Sunday, June 7, 2026

Travel Story--Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, Austin, Texas

For me, who writes about plants and checks her accuracy in books and on websides, the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center (website) has long been a resource I rely on, both the website (Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower data base) and books they have published. So to visit the actual center was a treat!

flower bed of evening primroses
flower bed of evening primroses (Oenothera)

Sunday, May 31, 2026

Disambiguation of Some Common Plant Names 3: Marigold, Mountain Ash, Bugleweed, and Loosestrife

Common names are locally-used names. Nobody standardizes them. So it is easy for people to use the same common name for different plants. 

marigolds, genus Tagetes
marigolds, genus Tagetes

Sunday, May 17, 2026

Travel--Spring in the Chinese Garden in Montreal

Traveling, my husband always tries to pick the perfect time: not too hot, not too cold, not rainy, etc. He scheduled us to see Montreal, Quebec, Canada, the second week in May because apparently tourists start arriving the third week in May and hotel prices rise dramatically. I am not sure whether he thought about what that said about Montreal's weather. We flew into most of a week of chilly temperatures and light rain. 

So I have to say this was not the perfect time to see Montreal. 

rhododendrons in the Chinese garden
rhododendrons in the Chinese garden

And yet, the Chinese Garden at the Jardin botanique de Montreal was gorgeous. 

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Plant Story--Houndstongue, Gypsyflower, Cynoglossum officinale

About four years ago, I found an unfamiliar plant in my yard. I watched it flower and liked the pretty red flowers. So I let it go to seed. Mistake.

gypsyweed, hounds tongue, Cynoglossum officinale
hounds tongue, gypsyweed, Cynoglossum officinale
 

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Travel Story--Wildflowers of the Texas Hill Country

 In mid-Apriil, we drove south and west from Austin to find wildflowers in bloom. 

And there they were, all along the roadside

roadside wildflowers  in Texas
Texas roadside wildflowers

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Plant Story--slimflower scurfpea, Pediomelum tenuiflorum, an Inconspicuous Pretty Native

Sometimes you look right through it 

slimflower scurfpea, Pediomelum tenuiflorum
slimflower scurfpea, Pediomelum tenuiflorum

Sometimes its the green clump in the brown grass

slimflower scurfpea, Pediomelum tenuiflorum
slimflower scurfpea, Pediomelum tenuiflorum

Short (rarely more than 2' tall), with small leaves pea-like, small blue-purple flowers, and a difficult name  to remember (in English or Latin), slimflower scurfpea, Pediomelum tenuiflorum (pea family, Fabaceae) doesn't get much attention. Yet it is an American native wildflower with a range all across the mid-continental grasslands, from Indiana and Kentucky to Montana and New Mexico (see USDA plants data base under Psoralidium tenuiflorum).