- Apr 19, 2013
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If you've got Texas natives, and they survived our long hot dry summer, they should be fine til spring. At that time, when they start leafing out, you may need to water if we've had a winter drought. Again, keep an eye on your babies. I'm impressed that you planted so many. Good luck!
I hope so. I'm sick and tired of standing around holding a hose for them. I'm hoping next year I can get away with watering deeply every two weeks or less. My 2 acre property is mostly covered in big live oak and I find that very, very boring. No one in my neighborhood--all acreages out in the Hill Country--has anything other than live oak, cedar and occasionally Texas oak and crape myrtle. No color anywhere. I've tried to plant things that will have spring and fall color but are also natives--flame sumac, red buds, Mexican buckeye, bigtooth maple, Mexican plum, Texas ash, cedar elm. Each one of those 100 or so trees and shrubs also has a deer fence around them, too, except for the mountain laurels and oleander. It was a major undertaking to put them in last winter and spring.
I'm going to again plant wild flowers inside the deer fences and use them as a guide for watering. When do I plant wild flowers? Texas bluebonnets? I planted some bluebonnets from seed last year but they were a failure. I think I planted them too late.