.This salad contains garden radishes and garden lettuce.Butterfly milkweed in backyard.Verbena halei is leaning under the ironweed.The yellow in the rainbow garden has stopped blooming but the rock garden primroses are blooming!Standing cypress is looking magnificent after several days of tons of rain.
Sweet basil seedlings.Butterfly milkweed is up in the backyard too but hasn’t flowered yet (same as front yard).Yellow flax still blooming! It’s annual, so I hope the seeds like it enough here.Whitlow-wort gone to seed. Another native annual from TX home.False gaura that I planted from potted last night is doing well.Texas verbena has bloomed! It’s a perennial.The rattlebox had adorable seed pods as promised.The Rocky mountain bee plant from the botany club plant sale is blooming! There were ants at the blooms.The Phacelia is really fun.The prairie bluet is flowering a bit. I’m worried since it’s early that this means it’s not happy. However, it’s a perennial, so hopefully it will do its thing now and be less worried next year.The twice-moved yucca is making new little leaves!This yucca is in the shade which I figure is probably okay at this age. Many plants seem to like to have nurse plants.The baby winecups are starting to get true leaves.Second year for this mystery plant with no blooms.It does have a square stem. Abby suggested Monarda, which I did seed here at one point, so fingers crossed!!Slippery silk beans and several other varieties are up!!The two leaf senna didn’t have a lot of roots when I planted it from a pot last night. So, I put two containers of water so it would gradually keep it damp for now so it can get established. It’s my only sprout from the seed and I love this plant! It’s a host for Cloudless Sulphur butterflies.
Blue flax seedlings are getting tiny new leaves.Possibly a false gaura! It looks different from the common volunteers!Two Datura wrightii seedlings!A senna hopeful.It is actually a bit rough, so maybe this is the rough leaf sunflower??A redbud I potted up last year.The Euphorbia from Mom and Dad’s house is perking back up.Roman chamomile did well while I was gone!Lettuce and bok choy doing good.Two more fluttermill Missouri primrose seedlings up!The horse crippler cactus transplanted from Mom’s garden.I’ve put a drip on the ground plum (actually a legume) since yesterday, as it seems to be having a rough transplant. This is also into the rock garden.In the rainbow garden, a mystery seedling. Maybe two leaf senna???Butterfly milkweed is coming up in rainbow garden.Maybe another butterfly milkweed? It’s in the right place.A single cilantro seedling. The only one in the yard. In that crack.A winecup from two years ago.Purple prairie clover from two years ago.Maybe Liatris leaves? It’s in the right spot.Another mystery seedling.Tall vervain is perking up a bit.Ten petal anemone are perking up too!Greeneyes getting bigger!My blue stars are blooming!Salvia azurea leaves.