Not feeling cross about crossvine in bloom, and more!

Not feeling cross about crossvine in bloom, and more!

March 31, 2025 When it goes, it goes. Ka-boom! An explosion of orange trailing along the coyote fence. ‘Tangerine Beauty’ crossvine is one of my favorite vines for spring color. It’s native, semi-evergreen, attractive to pollinators, vigorous but not invasive (unlike similar-looking trumpet vine — avoid!), and tough as nails ...
Spring flowers and fab foliage a-popping

Spring flowers and fab foliage a-popping

March 16, 2025 Late last week, while I was under the weather and holed up on the couch watching Wicked, winter turned into spring. Yesterday I woke up feeling like myself again and noticed a text from my neighbor, thanking me for the beauty of my Mexican plum, which stretches ...
Spring is coming around

Spring is coming around

February 26, 2025 What a change from a week or two ago. It was a sunny 82 F today in Austin — fully spring-like and more like late March than late February. I wouldn’t say the garden is leaping into spring though. After all, we just experienced a deep freeze ...
Fall at Denver Botanic Gardens: Perennial Walk and Romantic Gardens

Fall at Denver Botanic Gardens: Perennial Walk and Romantic Gardens

January 12, 2025 With orange spines on its leaves and bright purple flowers, porcupine tomato (Solanum pyracanthos) looks like it’s from another planet. I spotted this one at Denver Botanic Gardens. This is Part 7 and my final post from my visit last September. Japanese anemone Crossroads Garden Let’s start ...
Lori's blue fantasia garden

Lori’s blue fantasia garden

January 04, 2025 I popped over to my friend Lori Daul‘s house on Thursday, craving one more garden visit before the Arctic barrels down to Austin and brings our long growing season to an end. At Lori’s, fountains still trickle, ponds reflect sky, and plants sprawl luxuriantly. The garden echoes ...
Thankful for fall flowers, cool temps, not deer

Thankful for fall flowers, cool temps, not deer

November 27, 2024 Fall was slow to arrive this year. Autumn rainfall has been tardy too, just a smattering here and there. But there’s plenty to be thankful for in the garden, as always. I’m grateful for cooler, yet frost-free temps and the fullness of the autumn garden. Hooray for ...
Cold-hardy cactus and more at plantsman Kelly Grummons's garden

Cold-hardy cactus and more at plantsman Kelly Grummons’s garden

November 12, 2024 While in Denver this fall, I found Colorado gardeners to be warm and generous about sharing their creations and eager to make introductions to other gardeners they admire. That’s how I came to meet plantsman Kelly Grummons, co-owner of specialty nursery Prairie Storm Nursery. How, exactly? After ...
Heidi Harris's Denver dry garden, inspired by David Salman, outshines any lawn

Heidi Harris’s Denver dry garden, inspired by David Salman, outshines any lawn

November 07, 2024 I love a good chain of inspiration, seeing how one gardener’s efforts can fire up the imagination and determination of another, and so on and so on. Heidi Harris, aka Denver Dry Garden, is a great example. She bought her home in Denver’s Regis/Berkeley neighborhood in 2018, ...
Boots on the ground in Mike Kintgen's Denver garden

Boots on the ground in Mike Kintgen’s Denver garden

October 30, 2024 Cactus-planted boots in Mike’s garden I met Mike Kintgen, curator of the alpine collections at Denver Botanic Gardens and a super nice guy, when he came to Austin a few years ago. Mike must have a LOT of energy because he manages not only the large Rock ...
Falling for SummerHome Garden, Part 2

Falling for SummerHome Garden, Part 2

October 21, 2024 In my last post I shared the genesis of SummerHome Garden, a privately owned garden and public park in Denver’s Washington Park neighborhood. I visited in late September and spent a couple of hours early one morning taking pictures. The garden was so beautiful that I couldn’t ...
Gillian Mathews' garden for outdoor lounging and dining

Gillian Mathews’ garden for outdoor lounging and dining

September 18, 2024 I’ve wanted to visit the Seattle garden of Gillian Mathews, former owner of Ravenna Gardens, since reading about it at Danger Garden and in the Seattle Times. Designed by Richard Hartlage of Land Morphology (whose personal garden I recently visited), its modern style, lush plantings, and original ...
Living on the edge in the Livingston Garden

Living on the edge in the Livingston Garden

September 11, 2024 I wish I knew how steep this garden is, and how many steps I climbed while exploring it. It’s a leg workout for sure. On the bonus day of the Puget Sound Fling in July, we visited Millie Livingston’s Seattle garden. At nearly 2 acres, the garden ...
Early taste of fall so I'm back in the garden

Early taste of fall so I’m back in the garden

September 10, 2024 The weather gods gave Austin a month-early taste of fall over the past few days. Summer returns this week, but wow, what a delight it’s been to step outside in the morning to temps in the low 60s with low humidity! All day yesterday I tidied up ...
Floating on an evergreen cloud in the garden of Tanya Bednarski

Floating on an evergreen cloud in the garden of Tanya Bednarski

September 04, 2024 When two neighbors go all-in on their gardens, it makes for great street energy. Such is the case with two of the gardens on the Puget Sound Fling‘s bonus day in Seattle. Last time I showed you Bonnie Berk’s terraced hillside garden. Today let’s explore the garden ...
Taming a hillside with terraces and sculpture in Bonnie Berk's garden

Taming a hillside with terraces and sculpture in Bonnie Berk’s garden

September 03, 2024 Steep lots make gardening — or even just mowing — a challenge unless you figure out a way to create safe, usable spaces. Seattle gardener Bonnie Berk installed terracing to tame her intimidatingly steep front yard, adding large sculptures to entice visitors uphill. I visited her garden ...
More exuberance at the Sparler-Schouten Garden, part 2

More exuberance at the Sparler-Schouten Garden, part 2

September 01, 2024 There was too much garden goodness and exuberance to contain in one post about Daniel Sparler and Jeff Schouten’s Garden of Exuberant Refuge, which I visited on the Puget Sound Fling. Here’s Part 1, if you missed it. Today, Part 2 starts on the back patio of ...