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Lots of Edwards Plateau crestrib morning-glories seedlings. |
A while ago, James and I walked around the gardens. Oh. My. Goodness! The recent rains have made all the difference! What a blessing! However, now I am SO OUTNUMBERED! I have SO MUCH work to do! But what a welcome change. After watching and grieving as our plants suffered and died throughout the long, hot, dry summer, now we’re astounded to see how everyone has made such a miraculous comeback. But I guess we shouldn’t be THAT surprised. After all, we planted NATIVES.
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Salvias, trailing lantanas, pigeonberries. (Salvias and lantanas are especially recovering fast!) |
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I was delighted to see that our “dead” western ironweeds are coming back from the roots! |
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So are the perfumeballs, also known pincushion daisies and fragrant gaillardia. |
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Simpson’s rosinweeds are peeking up from the roots! |
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Oops, a feline Prima flower along the Texas skeleton plants. |
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Butterflyweed returning from its roots, too. |
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I’ve never seen the brownfoot grow straight up like this. |
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Velvetleaf mallow, one of my favorites. |
I thought we’d have to wait until spring to see what survived and what didn’t. Nope! We’re getting a real good idea right now! The takeaway: Folks, PLANT NATIVE PLANTS! (Pssst, anyone want some? I’ve got a lot of volunteers I need to re-home.)
2 comments:
Deer proof?
This is me, Sheryl. James added paneling to our chain link fence to make our back yard deer proof. https://sherylsmithrodgers.blogspot.com/2020/06/deer-be-gone.html?m=1
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