{"id":249,"date":"2009-02-12T09:01:00","date_gmt":"2009-02-12T14:01:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/192.168.1.5\/gardens\/gardenlog\/?p=249"},"modified":"2018-03-14T19:22:47","modified_gmt":"2018-03-15T00:22:47","slug":"week-06-zanthan-gardens","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/weekly-comparison\/week-06-zanthan-gardens\/","title":{"rendered":"Week 06: 2\/5 &#8211; 2\/11"},"content":{"rendered":"<h4>Dateline: 2009<\/h4>\n<p><!-- 2009-02-12 -->I associate the first redbud blossom (my private official marker of spring) with Valentine&#8217;s Day but this year I saw my first redbud on Monday (2\/9), almost a week early. Spring&#8217;s in Austin and there&#8217;s no holding it back.<\/p>\n<p>As my son retorted, &#8220;Does this mean we&#8217;re going to have a month of 70-degree days and then a hard freeze during Spring Break?&#8221; Probably. Austin&#8217;s average last freeze is now February 26th (it used to be in March) so the period between Valentine&#8217;s Day and St. Patrick&#8217;s Day is always a bit chancy for tender new plants. He&#8217;s probably remembering when he was a boy and I took him camping at Enchanted Rock for his birthday. The temperature surprised us by dropping to 14 degrees that night. That was the same year as the latest freeze on record, April 3, 1987. As the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.highlandlakes.com\/climate.htm\">Austin Climate Summary<\/a> shows, Austin can be in the 90s or higher ANY month of the year; it can also freeze anytime between October and April.<\/p>\n<p>Flowers were opening all over the garden. This is the most excitement we&#8217;ve had at Zanthan Gardens in about eight months.<\/p>\n<p>First flowers: Prunus mexican (2\/5); paperwhite Narcissus &#8216;Grandiflora&#8217; (2\/6); rose &#8216;Ducher&#8217; (2\/6); Mahonia bealei (2\/6); Narcissus tazetta &#8216;Grand Primo&#8217; (2\/8); Leucojum asestivum (2\/9); Cercis canadensis (2\/9); Lantana montevidensis (2\/9).<\/p>\n<p>We had a bit of relief from the drought this week, too: about half an inch of rain in a slow, soaking drizzle on Monday (2\/9) and then a bit less late in a 10-minute downpour (accompanied by high winds and hail) late Tuesday evening (2\/10). The rain penetrated the first 4 to 6 inches of soil (depending on where it is in my yard&#8211;heavy clay or well-composted). Below that, the dirt is dust dry. It&#8217;s frightening to dig into it. I expect the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/gardenlog\/?p=2327\">spring weeds<\/a> to kick into high gear now. Our weather has been so dry that even the chickweed was languishing. Some henbit has been blooming. I never weed it all out because the butterflies like it when nothing else is blooming.<\/p>\n<p>I have been digging out nandina to make a bed for three raspberry plants I bought at The Great Outdoors. I didn&#8217;t think that raspberries would grow in Austin but they assure me that this variety, &#8216;Dorman&#8217;, will produce in a couple of years. We harvested an actual serving for two of the English peas and have been eating lots of salad trying to get the most out of the arugula before it bolts.<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 2008<\/h4>\n<p><!-- 2008-02-13 --><br \/>\n<img src=\"http:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/photos\/320\/20080210.jpg\" alt=\"Zanthan Gardens Week 6\" \/><br \/><i>2008-02-10. The winter garden. So named because it is on the south side of the house, basking in winter sunlight and protected from cold, north wins. Last year, a tomato survived the entire winter here. The rose &#8216;Madame Alfred Carriere&#8217; is supposed to climb the wires and hide the electrical box. However, from the shadow of the trunk you can see she is terribly shaded when the red oak leafs out.<\/i><\/p>\n<p>Austin has already had five days of highs in the 80s (27+C) this February. Winter feels like it&#8217;s banished for this year but casting away worries of another freeze can be dangerous. However, no one is telling the roses not to bud out or the cannas not to shoot up. Apparently there is no shortage of hope, spiced with a bit of brazenness, in the garden.<\/p>\n<p>The warm temperatures bring their own dangers. Central Texas weather continues on its fourth month of being very dry. High winds dessicate the plants and the combination of dry fuel and winds has put large areas of Texas under burn bans. The violas and other cool-weather plants look limp. The cilantro and even the larkspur are already bolting. I spent equal amounts of time watering as weeding this week. (I used the timer on my new iPhone to monitor my watering while I worked elsewhere in the garden. I love it.)<\/p>\n<p>I&#8217;m stripping, pruning, and tying back roses, feeding perennials with Dillo Dirt and then mulching them with Texas native hardwood mulch, cutting back Turk&#8217;s cap, pulling out nandina, and still cleaning up leaves from the red oak tree. I finally planted (2\/8) the <i>Lonicera frangrantissima<\/i> that I bought in December 2007. And I repotted (2\/10) the Meyer&#8217;s lemon tree and cut it back about 1\/3. It has looked quite ratty since it almost died over my three week absence last summer. The leaves have what I think is sooty mold. I decide to strip them all off. I&#8217;ve never tried this on the lemon tree before so I guess I&#8217;m just as likely to have killed it as saved it.<\/p>\n<p>First Flower: Leucojum aestivum (2\/10).<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 2007<\/h4>\n<p><!-- 2007-02-11 -->Austin&#8217;s weather this week has been nothing to speak of. All the national news has focused (rightly so!) on the icebox that is the north and northeast US&#8211;the mind-numbing cold, the incredible snowfalls, and the nasty windchill factors. I feel a bit uneasy to admitting to y&#8217;all that for most of this week we&#8217;ve had beautiful weather. Last week&#8217;s gray drizzle disappeared on Sunday (2\/4) and each day got warmer until it reached a sunny 76F degrees on Wednesday (2\/6). I opened the windows and hung out all my laundry. Then it turned gray and cooler again. (Austin&#8217;s &#8220;cooler&#8221; is 40s and 50s&#8211;practically toasty compared with your -5s and -10s up north.)<\/p>\n<p>Despite our lovely weather, I was barely in the garden all week. I did go to Zilker Park on Monday and get two more bags of Christmas tree mulch. I was surprised to find some still left; I think it&#8217;s because the ice storm hit the weekend the Park Department made it available and people forgot about it.<\/p>\n<p>Usually, this time of year, I&#8217;m watching anxiously for the first Mexican plum blossom. This year I&#8217;ve been dreading it for it will remind me that I haven&#8217;t yet transplanted my roses and other perennials or had the trees trimmed. When I emptied the compost pale this morning I stopped and looked for signs of new life. Sure enough, one flower was open on the largest Mexican plum and the branches were covered with buds. The other two trees don&#8217;t look like they&#8217;ll start flowering for a couple of weeks, though.<\/p>\n<p>I eyed the flower with less than joy. If spring is here, can summer be far behind? However, I&#8217;ve been making mental notes for next year&#8217;s winter garden which is what I&#8217;m really looking forward to. I just wish the catalog people would send their catalogs to the south 5 months earlier. I got a slew of them this week and it is too late to plant all those &#8220;early spring&#8221; flowers and veggies. But next year I&#8217;m going to convert all my former rose beds to cabbages and cauliflower and colorful chard and lettuce for the winter. The few small rows I tried this year are the nicest part of the garden right now.<\/p>\n<p>The Narcissus tazetta italicus under the pecan tree look like white pom-poms this week. None of the other bunches bloom as prolifically as this group.<\/p>\n<p>First flower: Consolida ambigua (2\/5), Prunus mexicana (2\/11).<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 2006<\/h4>\n<p><!-- 2006-02-12 -->Friday (2\/10) the air was heavy with the promise of rain. A light rain did fall most of the afternoon ahead of an an arctic front. Earlier in the week I did manage to clear a spot here and there to transplant self-sown bluebonnets and larkspur. They&#8217;re so tiny this year! (due to the lack of December rains).<\/p>\n<p>&#8216;Ducher&#8217; is in full bloom. Narcissus tazetta are still in flower. Tulipa clusiana, the &#8216;Ice Follies&#8217; and the bluebells have sent up leaves which are already five inches tall. The summer snowflakes have also pushed up. The rosemary is full of tiny blue flowers and one odd lavender bloomed.<\/p>\n<p>First flower: Prunus mexicana (2\/7).<\/p>\n<p>Around town I spotted more Texas mountain laurel blooming, some redbuds along Town Lake, and many white irises and paperwhites in the old neighborhoods.<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 2004<\/h4>\n<p><!-- 2004-02-07 -->February 7, 2004<br \/>\nWhen I looked out the kitchen window this morning, I was surprised by a fluff of white by the birdbath that turned out to be <a href=\"http:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/gardenlog\/archives\/001024.html\">Iris albicans<\/a> blooming. I hadn&#8217;t even noticed it sending up its flower stalk. Last year, it didn&#8217;t bloom until the end of March. But there are a lot of irises, some purple, some white, which bloom this time of year in the older yards of South Austin. So maybe these just needed to settle in.<\/p>\n<p>The generous rains we&#8217;ve had lately combined with the milder than normal temperatures have also caused one rangy, wild-looking larkspur to bloom yesterday. But the Mexican plums don&#8217;t have a single blossom and they usually bloom the last week of January.<\/p>\n<p>The late rains have also caused a second burst of Grand Primo from the bulbs that did not get a headstart from my hand watering. The only rose that is blooming is &#8216;Ducher&#8217;. The nights are clear and cold, sometimes freezing. The days are in the 50s and pleasant if one works in the sun out of the wind.<\/p>\n<p>First flower: Consolida ambigua (2\/6), Iris albicans (2\/7)<\/p>\n<p>February 11, 2004<br \/>\nI haven&#8217;t been outside since <strong>last<\/strong> Wednesday. It has been cold, rainy, and dreary for an entire week&#8211;which is a long time for us. When we have rain at all, we usually have a big storm and the next day it is clear and lovely. Then the wind will switch to the south and it will become more and more humid until another cold front blows through and we get rain again.<\/p>\n<p>But this week it has just rained and rained and rained&#8211;a cold, drizzly rain that reminds the resident ex-Brit of home in the worst way. On the positive side, it is rain and we always need that here in Austin. And it is coming down slowly and steadily, so it&#8217;s soaking in instead of running off. I just wish we hadn&#8217;t run out of dry kindling for the fire.<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 2003<\/h4>\n<p><!-- 2003-02-10 -->This week&#8217;s my garden diary reminds me to look for the first bluebonnet, the first summer snowflake, and the first daffodil.<\/p>\n<p>First flower: Tradescantia (2\/6), Leucojum aestivum (2\/6), Indian hawthorn (2\/11). Lupinus texensis (2\/11).<\/p>\n<p>The weeds have not been napping. Chickweed, beggar&#8217;s tick, goosegrass, and thistle are running wild through the yard.<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 2002<\/h4>\n<p>Friday February 8, 2002<br \/>\nA warm and sunny day at last. Even though the roofers are still here, I spend some time in the garden transplanting larkspur into the west border. I see three tradescantia blooming, the first this year. One of the bluebonnets has buds.<\/p>\n<p>Sunday February 10, 2002<br \/>\nThursday, Friday, and Saturday were all gloriously warm and sunny so I did venture out finally. And yes, I saw the first buds on the bluebonnets and the daffodils (&#8216;Quail&#8217; and &#8216;Ice Follies&#8217;). So far the summer snowflakes are growing vigorously, but not yet flowering. And today (2\/10), the first Tommie crocuses opened.<\/p>\n<p>None of the Mexican plum trees are flowering yet. Usually the older trees in my neighbors&#8217; yards flower a week before mine. But there is not a sign of a flower on any trees.<\/p>\n<p>The city is collecting brush this week, so we spent the weekend trimming trees. I need to repot the Japanese maple.<\/p>\n<p>And I need to finish defoliating the roses. So far I&#8217;ve only gotten to &#8216;Madame Alfred Carriere&#8217; and &#8216;Prosperity&#8217;. &#8216;Madame Joseph Schwartz&#8217; is happy without any defoliating. She has made a dense little bush with dozens of buds. &#8216;Heritage&#8217; is blooming, but needs attention because she has a bad case of black spot. &#8216;Souvenir del Malmaison&#8217; is has one flower and would be stunning right now if most of the buds hadn&#8217;t frozen at Christmas. Ditto with &#8216;Ducher&#8217; and &#8216;Blush Noisette&#8217;.<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 2001<\/h4>\n<p>Friday February 9, 2001<br \/>\nFirst flower: Prunus mexicana (on the largest tree, the one from Gardens).<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 2000<\/h4>\n<p>First flower: Leucojum aestivum (2\/9)&#8211;though just one, in the south border. This year the Grand Primo is still in flower and the Ice Follies are just about to flower. Someday it will be nice if one melds into the other; Narcissus &#8216;Ice Follies&#8217; (2\/11), Prunus mexicana (2\/11)&#8211;on the largest tree, the one from Gardens.<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 1999<\/h4>\n<p>Friday February 5, 1999<br \/>\nWhen I return from Chicago it is in the seventies. AJM and I walk around the garden to see what has happened while I&#8217;ve been gone. I&#8217;ve only been away five days, but what a transformation.<br \/>\n* the Leucojum aestivum has the first two blooms<br \/>\n* one viola that I raised from seed has finally bloomed, but it is dandelion yellow and I don&#8217;t really like it<br \/>\n* the Mexican plum tree has more blossom, and the neighbor&#8217;s Mexican plum tree is beginning to blossom<br \/>\n* two bluebonnets have flower buds<br \/>\n* many larkspur have short flower stalks; some are blooming<br \/>\n* the Donna Bella tulips have pushed up their leaves.<\/p>\n<p>Saturday February 6, 1999<br \/>\nIn the eighties (actually 78: record high of 83 is on 2\/7) today. I water the meadow. There is a promise of rain that is unfulfilled. I mow the back lawn very short 1.0. AJM and I clean the garage. I buy a tool box and some peg board hooks and the planters for beneath the garden room windows.<\/p>\n<p>Bought 20 pale apricot-colored tulips to put on the mantle in the test-tube vase. It&#8217;s not a color I&#8217;d think to grow in the garden, bu t I just knew they&#8217;d look good in the vase.<\/p>\n<p>I wander around the garden looking for borrowed landscape. I realize that a vine-covered gazebo, facing downtown and the meadows, would be very nice by the west border.<\/p>\n<p>Lupinus texensis. Sighting of the first bluebonnet on Mopac at Bee Caves Road. A couple of my bluebonnets have buds.<\/p>\n<p>Tuesday February 9, 1999<br \/>\nContinues unseasonbly warm. Although the high of 84 did not break the record of 87, we are still about 20 degrees above average.<\/p>\n<p>Lupinus texensis. First flower on two different plants in the meadow. It seems strange to have the bluebonnets blooming before the Ice Follies. This is by far the earliest I&#8217;ve ever had bluebonnets bloom.<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 1998<\/h4>\n<p>First flower: Commelinantia anomala (2\/7).<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 1997<\/h4>\n<p>First flower: Tradescantia (2\/9)<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline: 1996<\/h4>\n<p>First flower: Prunus mexicana, the one from Gardens (2\/8), Narcissus &#8216;Ice Follies (2\/8), Leucojum aestivum (2\/11).<\/p>\n<h4>Dateline 1995<\/h4>\n<p>Thursday February 9, 1995<br \/>\nAnother bluebonnet sighted at Mopac South and Bee Cave Rd.<br \/>\nFirst flower on the redbud at 1003 Barton Springs Road<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p><img src=\"http:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/photos\/400\/06week20090211.jpg\" alt=\"Zanthan Gardens Week 6 Narcissus Grand Primo\" \/><br \/><i>2000-02-11. Narcissus tazetta &#8216;Grand Primo&#8217;.<\/i><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[17],"tags":[55,69,196,198,203,220],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/249"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=249"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/249\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":5676,"href":"https:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/249\/revisions\/5676"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=249"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=249"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.zanthan.com\/gardens\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=249"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}