A study in the plants and animals native to, and growing in the Edwards Plateau of the Texas Hill Country. ~ All rights reserved on artwork and photography on this site.

Monday, April 30, 2012

Wren Nestlings

Today I'm featuring a feathered native, the Carolina Wren.  This bird is a year round resident in the eastern two thirds of Texas and much of the Eastern US and Eastern Mexico.  On April 7th my husband, Michael,  heard something hit the garage door window and on inspection found this mother wren stunned on the ground outside the garage.  He scooped her up and put her on our back deck rail. With some drops of water she began to revive, but sat still enough for a few minutes to give me the opportunity to take these close-up shots.  Within the next couple of weeks, the wren built a nest in a nest box outside our garage, laid four eggs, incubated, and hatched out four tiny wren chicks, and then fed them till they fledged and left the nest. The whole process took place all in the month of April more or less.  Incubation time for these birds is 12 to 14 days and is only done by the female.  Now there are at least three new eggs in the nest ready for round two.

Mother Wren

Mother Wren
Wren nest with eggs -white with brown speckles

Newly hatched baby Wrens
Notice how many different materials are used to build this nest, from cedar bark to cedar and oak leaves, than layers of feathers from the wren and other birds and even bits of plastic or paper. 
"Feed me, feed me"

Older Wren chicks before fledging 

Wrens are known to build several nests at the same time to act as decoys for predators.  This mother built one of her nests in my bicycle helmet that was hanging on my bike in the garage.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Late April Wildflowers and Butterflies

Here is what's out there today, still blooming in the hot and dryer late April Hill Country landscape. Because of our mild winter and earlier spring rains, we still have quite a few wildflowers and lots and lots of butterflies.  Butterflies are everywhere it seems, but especially on and around wildflowers.  Butterflies usually only lay their eggs on one type of plant- the type that will provide food for their larvae the catiperllars.

Indian Blanket Painting

This painting of an Indian Blankets flower and bud is done on a 6 inch ceramic tile.  I love the way the phyllaries (green pointy "leaves")  on the bud curve and clasp around the flower before it opens. The brilliant red and yellow contrasting each other on the ray flowers makes this composite stand out from the rest.  Look in the photos below for the Indian blanket flower that has no red on it.

"Indian Blanket" 6 inch, underglaze on ceramic tile

Late April Wildflower Sampler:

Hairy Wadellia Flower with Red Admiral Butterfly
Venus Looking Glass
 The Prickly Pear Cactus are starting to bloom.  In this first photo notice the small green fleshy structures scattered over the green pad.  These are the true leaves and will soon fall off, while the pads are actually modified stems.  The flowers are  often clear yellow colored with delicate tissue-like petals. Pale orange flowers or yellow with orange streaks are also found.


Prickly Pear Cactus




Prickly Pear Cactus
Prickly Pear Cactus




Bluebonnet seed pods
Coreopsis, Golden-wave
Prairie bishop
Texas Skeletonplant
Purple Horsemint, Lemon Beebalm



Indian Blanket, unusual white and yellow form





Englemann's Salvia





Shrubby Boneset with white moth





Mexican Hat

Dewberry fruit





Prairie Brazoria


Prairie Brazoria
Blackeyed Susan, Browneyed Susan


Yellow Stonecrop - a succulent type plant that
grows very low often seemingly right on flat
rock surfaces




Shrubby Boneset with Monarch Butterfly

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Spring Wildflowers Watercolor

April has flown by so fast and with so many changes in the wildflower picture that I thought for today I would post some flowers that were started blooming a couple of weeks ago.  Some of these are still hanging on in some places and some have already gone to seed.  But first here is a watercolor I painted a number of years ago of some of my favorite spring wildflowers.  Many appear in April. Some a bit earlier.

Tomorrow I'll post some flowers I'm seeing now in late April.

Wildflower Painting


Wildflowers, 9 x 21 inch watercolor

The flowers in this painting are (from top to bottom and left to right):
Prairie Paintbrush, Gilia, Cedar Sage,  Stemless Evening Primrose,
Baby Blue-eyes, Indian Blanket, Bluebonnet, Winecup, Golden-eye Phlox

Early April Wildflower Photos

Bluebonnets and Cloth of Gold
 (Lesquerella gracilis; Mustard Family)

Cedar Sage (this one likes 
to grow 
under Cedar trees)


Green Thread









Wild Foxglove

Wild Foxglove


Sensitive Briar- a low growing
 plant whose leaves fold
up when touched

Blue Gilia
Damianita - this showy plant makes 
mounds of golden color in and fall.  
It is great for native gardening and 
the leaves have a pleasingly aromatic 
smell when touched.
Indian Blanket





Monarch Butterfly Caterpillars  
on Milkweed

White Barbara's Buttons








Englemans Daisy


Pink Evening Primrose





Thursday, April 19, 2012

Wildseed Farms, Fredericksburg

Last weekend we went to Fredericksburg to celebrate my daughter's birthday.  On the drive from Austin on HWY 290 we stopped at Wildseed Farms, 7 miles east of downtown Fredericksburg.  We were delighted to find it having it's best spring blooming season that I've ever seen.  Wildseed Farms is the largest working wildflower seed production farm in the US and a big tourist destination (Yup, even bus-loads of flower-lovers come here).  The display gardens, trial plots and flower fields are stunning this year.  If the photos below of the red corn flowers look like their glowing, it's because they actually look that brilliant in person.  We also enjoyed the outdoor seating area surrounded by show gardens and the nursery, while eating tasty frozen snacks.  The homemade soft serve peach ice-cream is a must.  And yes there is a gift shop, actually three, that sell more than just the wildflower seeds.


Entrance to Meadow


Field of Red Corn Flowers


Red Corn Flower

Red Corn Poppies
Butterfly on Bluebonnet
Passion Flower in the butterfly garden

Butterfly Garden



California Poppies
Display Garden with stream and Water Lilies

Corn Poppy color variations
Autumn Sages



Scarlet Flax

Baby's Breath
Desert Verbena


Bachelor Buttons

Living Easy Rose
Rocket Larkspur
Rocket Larkspur
Iceland Poppies



Iceland Poppy


Color variations of Bluebonnets including
the maroon  Alamo Bluebonnet

Salvia, Blue Victoria

Claret Cup Cactus
Garden and plant nursery around outdoor dinning area


Pottery Yard
Pink Evening Primrose