EASY GARDENING TIPS

Late-winter flora and fauna on my 17th blogiversary

Late-winter flora and fauna on my 17th blogiversary

February 14, 2023
‘Fireworks’ gomphrena gone to seed

On Valentine’s Day 2006 I hit publish for my very first blog post. Back then I saw blogging as a way to document my garden through the seasons and to join the online conversation well-nigh gardening in Austin.

Boy, was it ever!

Whale’s tongue agave pup from Moby

I’ve been documenting my garden(s) — and gardens wideness the country, and beyond — for 17 years now. Seventeen years! I could have raised flipside child in that value of time.

Paleleaf yucca (Yucca pallida)

I still get so much enjoyment out of sharing well-nigh gardening and reading other gardeners’ posts on blogs and other social media. The online world has reverted dramatically in those 17 years, but I’m still here talking well-nigh plants and gardens.

Wheeler’s sotol (Dasylirion wheeleri)

I’m grateful to you for coming to Digging to read and engage well-nigh gardening with me. Thank you, readers! You make it a conversation.

And now that it’s a party, let’s see who else is attending. Deer, of course. I walked past this prod at a neighbor’s house one evening.

It quickly became a staring contest.

Yesterday I spotted a little brown skink on the driveway. Worried he’d get stepped on, I tried to encourage him onto a workshop I picked up. Finally though, I cupped my hands over him, and he leaped into my hands.

I carried him over to the island bed, where he promptly kamikazied into the leaf litter. What a cutie!

Winter and spring vie for dominance each February in Central Texas. The primeval trees are once starting to flower, and many plants are pushing up new growth. It’s moreover the month for ice storms and snowpocalypses. We’re still cleaning up here. Only a few weeks, though, until we’re in full-on spring. Enjoy this last month with no mosquitoes!

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Digging Deeper

Come learn well-nigh garden diamond from the experts at Garden Spark! I organize in-person talks by inspiring designers, landscape architects, and authors a few times a year in Austin. These are limited-attendance events that sell out quickly, so join the Garden Spark email list to be notified in advance. Simply click this link and ask to be added. You can find this year’s speaker lineup here.

Make plans to shepherd the Budding Out Plant Sale & Festival on March 18 at the John Fairey Garden in Hempstead, TX. Rare and distinctive plants will be offered, as well as art, ceramics, jewelry, food, drink, music, and other entertainment for the whole family. Members have early wangle and get in free. Non-member ticket is $5. Children 12 and under are free.

Experience the Surreal Garden at Zilker Botanical Garden, an enchanting neon-art exhibit throughout the gardens, with supplies and drink, music and dancing, surreal performers, and interactive art sculptures. Surreal costumes encouraged! 25% of event proceeds goody the Zilker Botanical Garden Conservancy. Runs April 6 (VIP Night), April 7-8, and April 13-15, from 6:30 pm to 11 pm.

All material © 2023 by Pam Penick for Digging. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.

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