Showing posts with label Inside Austin Gardens Tour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inside Austin Gardens Tour. Show all posts

Sunday, April 30, 2017

Inside Austin Gardens Tour Preview

Last week I joined a group of Austin gardens bloggers for a preview of the Inside Austin Gardens Tour which will be held Saturday May 6th.  Sponsored by Travis County Master Gardeners the tour occurs every 18 months alternating spring and fall.  This year's tour is especially convenient for San Antonio garden tour fans since two of the gardens are just up the road in Spicewood which makes for an easy and beautiful drive.  I made it home to North Central San Antonio in under 90 minutes.  "By gardeners, for gardeners" is the theme of the tour and since one of my favorite things besides touring gardens is learning gardener's stories, this tour is right up my alley.

We'll begin our preview in Shari Bauer's garden overlooking the Pedernales River (Perd-n-alice for non-Texans) near Spicewood.  Titled "A Journey Through Fairyland" on the tour website our journey reveals a treasure trove of colorful and artfully arranged found objects.  Shari's garden was featured on Central Texas Gardener in April.  We began in the shed filled with pretty vignettes.


And then there's that view from the porch.


A porch just right for sitting with friends and family.


In the garden this Willys Jeep from the 1940s makes a cool fountain.  The headlights turn on at night along with many lights throughout the garden.  Friends drop off garden fairies for Shari's "fairy rescue" project.


Multiple outdoor seating and dining areas give Shari and her husband places to enjoy different areas of the garden each day.


Natural Spanish moss is a dull gray so Shari dyes it to add bright color to her arrangements.


Don't miss the succulent draped and fringed piano.


We also loved this beautifully detailed succulent dress form.


Along the way you'll find doors to secret gardens to enjoy.


Next up is Dorothy Thering's Wildlife Restoration and Preservation garden just a few minutes away in Spicewood.

They've embraced timeless Texas Hill Country style.



A huge raised-bed vegetable garden is just one of the destination spots on this large property.



A solar powered fountain makes sense in this full-sun spot down the hill from the house.


We stopped to feed sweet and friendly Miniature Nubian goats named Lucy and Ethel.


Dorothy's turquoise-accented shed draws attention on the other side of the drive.


Festive style inside and out


The shaded shed side garden invites on a hot day.


This view reminds me so much of summers in the hill country.  Before they built their house Dorothy, battling breast cancer at the time, would find respite in the beauty of this place.


"Sun and Shade" is our next stop on the tour.  I looked forward to meeting Velia Sanchez-Ruiz having remembered her garden from Central Texas Gardener in 2015.  She was away at another garden event but I'm sure she'll be there on tour day.  Check out the video, so much to learn from her love of gardening.



As a member of the Austin Daylily Society, Velia has quite a collection which are all carefully labeled.


Velias style shows throughout her garden.


The shady back garden features Jasmine on the trellis and lots of passalong plants to peruse in the garden.


Shrimp plant is one of those passalongs we rarely need to purchase in Texas.  A recirculating ceramic fountain completes a shady corner vignette complete with hanging mirror.


Daphne Jeffers' "Birds, Butterflies, and Zen" garden is a study in contrasts with its colorful sunny front beds.





That exuberance is cooled by a quiet Japanese garden in the back.


The screened building holds bird feeders.  The screening is large enough for small birds to get through while keeping doves and squirrels at bay.


Bamboo fencing adds authenticity to the garden.


If you're gardening on a slope Peggy Hart's Earth-Kind garden shows how to make it work while saving water and energy.  Her minimal lawn front yard features native and adapted plants.


A great example of how to landscape a shady side yard.



Peggy tamed her steep backyard with steps and terraces


More goats!  This time they're pretend goats and this steep slope is a good place for them.


Bevo too!


Peggy has added a keyhole garden for veggies and herbs.  She has a deer problem necessitating the netting and wire cages.  You will also see Ollas at work to efficiently water her raised beds.


A huge rain collection system gives access to plenty of water.


The relaxing deck....


...features Texas-style touches.


Stop and enjoy the view.


This preview post is just a taste of  each garden to encourage you to head up to Austin to see these gardens in person and I'll post more detail in the next few weeks.

The Inside Austin Gardens Tour is this Saturday, May 6th, from 9am to 4pm.  You can find more information at the link.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Inside Austin Gardens Tour 2015: Death Defying and Flashy Natives.

We're previewing the Inside Austin Gardens Tour with a sneak peek at two more gardens.  The tour, sponsored by Travis County Master Gardeners, is held every 18 months alternating between spring and fall.  The tour theme is "By Gardeners. For Gardeners."  This garden called "Death Defying Natives" is one I can easily relate to.  Drought-tolerant plants requiring minimal water use are the focus on this corner lot.  A low stone wall dividing the large front yard gives a sense of separation from the street.


Charming vignette at the front door.



Potato vine in both purple and chartreuse with bright pink roses line the house.


Potato vine in bloom, mine have never bloomed so this was fun to see.



Bright red Oxblood or Schoolhouse lilies were in bloom.  A special treat since they bloom for only a short time after a rain in the autumn.



Along the curb a bed of native plants provide buffers.



Minimal care and minimal water use are good principles during our summer heat and drought.  The streetside bed continues around the corner.


Yellow Mexican Bird of Paradise combined with orange Pride of Barbados screen the garage and driveway.


The family dog eagerly waiting to greet us.  This porthole is such a great idea.


Inside the back fence we see masses of waterwise plants surrounding a seating area ready to gather family and friends on just a small circle of Zoysia lawn.


Italian Stone Pine is one of the few pines or conifers which will grow well west of I-35 in Central Texas.


The next and final garden we visited on our tour was "Flashy Natives" and a very apt title with its bright beds of flowers and grasses.  A large Ashe Juniper surrounded by planting beds with just enough lawn to walk through.  Beds are lined with smooth Baja stone in contrast to our typically sharp native limestone.  I've thought of placing a few of these in strategic spots in my own garden and seeing these reminds me to make a trip to the stone yard.



Everything looks so good despite the heat.


The key is heat-loving perennials.



Another large purple pennisetum.  After seeing this earlier on the tour in Pam Penick's garden as well, it's going on my list.


Shady seating area out front to enjoy the garden and neighbors in the evening.


Around back a set of rain barrels.


More of that pennisetum.  Love it!


Curved beds with bump-outs help reduce the overall footprint of the lawn.


Mexican Flame Vine blooms always a treat.


Sweet cat enjoying the garden


Nice raised bed garden set off with a picket fence.


Rusellia makes a nice fern-like container plant.


Great gardening socks!


These two gardens along with the other four gardens featured in my preview series will be open this Saturday, October 17th, during the Inside Austin Gardens Tour.  It's a short drive from San Antonio to Austin so if you're looking for good ideas for your garden this fall it's well worth a day in Austin to enjoy the tour.  You can see my preview of "Shady Natives", "Cottage Natives", "Oh! Deer!", and "Sunbathing Natives" by starting with this post.  In addition to the six gardens on tour, the Native Testing Grounds at the Travis County Extension Service will be open to visitors so you can explore possibilities for replacing that water-guzzling lawn and get good tips from the Master Gardeners.  Visiting the testing grounds is a good way to kick off Texas Native Plant week too.

To see more blogger previews of the tour visit:

Rock Rose
Sharing Nature's Garden
Garden Ally
The Shovel Ready Garden
The Gardener of Good and Evil

Be sure to check out Central Texas Gardener for more on the Inside Austin Gardens Tour.