Briar helpfully alerted me to a potential friend carefully crossing the back fence today! What a magnificent neighbor. Turns out a few peach flowers survived. The ones with dropped petals are quite striking with pale tips over maroon backgrounds!I believe this is the annual (?) Cardamine sp from nearby seeded into the prickly pear planter. Abby has kindly identified this as a human-introduced species Armeria serpyllifolia, thyme-leaved sandwort. It isn’t from North American originally but doesn’t seem to dramatically disturb the landscape. This one may be an introduced chickweed. But a fuzzy one, not Stellaria media. More baby inland sea oat seedlings in a second pot!myMultiple baby native Rosa sp from Fannin Co TX. Thanks Mom!This seems big enough to be the persimmon I actually planted??Seedlings in false gaura pot, but not sure they look right. Oklahoma penstemon given to me by a kind fellow Norman citizen!Maybe smartweed amongst the Chenopodium. We shall see. A Datura maybe?? The label fell out of this pot. Anybody recognize this seed?I am informed the mustard leaf garnish is from garden and that the soup contains poblanos from last year from the freezer.
I checked over the Cardamine sp. where we saw a Falcate Orangetip butterfly two weeks ago, but could not find any eggs or caterpillars. A few are still flowering but many are starting green seed pods.The wild violets are blooming!Good smells
Happy dog heading home from Saxon ParkI think this is a Mexican plum.Leaves of same tree.A falcate orangetip butterfly visited this plant!Mom suggested an identification of Cardamine parvifolia. Thanks Mom!It is apparently a host plant for the orangetip.Chickasaw plum blooming!Paula gave me a combination garden tote/seat/knee pad. Pets investigate.Briar displays the seat mode.Gram examines the knee pad mode.Gram refuses to go for a ride in the rolling tote part.
A bit more cast iron forest this afternoon, not just the garden!
Probably a Common Buckeye butterfly caterpillar. Neat shelf fungi on a blackjack oak that has been burned in the past. Spring Beauty flower. Saw just a few! Moss with undeveloped capsules (thanks Jeanne!)Mexican Plums blooming had just a few bees on them. It was windy. Briar helped look for frogs. A round bit of moss. Close up of Mexican Plum flowers. Cardamine sp. (Thanks for ID, Abby!) You can see the leaves/rosette here. Flower of Cardamine sp. There were lots in this damp area. You can see in both pictures some nearby sedges.