Glinda’s
2007 Diary for the Divas of the Dirt
Our diary, posted once a year,
recounts the adventures of the Divas of the Dirt in their Austin, Texas
gardens. If you’ve come here from the
Transplantable Rose garden blog, please note that “Annie in Austin” writes this
diary for the Divas as DivaGlinda and that a different Diva of the Dirt is
named DivaAnnie. Just for fun we all use pen names – even the pets!

It
must be January – the camellias are blooming and the Divas are confused about
the date for the planning meeting.
DivaGlinda
- Did we make an actual date for
our planning meeting?? The great food and fine wine apparently were too much
for me - memory went blank.
DivaMindy – We were all smiling way to
broadly by the end of the day, weren't we? Does next Saturday work for
everyone?? And I think we decided to visit Elsi's new location...I'm hearing
more rain for tomorrow!! Yea!!
DivaKarla – I drove up and down Burnett
looking for it. I now know where it is, unless another move has taken
place. Try not to confuse me…
DivaAnnie - Happy New Year to all! Any
Saturday will work for me, are we thinking about 9 AM? Elsie’s sounds good.
DivaSophia - I just returned
from beautiful downtown Lubbock …I will be able to attend the Sat morning
breakfast-I’m free the WHOLE day!!! See y’all there!
Because
our friend Candy had resigned from the Divas at the Christmas party we had a
spot for a new Diva of the Dirt. Karla had thrown her friend Mattie’s name in
the hat three times since 2002 without luck, then Mattie had moved out of state
for a couple of years. She’d recently returned to Austin so we declared Mattie
our new Diva by acclamation!

Elsi’s
is a great place for huevos rancheros or migas - on a damp January Saturday we
six returning Divas enjoyed a morning of food and conversation with our new
friend. You see eight Divas in the photo because former DivaSugar popped in to
visit. I can’t resist a little local namedropping – at a nearby table we saw
Evan Smith and his family [he’s the editor of Texas Monthly and the host of “Texas Monthly Talks” on local PBS station
KLRU]. After watching us take photos of each other a kind [and very cute] guy
at another table volunteered to take this group portrait. Thanks!
We
set up the schedule, each Diva reaching into the ‘hat’ to draw out the month
she’d hold her 2007 project day.
A few days after our breakfast meeting all of Central
Texas was hit by a major ice storm, breaking branches, bending trees and
turning the leaves into shimmering ice sculptures. After the ice melted and the
weather warmed again, we assessed the damage in our gardens.

FEBRUARY ~DIVA-ANNIE
DivaAnnie - As I had mentioned before, it is
just going to be some general cleaning up of existing beds, mulching, staking
or something for my poor ice ravaged mountain laurel, and maybe creating
another small bed in the front around the other tree if there is time and
desire. So plan on bringing general tools. Right now the weather is
predicting a good weekend with temps in mid 60's, let’s hope that this holds!
DivaGlinda
- Good thing
it wasn't this past weekend! I'm wearing out the 'winter' clothes that I wear
to Illinois in December - thank heavens
for sweat pants. But isn't it nice to have cool nights with cozy quilts? It
will be great to see all of you~
In the previous warm and muggy September of 2006 we’d laid
out a long new front bed for DivaAnnie while a reporter and photographer from
the Austin-American Statesman watched us work [and eat!]. On this beautiful
sunny breezy day we’d be adding another bed to the front – but without an
audience.
DivaAnnie presented a new dish for Mattie’s first
meeting - “Wake Up Egg Cups” in
addition to Waffles with Strawberries, Blueberries and Blackberries…we were six
for breakfast – Sophia wasn’t able to come.
With good weather and a feeling of spring in the air we finished all the proposed tasks – did the usual spring cleanup, worked on the ice-damaged tree and made the new bed, too!

The Durantas grow 5-feet tall each summer in a large bed between the driveways, but the tops die to the ground when the frost comes. They need a lot of cleanup each spring before new growth starts. The hardy Shasta daisies barely lose a leaf in our winters while Rosemaries and Lavenders also stay evergreen.

The Divas pondered the best size and shape for the new
flowerbed, then used the old garden hose trick to define the edges so we could
start getting out the grass.
When we began to dig we were amazed at how mellow and
tillable the ground was. We divided daylilies, penstemon, bulbine and creeping
phlox from the original ‘doughnut’ around the trunk and added them to the
daffodils, lavenders and other plants in the larger bed – there were even extra
plants for passalongs to the other Divas.
This was our major project for the day, but we’d also come
prepared with stakes and cords. The weight of the ice on the evergreen leaves
had tipped DivaAnnie’s Texas Mountain Laurel, partially pulling it out of the
ground.

This was more than a hands-on task – it took shoulders,
dug in feet and hauling on ropes to stand the whole tree upright – then we ran
cords through pieces of garden hose around the trunk, ends firmly tied to
strong stakes so the small native tree could get its roots firmly in the soil
again. Sometimes called Mescal Bean, this tree is not related to the Eastern
mountain laurels, but is botanically Sophora secundiflora.

Another task was the yearly pruning of the Vitex
agnus-castus, sometimes called Chaste Tree or Monk’s Pepper. It produces
long panicles in a lovely lilac color in late spring but can get out of bounds.
The branches had grown so long and low that DivaAnnie could barely walk through
that part of the yard.

Lunch was King Ranch Chicken Casserole, a Green Salad with
Avocados and fresh Pears, and a Martha Stewart cake made with ground oranges
and almonds…DivaAnnie even candied orange peel for this elegant presentation!

In the photo above we’re almost done, but the shadows are long and the garden is still dormant – better come back and take another photo when it’s summer! As we prepared to leave there was a minor glitch - one non-starting car…Buffy & Mindy handled that with ease.
Here’s a follow-up photo of the Texas Mountain Laurel in January 2008…that’s DivaAnnie’s Border collie Chip having fun after swiping a towel and taking it outside. The small tree survived the rescue mission, is bigger and bouncier than ever, and it’s growing upright.

DivaAnnie sent an e-card, thanking us for our help.
Diva-Mattie - Nice
card, Annie. Thanks. Also, thanks to you for all the nice plants starts. They
are all cozy in new pots. I can't wait to get my beds ready to plant them.
Diva-Glinda - Very
cute card, Annie! It was such a picture perfect day, with such a delicious
breakfast and lunch. So we should be thanking you. I hope Mindy & Buffy
didn't have too much trouble getting the battery jumped.
Diva-Mindy - We all should know Divas rule!
…Promise you'll take some pictures when the thalias (not dahlias:) and
daylilies start blooming!!!
A bonnie fine beginning to the 2007 Diva year!! ….Sophia, we hope you are on the speedy mend
and ready to enjoy Karla’s day next month!!!
Bring all of the usual tools - we will be cleaning out beds,
composting, planting and mulching. No new beds this time - a
real first…don't feel I'm letting you off too easy - there is some real clean
up. If you want to bring your 22 rifles, we may have a squirrel party
afterwards (just kidding!) - they are going crazy over here and will dig
up anything that we plant. Glinda, please bring your pole cutter so
that I can get the ligustrum off of the roof of the house.
Looking forward to seeing everyone - enjoy your week!
Unlike her March 2006 project, known forever more as the
“Day of Mud”, Karla’s day in March 2007 was perfect… not too hot at the start,
mild 70’s, sunny.

Karla had enlisted her sister Callie to help serve a
breakfast of Swiss Eggs, French toast with Orange-Apple sauce, huge
strawberries and link sausages. It’s always fun to meet each other’s family!

Many times we do a fairly large garden project– then come back the next year to find that some parts just didn’t work. Sometimes the rescued-and-reused plants do wonderfully well… other times they never take hold and don’t survive.
We tacked the front yard first. We’d been pleased with the general shape of last year’s border project, but there had been plant failures. We weeded, composted and removed an ex-camellia and a Pittosporum that did not make it. A new Pittosporum was installed, along with a containered Texas Redbud given to Karla by Candy the previous fall. I wandered around with the pole pruner, taking off some branches that were touching the roof or endangering windows.

Garden sites frequently refer to the area between street
and sidewalk as the “Hell strip”. We redid Karla’s parkway a couple of years
ago – this time some clean-up and a few more Shastas and lambs ears added to
the Rosemaries and salvias was enough to make it look very “Austin”.

For lunch Karla made us happy by serving the wonderful
Wild rice salad that was such a hit in 2006…the recipe is in the 2006
collection and if Karla wants to make it for us every year - that would
not be a problem! Callie made a super tomato pie and kept us healthy with a big
green salad. Then we finished up with Custard Cookies.
The front was looking good with new
annuals added – lots of Karla’s favorite red and pink impatiens.

Most of the borders we’d made
for Karla near the back patio were doing just great, needing only clipping,
grooming, thinning out of spreading plants and new mulch.

There were plant divisions for
Karla’s friends to take home, including Salvia leucantha and Agapanthus/Lily
of the Nile in addition to plants the other Divas brought to share.
As we left we took one more
admiring look at the entrance garden.

DivaKarla - Thank you for all of hard work
yesterday and for making my yard look so beautiful. It is just perfect,
and with a couple of new plants in the back yard, it will be a garden party
every night!! Of course, if I feel even close to what I am feeling right
now, the party will have to take place in bed - with lots of medication.
I am so sorry if the rest of you feel like I do …. Please tell me it was hard
work and that I am not just wimpy…Glinda, I hope you are not too battered
feeling this morning from your fall …all of the transplants were perked up this
morning, looking as if they had been there forever. Annie, please send me
the name again of the plants you brought… you know I have to see things in
writing! Even the oxalis looked perky and happy!!
Again, thank you all so much. I will work very hard to
keep it the way it looks right now (New Year's resolution).
DivaMindy - Well,
as a matter of fact Karla, I was sore as heck & looking for the license
plate number of the truck that hit me, but after a handful of ibuprofen and
that trail walk a lot of my soreness is gone. Buffy & I were thrilled
to get to see the collegiate women's rowing teams on town lake for the
spring regatta---there were teams from Duke, University of Miami, Stanford and
of course UT!! Hook em!!
DivaAnnie - Karla and the rest of the
divas, I'm so glad to know that I too was not hit by a truck yesterday.
Yes, yes, I'll say it aloud I too am a WIMP!! …just means need to work harder
to get back into gardening shape….it was a wonderful day. All the food
was simply delicious (my compliments to the chef!) The plants were: Grecian
pattern plant and salvia guaranitica. Great start to the spring gardening
season
DivaMattie - I had a great time as well
and learned a lot. Karla, the food was delicious. I went to The Natural
Gardener today and looked at all your suggestions and liked them all. I can't
wait to get started on my backyard.
Thanks for all the plants. There were lamb's ears, cannas, Shasta daisies,
oxalis and what else? There are two I can't identify. I look forward to
planting a divas garden when the construction is over. Have a great month.
DivaGlinda - The
arm was just a scrape, looks better already; my aging joints needed
Ibuprofen last night, too, even though I was mostly pruning while you guys were
digging and dragging bags of compost around. Meeting your sister was great…one
major resemblance- you're both wonderful cooks!
An
excited note came a few days later from Mindy - I was trying to take a pic of
my pomegranate "twigs" … a male hummingbird tried to steal center
stage!!! You can see the fan of his tail in frame #4! Enjoy this perfectly
gorgeous Spring day!!!

DivaMindy: Saturday--we should be needing only the basics everyone
usually brings. No new beds this year, in fact, we shall be painfully visiting
the bane of my yard’s existence--the bermuda patch in my front garden (wailing
& gnashing of teeth:( Buffy, I still look forward to your suggestions on
rearranging some existing beds), then if time is left, top dressing, mulching
all existing beds. Everything is beautifully green and shooting up at
break neck speed. I think we have had sufficient rains to keep what soil
I have soft…oh, yeah, I do have a Chinese Pistache that I need help placing and
a Curly Willow that may have been a mistake purchase, but I will have to think
about that Saturday. I know for certain we will have pristine weather
(thank you weather gods)…

It was a good thing that Mindy sweetened us first with a
big fruit salad, Eggs Faux-Benedict, Potatoes with red onions and plenty of
coffee, because once we started working outside we knew we were in the Hill
Country. Mindy’s big front garden is a sort of meadow with grasses, cactus,
yucca, crepe myrtles and a few non-deerproof plants hidden among the less
palatable Copper Canyon daisies, Salvia greggii and Salvia leucantha.

The Bermuda grass was awful, but as we moved around in the
space, digging and moving rocks we had interesting close encounters with Mother
Nature - she surprised us with scorpions, fire ants, small snakes and most
exciting of all, a nest of infant walking sticks. They were adorable but tiny,
fast moving and hard to photograph – can you see the vague outline in the
center of the photo below?

Karla declared that we should install a Webcam on this
garden – so we could call Mindy and send her out whenever any Bermuda grass
showed up via our monitors.
Lunch was a delicious Mexican Chicken Casserole and salad
with greens and mandarin oranges. Dessert – banana split cake – yum.
Although we never got around to putting in the Chinese
Pistache [and Mindy had no idea where we should plant it!] we did get
some of Mindy’s many plant purchases into their allotted spaces.

We also did some revamping and replanting in the two front
entrance beds down near the entrance gates and admired the gardens of native
and butterfly plants that we’d made last year for the greenhouse and along the
side fence.

DivaMindy -
Well SCHZAAM!!! Dearest Divas!
I know my garden date will be
the most talked about for awhile to come (and not for all the right reasons);
needless to say I owe all of you an eternal debt of gratitude for miraculous
work in the "Bermuda Triangle".

DivaKarla - Mindy, I forgot to get a catalog
from you for the gardening company that had the plastic tubs/baskets. I must
have been rushing out before another clump of bermuda grabbed me by the
ankle!! Could you please send me the website?
PS Hate to be the first to mention it,
but I checked the webcam this morning and thought I saw a piece of bermuda
peeking out. I'll check later to make sure it is gone!!!!
DivaMindy - Warren & I stopped by
Natural Gardener Sunday afternoon …Picked up 2 gallons of vinegar & more
Liquid Deer fence...haven't applied it yet since the weather has been misting
or outright raining since Saturday…when the weather clears, I will be spraying
the cleared areas w/ vinegar, laying down paper and mulch (photos will
follow--or you can catch on your webcams!!). Oh, I planted one of the window
boxes, relocated the 3 Russian Sages to the triangle, and stuck the last
germander in the front bed. How are the shared salvias & lilies
doing? Lastly, here is the website for the colorful trugs ya'll were asking
for... http://www.gardeners.com/Colorful-Garden-Tub
With sincerest humility & humblest gratitude…Mindy
DivaGlinda: Mindy, maybe we should just
change the name from the Bermuda Triangle to the Bermuda Triathlon! You know
how those sporting events go.... if you live through the experience, you have a
sense of triumph, LOL. Many thanks for the Passalong plants which are okay so
far. I'm glad you put the Perovskia in the triangle - they should look
spectacular and add some texture. The deer never ate that one anyway – good
luck with the Liquid Fence.
DivaAnnie: I'm glad we didn't lose anyone in
that Bermuda Triangle, did we? everyone is well and accounted for, right? Well
maybe not completely well as it was certainly a marathon grass pulling session.
Hopefully, the vinegar will help keep it at bay and that the bed can become the
beautiful entry area that was once envisioned. Mindy, the day was wonderful and
the food DELICIOUS! I too want the chicken recipe… YUM!

It’s always a pleasure to go to Buffy’s house and sit
around the table in her beautiful dining room. Here’s a close-up of those
splendid flowers-

As always Buffy served us a feast: omelets, hash browns,
cinnamon rolls and sausage.

When Buffy drew a month in early spring she’s had us groom
and tidy her lovely garden, but this year she had a new project in mind-
turning her Hell Strip into a Heaven Strip.
It can be a pain to grow grass in these narrow strips of parkway when
they’re in full sun – keeping the water from going in the street is almost
impossible. Buffy wanted some waterwise beauties instead of the non-thriving
grass.

She also asked us to rework the nearby Grove Bed
surrounding and connecting the front trees. Each year we do more tweaking on this
big area, which we first changed from grass to flowerbed back in 2002. It’s
become more interesting every year. It was warm as we worked on both of these
front beds.

After a restoring lunch of Chicken salad, green bean salad
and potato salad, with an Almond Bundt Cake for dessert, the hell strip was no
longer in existence – replaced by a curbside garden. More lambs ears were added
a couple of days later.

And the interior of the Grove Bed was once again a
complement to Buffy’s lovely house.

On the covered porch Libby supervised the Divas from a
comfortable and picturesque bench. Everything at Buffy’s house is comfortable
and picturesque!

We marveled at the back garden and noticed that the
‘Mermaid’ Rose and the Loquat were engaged in their perennial battle over
territory.

But who could oust either one of them? Loquat provides
shade, fragrant flowers and sometimes fruit, and Mermaid is so beautiful she
must be forgiven.

Buffy’s email wasn’t working – so no funny after-workday notes
this time!
I had to attach a few shots of our storm damage from Sunday
nite…we worked like Trojans all day Sunday on the property--it looked like a
park until the 70 mile/hr winds hit!!

Nothin' compared to the damage we've seen hurricanes do, but
our little mess has kept us busy since Sunday.
I guess there is an UP side to every adversity--my bedding plants will
be getting a little more sun, and I knew they were wanting it. And I think I
now have a free and clear space to plant my Chinese Pistache!!! Mattie, we will
see you Saturday!! Diva Mindy

Hey Mindy - that storm dumped half a tree right on the entrance garden – we just finished redoing that bed!
DivaMattie - I am looking forward to having
you over on Saturday. The plan is still evolving and I am hunting a few more
bushes. We will be extending a bed in the front considerably so pray for few
rocks. It looks like it will be nice but hot. If you dare, bring your bathing
suits. Karla and I will jump in after it is over and I will commit that it will
be by 4:00. I think it is good to set a time limit. Breakfast is at 8:30.
Attached is a map to my house …Call if you need directions…See you soon.
It’s always fun to see a new Diva’s garden for the first time
– but I was out of state and missed Mattie’s first turn as hostess and project
planner. The photos and descriptions from those who were there show that
everyone had a great time and got a lot done, in spite of the hot June weather.
Mindy took these great photos – I hope she brings that camera along for our
2008 meetings, too!

Everyone admired the exotic orchids in the dining
room - at least a dozen colorful wands
were in bloom that morning
Mattie pleased her worker bees with an elegantly set table,
ready for a breakfast of fruit salad, frittatas, slices of creamy avocado and
croissants – no wonder the Divas have such big smiles in this photo!
Karla was quite thrilled with her new garden bench but
knew there would be little opportunity for sitting once the workday began.

This front border was too narrow and tight up against the
house – in the photo below, Buffy and Mattie consider how just expansive the
new bed should be – containers of plants await their new location.

The Divas outlined the new edge of the expanded border,
marking it with the garden hose below. Next comes the tedious but necessary
turf removal part of the workday.

Tilling and composting isn’t glamorous, but adding in
those amendments seems to make a big difference in the way the plants grow.
While those blue garden claws aren’t useful for the actual digging of new beds
– sturdy garden forks and spades are needed then – the stand-up-claws come in
handy for mixing the various composts in with the soil.

As usual, Buffy’s expertise with stones means she’s stuck
with the job….maybe ‘stuck’ isn’t the right word, let’s just be thankful that
Buffy is very talented with stone and rock! She has the right combination –
natural strength, a precise eye, and the fortitude to back up, dismantle and
start over to make the line flow from the beginning. Maybe she should run for
office! We could use those qualities in government, too.

Time for a break and some lunch – including what DivaAnnie
described as a HUGE Salad Nicoise, French bread, and a Key Lime pie with
Raspberry Sorbet. Don’t get too comfortable on that sofa – you have to finish
the job! Karla took this photo of Sophia, Annie, Mindy, Buffy and Mattie
relaxing.

Some of the plants used in the new bed were a ‘Spring
Bouquet’ Viburnum, lantanas and a small crepe myrtle, as well as filler plants
that Mattie had been collecting. A good layer of mulch finishes off the bed -
Mattie’s was happy with the results.

DivaMattie: Dear Divas, my front
bed looks wonderful… the results far exceeded my expectations. You have really
inspired me to do more with the front of the house and I plan to get additional
plants tomorrow. After you left and Karla and I went swimming, my neighbors
came over and raved about the nice job you had done.
The opportunity to join The Divas has been a real delight for
me. Thank you for your knowledge, companionship and hard work. I hope we can
get together in the next couple of months. If not, enjoy your summer and see
you in September!
DivaSophia: WOWW!
You have achieved so much in such a short time. How do you find the time to get so much accomplished? The pool is
simply beautiful! If I had it I’d be there every day…swimming and lounging
while sipping an adult beverage. Thank you for the wonderful hospitality on
your diva day! The delicious food was very healthy and filling. How is our new
photographer faring?
I hope the new front bed is working out. Have you added anything new? You should come
over and get some shade plants from my front yard jungle! Hope everyone has a
good weekend!
DivaAnnie: Yes, it was a wonderful Diva
Day….a wonderful transformation! Hopefully, we can all get together sometime
before September!
DivaMindy: Mattie, it was a wonderful first planting…thank you for the
wonderful breakfast and refreshing lunch. Your previous pictures of the
back yard are full testimony of the hard work you have put into your pool and
surrounding plantings.
…Back to another coat of primer in the bedroom before the color goes on. Hope
everyone got some of the showers--we have 2.5 inches in the rain gauge.
The
Divas don’t schedule any projects in the hottest months of July and August but
we occasionally get together – thanks to Mindy this July we met at a Southern
Living seminar on outdoor entertaining at the Smith & Hawken store in North
Austin. The seminar was fine and after making some fun purchases we took a
photo with manager Zach before heading out to a new restaurant. Here are Zack,
Mindy, Glinda, Mattie, Karla, Annie and Buffy - we had fun but missed
Sophia.

I stopped at
DivaAnnie’s house for an in-progress photo of her front cottage garden, showing
the relationship between the original bed and the new one at right. Look at the
Senna tree in the center – it’s really grown since we worked on that front bed
in February!

In August we were
invited to meet some gardeners to the Northwest of Austin.
There is a yahoo group called the Central-Texas-Plant-Exchange
…a few of us are meeting tomorrow …and I’d love to invite you to talk about
Divas, how you started, pitfalls you encountered, and anything else that could
be of benefit to us. We’d make sure you were well-fed and not too bombarded
with questions, I promise!
Mindy and I went to meet them – what a hospitable group,
and what lovely food they served! Their group occasionally holds large-scale
plant exchanges with many people participating. This is a great way for
gardeners to meet each other -we wish them well with their projects and the
friendships started through this members-only
online community.
One of the items discussed when we met at the seminar was
our need for a new way to choose the months for our project dates. In theory,
pulling the name of a month from a hat should give us a range of months. For
some of us the luck of the draw worked well, but Karla’s pattern had been July,
April, March, April, March, March – kind of boring for her! Buffy hadn’t had a
fall month in years and several Divas needed to know about schedules in
advance, rather than wait until January each year. We decided to give a
rotating schedule a try in 2008. Karla offered to make up spreadsheets
displaying schedules with different intervals for us to consider. Thank you, Karla!
SEPTEMBER ~ SOPHIA
DivaSophia - I’m hoping we can
spruce up the front yard, nip and tuck I guess…okay okay-lots of nipping and
lots of tucking!!
I don’t have any new plants to plant, just some overgrown ones that
need to come out and maybe moved around and/or shared. There is a ton of giant
ruellia and Katy ruellia and the Vinca has taken over! With all the trees in the front yard, the
leaves are already scattered around. I
was thinking about a small raised bed between the driveway and the road…but
we’ll just have to see what evolves.

Sophia had lots of wonderful fruit for us - watermelon,
honeydew melon and grapes for dipping into creamy yogurt. She’d supplied plenty
of scrambled eggs, sausages and scones for breakfast and really good coffee.

When we looked at the front garden we could see why Sophia
referred to it as her “jungle”. The rumor was that a path once ran across that
front garden! Asiatic jasmine and Vinca major are takeover plants and some of
them had to go. Other plants needed to be relocated within the front garden
since the areas of sun and shade have changed since this garden was begun. A
group of ferns could be a nice feature in the right place.

The plants in the front corner were overgrown and some
Copper Canyon daisies no longer bloomed as the shade had deepened.

It was a rather warm September day, but our group all
showed up to rescue Sophia’s garden.
We slogged along, digging and pulling plants that were
trying to choke each other –having lively conversations and deciding which
plants looked better in which places. Sophia had shared divisions of a
wonderful purple iris in March 2006 – this time I shared early white iris for
an area near the sidewalk.
Sophia called us in for lunch – first with tortilla chips
and dips as football played on TV, then charming us with an Italian deli meal.
But Tedster and Woody have to make do with doggy treats no matter how endearing
their pleas through the patio door.

We feasted on prosciutto, Italian cheeses from Central
Market, olives, raw vegetables, dips and great bread.
Then came the incredible, totally handmade filled and
layered dark, dense chocolate cake made by Sophia’s son Mark – it was heavenly!
We were pleased with the way the garden was coming along
and there were lots of passalong plants stacking up in the shade.

Sophia was right – there was a path running across
the front from the porch entrance to a pretty bench on the far side of the
garden. Now that path could be walked on again and iris in the sun and ferns in
the shade may do well once they’ve caught hold.

The corner bed holds a reduced-but-still-large group of
Inland Sea Oats, gracefully arching over blue Plumbago, silver foliage plants
and some plants with purple leaves. More Setcresia/Purple Heart and purple
oxalis appear in other places near the drive and walk adding unity to the
garden. The main shade comes from Cedar Elm trees – deciduous natives that are
leafless in winter. They weren’t blooming in September, but the ‘Mutabilis’
roses near the front sidewalk put on quite a show last spring before the elm
leaves expanded. Buddleja lindleyana, a species of weeping butterfly
bush, has made a small thicket at the right side of the garden with long
fragrant flowers suspended from the branch tips in late summer to fall.

Now the fern bed looks cool and inviting – and ferns in
the ground joined with ferns in the hanging baskets also give a sense of unity
to the front garden.

The keepsake ornaments we’d previously ordered from Keep Texas Beautiful had arrived – this
2007 tribute to Lady Bird Johnson was especially lovely.
DivaSophia - Thank you! Thank
you! Another extreme makeover!!
You all worked so hard yesterday and the results are amazing! No longer
do I have the jungles of the Amazon in my front yard! …The neighbors who worked outside next door yesterday came over
last night and commented on how great everything looks and mentioned that you
all were a humorous group of women. They must have heard some conversations!
…Have a great week-
DivaAnnie: Just saw the before and after
photos, and it was an amazing transformation, didn't at first think that we did
all that much, but it really looks good thinned out and with the ferns up front
and center. Enjoy your yard and next weekend with your family. Did you tell
Mark how MUCH we enjoyed his cake, we were all scraping our plates.
DivaGlinda: It was
exhausting but fun, Sophia - and looking at the B4/After photos is quite
satisfying! We didn't believe you at first when you said there was a path
running from sidewalk to bench. Mark rules! Last year's Pizzelle were
wonderful, but he surpassed that dessert with this year's Chocolate Cake.
My turn was coming up soon, and I had something special to
pass along to the Divas. One of the Austin Garden Bloggers offered us a chance
to be part of her plan to share an especially beautiful plant with other Austin
gardeners.

DivaGlinda - Have any of you seen the red
Schoolhouse lilies that were in bloom in older parts of town in the past month?
They're also called Oxblood lilies and the botanical name is Rhodophiala
bifida. They're pretty easy to grow, part sun or light shade, occasional
watering and were tough enough to go through both the droughts of the last few
years and the floods of this summer…. MSS who has the Zanthan Gardens blog divided a large established
group from her garden and she offered to share some of hers with the Divas.
MSinclairStevens has passed some of these bulbs along to
Austin gardeners, hoping the restore the Oxblood Lily’s traditional role as a
symbol of Austin. As
you can imagine – this offer was accepted with many thanks – it will be fun to
see them bloom in Diva gardens next September.
DivaGlinda - Hello Divas, Our last project
of 2007 is set for my house this Saturday. The weather looks sunny and not
terribly hot, thank heavens. The project will be in back - expanding and
reworking this border.

The photo is from a few months ago - Ozz & I
already moved that Abelia [at lower left] to the front …we'll need to
start with one of our favorite activities - removing grass. It's just an
18" strip so it shouldn't be that bad! We'll amend the clay and do some
transplanting of perennials, etc. … with the days becoming shorter
[sunrise about 7:30 AM now] - would an 8:30 AM start make more sense?
DivaMindy - 8:30 will be my choice for
start time also…Warren & I are going to sit out on the deck this evening
& enjoy this cool change of temperatures--see everyone in the morning:)
DivaKarla - 8:30 sounds great as long as we
don't have to eat less just to get outside in time!!!! I will enjoy the extra 30 minutes of sleep.
Looking forward to seeing everyone!
After everyone arrived we had breakfast tacos with
potatoes, eggs and chorizo sausage. The fillings were ready and thanks to Ozz
who drove to our nearby Taco
Cabana the tortillas were fresh and warm. We also had fruit salad and a
loaf of Pecan bread. Nut bread in itself may not be unusual, but this was made
with pecans from our own trees – the first time they’d produced a harvest since
we’d moved here.
