We used our trusty garden cart to bring the green section plants from the backyard as well as the verbenas. The sand lovegrass had a beautiful root system!The green milkweeds had very long root systems. These just sprouted this spring. I think I got 3-6 from this pot into the ground. Not all put up leaves again with the fall rain so it’s hard to be sure. Everyone tucked in snugly. I moved the spikemoss from here to the rock garden as the spotted euphorbia keeps almost covering it here.
Potted E. vivipara flowers!Briar guards The front yard one blooms too. PrettyWe want fruit! Paula used a q-tip to pollinate. Hopefully also some insects will visit.
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.
This seedling is not something I recognize so I’m hoping it could be Bluehearts from Mom. I left other volunteer plants in as that species is hemiparasitic and does better with a host. Possibly a silverleaf nightshade seedling!Another possible silverleaf! Looks a lot like its congeneric cousin tomatoes’ babies. Another baby Arkansas yucca!!! This one is in a bigger pot so hopefully we can keep it watered enough. Two fern acacia seedlings from last fall came up!!The winecups are really taking off!! Super pleased. This adorable sweat bee is the first visitor I’ve seen so far to our Penstemon grandiflorus. New mystery in the prairie!Briar being innocentGuard flamingo One of our two plastic flamingos has been retired due to its new hobby of breeding mosquitoes. The remaining one has been reassigned to guard two Oklahoma penstemon that the dog keeps laying on.
I’m not sure if the Fluttermill Primrose is just almost done blooming or the rain has just been so heavy in the last week when it happens, but they are looking a little worse for the wear right now.
We put one of Paula’s native Oklahoma cacti outside earlier this spring and wow has it grown! I cannot remember which genus it is. We had it identified at some point and keep forgetting to label it.
The Penstemon grandiflorus is blooming in its second year!They are such big flowers. After rain during the day, the leaves collected water!Another side view of the big water blob on the leaves!