Big booms and May blooms
Our second hailstorm in a week pounded us Wednesday night. Like machine-gun fire—rat-a-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat—chunks of ice flew horizontally at the west-facing windows and piled up on the patio. We moved the sleeping kids away from the windows, I listened to reports of “tornadic rotation” on the TV, and my husband stood vigil on the back porch, watching his car take a beating in the driveway. When it was over and morning revealed the damage, it was mercifully minor. Unlike neighborhoods to the east and south of us, no trees were lost, no windows broken, and even the car seems undented. In the garden, the daylilies, a few new roses, and the cut-leaf daisies were a little ragged and torn, but otherwise everything looked fine. Plus we got three-quarters of an inch of rain, which is always welcome.
I’m a day late for the Garden Bloggers’ Bloom Day party, and I didn’t try to document every flower with a photo this time. So here’s an abridged version of what’s blooming in my garden this May 15. To see what’s flowering in other gardens all over the world, visit May Dreams Gardens for links to other Bloom Day posts.
‘Wilson’s Yellow’ daylily defiantly opened the day after the hailstorm.
Autumn sage (Salvia greggii ) welcomes visitors to my garden on each side of the entry with cheery flowers and fragrant foliage. To the left of the blue-green agave, rock penstemon and bulbine are blooming. Jerusalem sage and four-nerve daisy show their yellow flowers in the background on either side of the variegated agave.
Bat-face cuphea (Cuphea llavea ). Do you see the little bat face with big ears?
The purple coneflowers (Echinacea purpurea ) look a little bedraggled after the hailstorm, but I like the way they’re mingling with the leaves of Gulf muhly grass.
Pink skullcap (Scutellaria suffrutescens ), like a tidy alpine shrub, grows in a small mound of tiny, green leaves topped by tubular, lipstick-pink flowers.
Heartleaf skullcap (Scutellaria ovata ), visibly fuzzy in the morning light, sends up lavender spires.
Along the curb, where summer sun and drought would shrivel fainter hearts, the native damianita (Chrysactinia mexicana ) and Mexican feathergrass (Nassella tenuissima ) make a pretty, yellow combo. The feathergrass also acts as a weathervane for me. Here you see it blowing southward, which tells me at a glance from the window that a cool north wind is blowing, and the humidity will be low—perfect for gardening.
‘Best of Friends’—still hanging in there after the hailstorm
‘Indigo Spires’ salvia
Also blooming this month
‘Carefree Beauty’ rose
‘Radrazz’ Knockout rose
‘The Fairy’ rose
Engelmann’s daisy
Rock penstemon
Bulbine
Mexican snapdragon vine
Pink cuphea
Barbardos cherry
‘Hot Lips’ salvia
Salvia guaranitica
Coral honeysuckle
Passionflower
Cosmos
Zinnias
Blackfoot daisy
Winecup
Kidneywood tree
Gulf Coast penstemon
Salvia leucantha
Pigeonberry
White oxalis
Purple oxalis
Pomegranate tree
Zexmenia
Lion’s tail
Blue mealy sage
Guara
Texas betony
Star grass
Blooming, but nearly finished
Orchid tree
Star jasmine
Crossvine
Nasturtium
Bluebonnets (blue and maroon)
Columbine
All material © 2006-2008 by Pam Penick for Digging. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.

