Saturday, May 31, 2025

New additions (and a pop-up)

Here's what we brought home from the Festival of Flowers in San Antonio: Jimsonweed (Datura wrightii); skeleton-leaf goldeneye (Viguiera stenolaba); red salvia (Salvia coccinea) and two rosemary plants (latter complimenets of SAWS). 
I chose the moonflower because ours that we bought and planted back in April 2014 finally pooped out a couple of years ago. This afternoon, I walked over to the garden spot in our front yard where I thought we'd plant its replacement. What should I see? A new jimsonweed child! How cool! Nature is just amazing. 

Festival of Flowers!

What fun! At nearly the last minute this morning, we braved the traffic and hopped on down to San Antonio for the 25th annual Festival of Flowers. We'd never heard of it before. But thanks to a Facebook post I saw by our gardening friend Shirley Fox, we checked out the online info and decided to go. (Free parking and $10 entrance fee  at the San Antonio Shrine Auditorium.) Here are some of the nice folks we met. Of course, we came home with a few plants.
Our friend, Shirley Fox 
 
Brothers Mike and Mark Fanick with Fanick's Garden Center

Donald Gerber and employee with Pollinatives

Publisher Jay White with Texas Gardener (I've written for the magazine in the distant past.)






Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Two new additions

I bought two pots of tall aster (Symphyotrichum praealtum) from the Blanco County Master Gardener plant sale last month. Suzanne C. gave me another a pot (far left), but I don't think it's tall aster. We'll see. They're all planted behind the new high fence.

 

Thursday, May 15, 2025

iNaturalist milestones


Look! I'm at 1,470 species and 6,000 observations, of which the majority by far have been in our yard!

 

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Catocala caterpillar nabs attention on iNaturalist

Well, not a LOT of attention. But some on iNaturalist! Most notably by Larry Gall, a systematist and field biologist in Connecticut who works at Yale University's Peabody Museum as the senior collections manager for the entomology department. I posted this observation in April 2020 and only took one photo. I think we had an abundance of caterpillars that spring so I didn't take multiple pictures of just one. 

From what I'm gleaning from the conversation posted to this observation, this caterpillar could be the larva of one of two species – Catocala delilah or C. desdemona. Few larvae of both species have been documented. I've been asked to rear one if I ever see this caterpillar again, which I'll gladly do given I have some guidance. 

Here's a cool guide that Gall and his colleagues have compiled: Underwing Moths (Catocala) & Larvae: A companion guide for iNaturalists.

 

Wasp with caterpillar victim

Remember my mud-nesting wasp with the mutilated wolf spider? Well, now meet a thread-waisted wasp (family Sphecidae, perhaps genus Ammophila) dragging a paralyzed caterpillar across sedum. Most of these parasitic wasps sting and paralyze their victims, then drag them to their burrows or nests. There they'll lay their egg(s) on the victim so the larvae have fresh food to eat when they hatch. Thank you, Linda Chang, for sharing your observation and photos with me!

Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Day in the Park 2025

Another great Day in the Park at Blanco State Park! The annual event for Blanco third graders is sponsored by the Friends of Blanco State Park and put on by Texas Master Naturalists with the Highland Lakes chapter. Yesterday 65 students rotated from station to station, where they learned about spiders, monarchs, bird nests, fish and reptiles, bats, pollinators and vertebrates. James and Karen S. assisted me at the spider station. It was so fun! I love interacting with kids.


 
 


James caught me drooping after our lunch break. "Smile, Sheryl," he exclaimed. So I did. I perk up quite nicely, right?
(This photo is for my records.)

Pearl milkweed beauties

This beautiful cluster of blooms was a first for me. Usually, our pearl milkweed vines (Matelea reticulata) just have singular flowers on the stems. I love this species, but it likes to spread a lot via seeds. So I often pull up vines where I don't want them growing.

Snapdragon vine surprise

In October 2014, we purchased a snapdragon vine 'Red' (Maurandella antirrhiniflora) at a native plant sale at the Wildflower Center in Austin. We planted in the back yard, exactly where I can't remember. It died, and I forgot all about it ... until, a few days ago, I was wandering along a rock path by the chain-link fence. I looked down and – lo and behold! – there was a 'Red' snapdragon vine! What a happy surprise! 
 
In the meantime, we have lots of the native snapdragon vine because it likes to spread around.
 

Friday, May 2, 2025

New fence!

 
 
 
 Look at what we commissioned! A new fence around the west side of our property! Fence builders extraordinaire Wayne Brewster with assistance from Bowie Crofts put up this beautiful fence made of cedar posts and wire. It's high to keep out our neighborhood deer and axis. Our old cedar fence was built more than 50 years ago by our home's original owner, the late Henry Bendele. He was the ag teacher at Blanco High School for years. If you scroll through the photos, you'll one of two gates that he welded. 

Now we can plant a few vegetable plants and enjoy this area more. Thank you, Wayne and Bowie!






Beetles just can't resist

Whenever our prickly pear cacti bloom in the Meadow, Kern's flower scarabs (Euphoria kernii) and a few dark flower beetles (Euphoria inda) show up in droves to pollinate and party!