Texas

I moved to Dallas in January 1979 and went straight into a job as greenhouse grower and moved up to management before getting into retail nursery and landscaping in 85. We Purchased this place in December two years ago but Actually didn’t got moved out of Dallas until a year ago about now and closed on that house next week 1 yr anniversary. Had chickens from the get go after the purchase here. In Dallas I would be looking at geraniums and alyssum for my pots about now. Knowing that the night heat especially would get the better of them by June at latest. Out here plant them in April and they last until frozen in late or not so late October. Cool summer nights up here. I do miss some of the temperate nights in early spring out there though. Here it is guaranteed 20s-low30s from December to March. and still the biggest Minnesota type mosquitoes out here in August after we begin to catch monsoonal moisture flow with New Mexico. Absolutely incredible sunsets almost nightly out my front door! I can see for miles and miles any direction. My forest is planted and around the house for my enjoyment and the birds we get that stay for nesting or migrate thru. Hoards of monarchs also pit stop here for water and the Arizona cypress trees windbreak. Literally thousands of butterflies both ends of the migration. Hummingbirds too. I haven’t figured out yet how to nectar feed the monarchs yet on their migration to Canada passing thru here in April !.View attachment 2030512
Hi @Aggiedusty ! Im from Deep South Tx! I also plant lots of milkweed and raise monarchs for educational purposes. If you are looking for seeds check out the fb group Monarchs and milkweeds Houston Network they are always sharing all kinds of mw and nectar seeds.
 
Hi @Aggiedusty ! Im from Deep South Tx! I also plant lots of milkweed and raise monarchs for educational purposes. If you are looking for seeds check out the fb group Monarchs and milkweeds Houston Network they are always sharing all kinds of mw and nectar seeds.
Okay! That’s great news! We have a native milkweed up here that has a huge round leaf and nice size flower cluster that is green. Our mother , a school teacher for life, taught us very early on to leave the milkweeds alone in the pastures and told us of their importance to the monarchs survival as a larval and nectar source as they migrated back south from Canada. I don’t think she knew that we with pastures and milk weeds were helping to create that last super group of monarchs that must make it to Mexico to over winter. Most people are unaware that , no stage of the monarchs life cycle, whether it be the egg, larvae, pupae, or adult butterfly is hardy to a freeze and will not survive one. Thus the need for the mass migration. There is nothing like a beautiful perennial garden full of butterflies and honey bees bringing the garden into motion and even more full of life. I really do want to plant massive amounts of different milkweeds. I think up here In our drier climate Asclepia tuberosa would thrive and perennialize . In Dallas there was to much rain and soggy clay for it. I have beds that I’ve begun planting with perennials and that I water that Asclepius incarnata would thrive. They don’t kneed that much moisture. I’ve also saved a few seeds from the native one up here.
 
I miss 'snap dragons' in Baba's (my Gramma who passed last fall @103) garden up in Michigan growing up.......

This current flowering thread tangent is wonderful. Thanks for the stories & the jaunt down memory lane!
I am very sorry to learn of your Babba’s passing. I can tell you had a special connection and you still do. I believe she is here through you. My grandmother passed at 100 yrs and 3 days. She was mentor and I miss her daily but my memories with her are so full of love, caring, and life that they bring to me that really warm deeply loved feeling into my heart. She makes me smile each day and sometimes with a tear of longing.
 
Look for your local Master gardeners club as well your agricultural extension officer in the county office can probably point you there.
I often taught seminars to the Dallas Master Gardeners and went through the process of getting my classes accredited for them for their needed points. The closest possible master garden group would be in Lubbock 90 miles to the east south east. I did try our extension agency but they are here almost at the readiness for the huge farming community and their needs, cotton, corn, milo, sunflowers and such. Nice though and did get fruit tree handouts and pecan variety handouts. It’s so rural out here most people can’t fathom what it’s like.
 
Okay! That’s great news! We have a native milkweed up here that has a huge round leaf and nice size flower cluster that is green. Our mother , a school teacher for life, taught us very early on to leave the milkweeds alone in the pastures and told us of their importance to the monarchs survival as a larval and nectar source as they migrated back south from Canada. I don’t think she knew that we with pastures and milk weeds were helping to create that last super group of monarchs that must make it to Mexico to over winter. Most people are unaware that , no stage of the monarchs life cycle, whether it be the egg, larvae, pupae, or adult butterfly is hardy to a freeze and will not survive one. Thus the need for the mass migration. There is nothing like a beautiful perennial garden full of butterflies and honey bees bringing the garden into motion and even more full of life. I really do want to plant massive amounts of different milkweeds. I think up here In our drier climate Asclepia tuberosa would thrive and perennialize . In Dallas there was to much rain and soggy clay for it. I have beds that I’ve begun planting with perennials and that I water that Asclepius incarnata would thrive. They don’t kneed that much moisture. I’ve also saved a few seeds from the native one up here.
If you're dry most of the year then you might want to look at the xithothies species as well some of the staghorn milkweed and it definitely makes those compact clusters of greenish white fragrant flowers. Keep an eye on the ones that are flowering and seed heads are drying so you can go ahead and propagate your own seed more efficiently than mother nature.
 
If you're dry most of the year then you might want to look at the xithothies species as well some of the staghorn milkweed and it definitely makes those compact clusters of greenish white fragrant flowers. Keep an eye on the ones that are flowering and seed heads are drying so you can go ahead and propagate your own seed more efficiently than mother nature.
Just got in from first round with the hens. Made a nest box from a child’s book shelf yesterday and got it put into their house late. Yes there were nice hollowed out places in the coastal nesting sand thus far all blue eggs in the different nests levels. Don’t we just love a little success . Can’t wait to look up the Xithotheis group! Yes we are dry prairie with native prairie zinnias and verbena and black foot daisys that everyone wants in the metroplex but it rains Way too much. And then there’s those sprinkler systems running unchecked.
 
I have rose bushes that I rooted just out of college that came from my grandmother’s polyantha rose bush from her garden in Lunbock . I had never known conscious life without that rose bush being a part of my life. Even as a child unaware of the connection of seasons to plants and their blooming, I would run out to the backyard to see that bush before saying hello to everyone. My grandmother’s oldest sister worked at a Florist’s shop in Amarillo and so when mother was born in 1931 she came to Lubbock to help grandmother and brought her a rose from the shop. Yes it was planted and grew and bloomed and became part of my family history that I kept with me to this day. Yep it (they) made it to Bailey county on the New Mexico border. I had rooted several to move with me amongst others. I also from that nostalgia and passion developed a seminar that I taught through out Dallas called Antique Roses for the Dallas Area. I am a tree planting fanatic too. Roses and English Gardening Texas Style were my claim to a short period of fame in the metroplex.
Sad to report we had to kull almost all the roses my Better-half planted when we moved out here in 2011..... Rose fungus.
We have a tone of rosemary now though.

Next year we are supposed to be able to start up with some "new to us" roses *NOT from any nursey! We have also noticed when we discovered the fungus that every nursery around us had fungus amungus all year long.

Would love to learn move of y'all's wisdom as the seasons fade thru the years.....
 
I would tell people I’m my classes that they may not be aware but something in your garden may click with someone you love. And in some moment that loved one will experience a site or smell or yes even a taste and all your love and joy will come right back to them in that moment and you will be there bonded with them in memory and spirit. The smell of daffodils and irises are two scents that bring my grandmother back every time for me. She belonged to. Garden Club in Lubbock and flowers were one of those things we shared as a passion from early on. No Thank you, Monk. I was having a really hard time with my grief, missing my departed spouse, this morning. Having this group to just visit with and share pieces of life with means a lot.
🤗 I appreciate the thanks, let's just let it be a two way street regarding 'memory lane' for those who have passed.

And... Oh, oh, Mr. kotter, Mr. kotter - that "nano-second memory from a plant" is such a wonderful thing to keep around.
My parents (Mom & name father"Dad") had a few specific plants that they grew so we'll that I plan to cultivate over the next year as I build our greenhouse /gotta get that wellhouse done 1st so the greenhouse can be added as an extension.
Difanbachia(sp?)-Mom, spider plants(Mom & Gramma Billie), Tomatoes(Dad), Jade & Blue spruce(Mom & Dad), .... Mom had the really neat "tree" that was like a cross between a Fern and a pine tree in a large 4-5gal pot for over a decade. She had it for several decades - lost access to it (among so much other stuff/memories)thanks to a nasty ex-step-dad. Baba had Roses that grew every year in Michigan for 30+ years they might still be growing but, I don't know. They also had the beautiful Magnolia tree that my brother & I grew up climbing in.... It's still there and likely 45+ft tall now. Would like to plant one here(bonus is my Better-half love them too)...... And the new one to my list: Gaberra Daisies are "Her favorite" and i'come to really enjoy them too now.

Ahhhh .... (Sniffs) now, I'm feeling a bit blue.
 
I think you said a greenhouse was on your bucket list a while back. Here’s mine completed in February just in time for the move.
Ohhhh man @Aggiedusty when you have spare time. I'd really like to get detailed pics of it and maybe even plans pictures? I'd love to transmogrify that into a blend with the planned wellhouse.....
 

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