This afternoon, I took lunch out to James, who's working on our land northwest of town. After our peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwiches, I ventured off alone and hiked some deer trails. Along the way, I picked three species of grass seed. I would LOVE to establish some native stands in our Wildscape. I also picked up some possumhaw berries in hopes of planting some of those, too. I tried last year with no luck. So I'm just gonna try again!
I've got my copy of
Grasses of the Texas Hill Country in my lap (by Brian and Shirley Loflin), trying to ID the three species. I'm guessing the two "sideways" seedheads are a grama species (
blue or tall). The long single seedhead may be
Lindheimer muhly (
Muhlenbergia lindheimeri). Hope so! The delicate, wispy seedheads came from
seep muhly (
Muhlenbergia reverchonii).
On that note, last weekend I clipped a newspaper article, "
150,000 seed balls bound for Bastrop," written by reporter Claire Osborn with the
Austin American-Statesman.
"The seeds are from more than 50 varieties of plants found in the Bastrop area, such as little bluestem, black-eyed Susan and Indian blanket. Each ball has nine or 10 seeds and should grow with a little water," the article states. "They will be available to Bastrop residents whose land was damaged by the fires."
Members of the Capital Area Master Naturalists sponsored the project. According to the
Statesman, "150,000 marble-size balls of clay, compost and native plant seeds were put together by about 300 groups of children at schools, churches and youth groups in Williamson, Travis, Hays, Caldwell, Milam and Bell counties."
The group raised $1,800 to buy compost, clay and a special seed mix from my friends, Bill and Jan Neiman, at the
Native American Seed Co. in Junction. What a wonderful project!!