Showing posts with label Autumn blooms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Autumn blooms. Show all posts

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Autumn Garden Roundup: Back Garden

With our first cold weather of the season hitting this week I'm posting my annual garden roundup to show the gardens at their Autumn peak.  In my last post I featured the front yard and today we'll tour the back yard.

The centerpiece of the back yard is the circle garden created last year to cover a bare spot left by two years of extreme drought.


Monday, November 11, 2013

Autumn Garden Roundup: Front Garden

The weather is saying it's Fall as colder temperatures head our way.  As always, we are grateful to the folks farther north for blunting the impact and accepting the worst of the cold front's effects.  Anyway, it's time for my annual Autumn Garden Roundup before the garden fades for a few months.  I've taken quite a few photos of the garden at its peak over the last week or so for your viewing pleasure.

We'll begin in the front where there haven't been many changes this year.  A little different view than I typically show is this approach from the front of the house out to the street.  Yes, that's a lot of concrete. Concretious Americanus is very cold-hardy and was installed by the original owner who is also a contractor.


Friday, November 30, 2012

Flower Round-up for Friday

Autumn blooms have been going strong this year and I'm posting a collection of my favorites.  Yesterday I highlighted the wheel garden of grasses and flowers in the back yard and today is a round-up of flowers from other gardens.

Looking across the back yard from the gate we see Salvia madrensis and violet ruellia.  The wheel garden highlighted yesterday is in the background.


Salvia madrensis is a shade plant which produces bright yellow blooms in the fall.


I pair it with the violet blooms of ruellia which were set back by our one cold night early in November.


In the same bed along the house, Brugmansia 'Dr Seuss' had a flush of two dozen blooms at once.

Across the way the flowers of our native Snapdragon vine show how they got their name.


In yesterday's post I highlighted two types of Gomphrena in the wheel garden. There are more around the yard like these tiny native Gomphrena 'Little Grapes'.


Purple Gomphrena in a galvanized planter along the fence is blooming beautifully today.





Over by the garage, the Bat-faced cuphea managed a few blooms before the deer ate them.  They will be relocated behind the fence in the spring.


Salvia "Indigo Spires' loves the cooler weather


Along the creek, Cow's Tongue Opuntia is combining with the monster Lantana camara


Rusellia is a reliable bloomer most of the year


The Meyer Lemon bloomed even with a lemon ripening, these blooms all dropped off.


Out in the front yard our native Gulf muhly bloomed for the first time.  I've moved these three times in the last two years and have finally found a spot that works.


New Gold Lantana in the front yard was covered with blooms for weeks


Agave Ovatifolia isn't exactly a bloom but it's shaped like one so it counts.


That concludes the tour of Autumn blooms in my garden.  Thanks for reading this far!