Monday, May 26, 2014

Walking between the raindrops

We were dragging and up late. But we had a chance to walk before the next wave of storms and we took it.

The sun broke through the cottony cloud-cover off and on. The earlier shower cannot have been too hard as dry sections of street and sidewalk gave witness to rain that did not break through the trees. Still, too wet to mow, the grass in our yard mocked me.

Few cars passed and many neighbors were still abed (the papers were still wrapped in plastic, abandoned in the yard, waiting for rescue before stray dogs have their way).

We made it to the park and found so many things blooming or budding. Of course, I had allowed my camera battery to run down so I was forced to borrow DH's phone.

I missed the raindrop hanging at the edge of the leatherflower bloom.

I ignored the dark green globes of immature chinaberries (They "deserve no such attention."*).

Here's some of what we saw:

Leatherflower buds, tiny hot-air balloon shapes amid greens of the woods.

The drop had dropped, but this bloom was still bright in the sunshine. Finding these in our park woods has been such a treat.

Tiny pecans just starting to form (center of photo).

 NOTES:

* Borrowed from Lady Catherine de Bourgh, Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austin

Texas Vietnam Memorial

Flag flying at the local cemetery
DH and I watched the Texas Country Reporter story on the new Vietnam Memorial at the Texas Capitol.* I suppose, in many ways, it was our first war. I protested it and he has his own story.

We talked about going to Austin tomorrow, but other commitments intervened. Still, there are reasons it is there and I need to write.

Today I walked round the courthouse. A friend said the Confederate War Memorial included all the names of soldiers from our county who served (which proved not to be the case.).


Civil War Memorial, Courthouse square
 There was the WWII Memorial with all the names of the soldiers who were mobilized at Belton to serve in Company I, 143rd Infantry.

WWII Memorial, Courthouse square
 And there is a memorial for veterans of "All Wars."

All War Memorial, Courthouse square
In Gratitude to God and in Love of Freedom, This Monument is Dedicated in this our 200th year of Independence to all Bell County Veterans of All Wars, For their Patriotic Service and Sacrifice in the Defense and Protection of Our Nation.
But, recognition of veterans of Vietnam has been long in coming everywhere.

The memorial in Washington D.C.** is amazing and moving...and controversial still. I saw it in 2008 and will need to go back another time.

So, I thought you might want to know about this new memorial*** in Austin, on the grounds of our state house. There is also a traveling exhibition of dog tags called the 3417 Project**** (dog tags of every Texas casualty). It too is worth seeing.

Some wounds are long in healing. Some wounds never heal. But we have to try.


NOTES:

* http://texascountryreporter.com/episodeitems/may-17-18-2014

** http://www.nps.gov/vive/index.htm

*** http://tcvvm.org/

**** http://tour.tcvvm.org/about/3417-project/


OK. I love the Victoria Confederate War Memorial. It is stunningly beautiful and like no other. So I am adding a link to the post from my October visit and a photo (in case you missed it).

http://walkinthepark-padimus.blogspot.com/2013/10/war-memorial-on-civilizations-height.html

Sculpted by Pompeo Coppini



Sunday, May 25, 2014

Yes, I am a screamer...

There are thunderstorms moving north, just to our west. It looks like we will miss the excitement, but I decided to walk the puppies anyway - we needed to get out.

I usually don't walk to the park in the evenings. Too many people are out and they let their dogs out loose. It seems prudent to avoid all of it, but today it seemed late enough that most people would be inside, or heading inside. So the pups and I headed for the park, just a quick walk to stretch.

Two blocks from home a little yip-dog was barking. We crossed the road to avoid him even as we noticed the tether keeping him a few feet from the sidewalk.

We re-crossed the street and found a friend on her porch. DH worked with her some years ago and we regularly move her paper to her porch if we find it first...why not save her some steps.

As we neared her house we noticed the neighbors across the street gathering their animals into the house. One, a large bulldog mix and one a hairy yip-dog seemed interested in causing trouble, but were stymied, but only for a moment, it seems.

We finished talking to Laverne and made the mistake of turning our backs on the house. The troublemakers escaped the house behind one of the owners (they were grilling in the front yard) and sped over to us where they sniffed and then started growling.

I pulled my guys back and away -  and screamed.

Ugh! <exasperated sighs and disappointment here>

I am a screamer.

One of the owners rushed across the street and gathered his dogs up. Cars stopped. He apologized mid-street.

Laverne invited me to sit with her on the porch swing, but I just stood and coughed and tried to catch my breath.

Then we tried to finish the walk. But Scruffy started wheezing and coughing too. I called DH in case he might be near his phone...and he called right back.

"Come get us please," I asked. "We've had a scare and need a ride."

We continued walking until DH arrived and we headed home.

Sorry, no peaceful walk today. Perhaps tomorrow.

Saturday, May 24, 2014

Memorials

We remember.

We remember young men and women - forever young.

We remember our family members - like John E. who did not reach 21 and was buried near where he fell in France, until the war was over. His parents, like many others, asked for his remains to be returned home. His headstone, imposing, stands alongside those of his parents. He came home to the place where he went to school, ran barefoot through the fields and along dirt roads, flirted with girls, raised mules,* and worked on the farm. A second son, John was later remembered by his just older brother (only a year the elder) when H named his second son, John. He remembered and we remember.**

When John came home, he was welcomed - and his family comforted - by hundreds of family, friends, and neighbors.  They all remembered.

Detail of John E.'s stone.

We remember our neighbors.

We know our neighbors in such odd ways. We walk some miles each week and see them in the early morning or just before dusk. We know few names, but smile or nod when we meet. People move in and out so often. It is hard to keep up.

People only move into North Belton. And there is a spot DH calls the "Soldiers' Corner." These silent neighbors' headstones disclose information which led me on another journey today - to learn a little of their stories.

This weekend we will remember some of them.

I. Marion Stanley

Part of the "Soldiers' Corner"

PVT Marion E. Stanley
Marion E. Stanley enlisted in the Texas Army National Guard (for one year) in 1940, or so the records show. He deployed to Europe and was taken prisoner in Italy. He died in a POW camp in Germany in 1944 or 1945. The records show conflicting dates. His death certificate dates (Born March 15, 1921, killed 1944) do not match the dates on his headstone (March 15, 1919 to March 31, 1945). His cause of death is also not clear. He was either killed in transport, executed at the camp, or killed while attempting escape. His Texas death certificate shows only "D.K." in multiple blanks and recommends checking the records of the Adjutant General from 1944.

What is clear that Marion went to war, died in that war, and came home in 1949.

Marion was the son of Albert Stanley and Lee Dunn Stanley Blankenship. He had two older sisters and (at least) 5 younger half-siblings.  He was reportedly a married man, but I did not find his wife's name nor any indication that he had children.

Rest in peace, PVT Marion Stanley.

Added a flag for Marion.

WWII Monument at courthouse square


PVT Stanley's name on the monument

II. Paul N. Holcome

SGT Paul N. Holcome
Paul Nunn Holcome's stone is also misleading. It only indicates his service in WWII. The 1945 date made me think he too died in the war. He did not, but there is more to SGT Holcome's story.

Paul Holcome served in both WWI and WWII. He was injured in 1943 and returned home because his injuries prevented him from serving further. His death certificate shows he was a pharmacist and that he died from shotgun wounds - a homicide. Holcome's death and funeral were on the front page of the local paper, but my limited research provided nothing further.

Paul's parents were Jackson D. (Dock) Holcome*** and Mary Jane Light Holcome (or Halcome or  Halcomb depending on the document). He was a divorced man, but I did not find an ex-wife's name, nor did I find any children. The spelling of the last name caused significant confusion as there were many Holcombs in the area. Paul did have a brother Emmett Eli and a sister, Alene Holcome Kelley,**** who served in the WAACs during WWII, survived the war, and was buried next to her brother in 1980.

Rest in peace, SGT Paul Holcome. Rest in peace, Alene Kelley.



NOTES:

* John E. was a muleskinner in the war...a good job for a boy just off the farm.
** My youngest brother, son of that second second John, named his second son John as well. It is a pattern I only recognized as I typed this post.
*** More on Jackson's bunch - http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=head-wall&id=I27154
**** Also found this "Allene" and "Cora Alene Holcome Kelly." Alene was married to Wade Curtis Kelley and had a couple of children including C. Clifton and Ann in whose obituary Alene was mentioned - http://www.rockportpilot.com/obituaries/article_f85f46ef-afb2-59fa-9a60-0e05ca923e7f.html

Saturday, May 17, 2014

No rest for the wicked


"Fare thee well cold winter and fare thee well cold frost....."* - I sang to myself as we walked this brightening day. The waning moon was still overhead, but the morning birds were already singing to welcome in the dawn. It was a perfect cool morning.

This bird symphony - amazing trilling, chirping, and warbling accompanied us as we walked along. The happy songs were punctuated here and there with the crowing of the neighborhood rooster and the squeaky-door sounds of a bird I have yet to identify.

Would that we had time to enjoy morning just a few minutes longer. Although we were up early this day, I had the penultimate graduation ceremony** only a few hours away and DH had exercise and reading and napping to do (yeah, I was a little jealous).

This evening we would drive to Rosebud, through farm country. Fields of hay had been harvested and huge rolled bales of hay were lined up waiting to be moved. We cleared one hill and gazed at dark green foliage - grain just a few feet high - as far as we could see. Among the green fields was one of yellow brown wheat waiting to be cut and a corner near a creek covered in the orange of heaven-planted gailardia.

The recent rains had filled the tanks (ponds to you guys from out-of-state) and streams. Old wooden sheds and barns slowly deteriorated while shiny metal silos and barns gleamed in the late afternoon sunlight. Sturdy brick homes replaced many of the old white wooden farmhouses.

We were on our way to celebrate a graduation with friends and their families along the banks of the local lake. Country dogs wandered as children played and adults jet-skied. We celebrated years of work and talked about future plans.

The sun started to set as frogs made their presence known near the shore. It is a sound I love even as it reminds me the day is almost done.

We drove home (each with a different idea of the fastest way there - it comes down to how many traffic lights can be found on each route. No one wins these arguments, but the driver gets to choose the route.) discussing how much we enjoyed a party where sober adults talked, watched their children, and enjoyed the afternoon outside and where no cell phones were in evidence. We had not really noticed it until I mentioned that I was the only one who took any photographs (with my c-a-m-e-r-a) and we realized - not one cell phone rang or was taken out to snap a photo...everyone was living in the moment. Our Luddite selves were satisfied with two hours of peace and I pulled out my phone to send a text to a friend who was waiting for a late evening chat.

Notes:

*This is an old (19th century) traditional English song made popular by Steeleye Span. A friend introduced me to the group and to this music in the late 1970s. She once fooled everyone at Durty Nelly's Pub in San Antonio - convincing them she was Irish. She entertained the place with a few folks songs, this one included I do believe. A year or so later I saw Steeleye Span in Dublin. You can see a performance here. It is worth listening to the whole thing for the harmony at the end.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CqInvZ9hY9Y

** The final ceremony will be that of my nephew. We will watch him graduate in a few weeks - from my old high school.


Thursday, May 15, 2014

Singing wires

The house is not back to normal, but we are a little more settled since the thunderstorms are more than 24 hours gone.

DH and I moved slowly - his was workout weary while mine was mowed late, but SLEPT IN MY OWN BED joint-stiff! Paddy seemed calm enough last night that she did not need a sleep-over on the living room floor.* Whew!

We walked to the park with regular collars and leashes. I have tried our walks the last couple of days without the pinch collars. I started using them because the dogs are so much stronger than I am. They can pull me down; they have pulled me down. I am clumsy enough on my own. So far they are doing well, but today they did create a twisted "candy cane" look as they moved round each other - jockeying for position.

The almost-full moon brightened the before-dawn walk. It was still almost shocking to see a clear sky with stars, but no dark clouds menacing us.

I am always surprised by the difference between pre - and post-dawn walks. Today we realized they have added another light in the park.  I suppose there were dark corners they wanted to illuminate. We walked on to the sports fields - to get the dogs a drink. The wires of the high fences surrounding the fields "pinged" and "sang" as we walked by.

NOTES:

* I continue to find casualties of her thunderstorm fret and frenzy. One of my favorite t-shirts is torn - shredded at some point two days ago.




Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Blue sky

There is nothing like sleeping on the living room floor with a fretful dog to start off your Wednesday right. We had more thunderstorms late evening/early morning and I thought I would see if this would be a better option for the scaredy-dog. It was.

Paddy and I rose and grabbed Scruffy-boy for a walk in the cool that followed the storm.

Only a few more traveling earthworms shared the sidewalks and streets with us - until we reached the park.

We could see it from the corner...a pale-colored something was walking around near the streetlight just inside the park. It was bigger and brighter than a squirrel. It was about the size of a skunk, but mostly a light color. It was the wrong shape for a cat or fox (although I hoped it was a member of the fox den we used to see).

"A 'possum" was the thought that kept repeating in my head...and it was. Paddy barely noticed. She is more interested in sniffing out smells. But Scruffy is a hunter. He alerted on the creature and did not "give him up" until he finally disappeared into the woods.

We saw no other walkers, no one getting out for a newspaper, no one waited for the bus, no one biked to work and no runners appeared - until we were about to turn the corner at the house. DH was two blocks away, cooling down from his run.






Tuesday, May 13, 2014

It's raining, it's pouring...

The old man was snoring, but I made him get up and walk with me...the old dogs (one at least) were challenging. [As she has aged, Paddy has become more fretful. She seems to have OCD type issues. It is sad because she cannot tell us what is wrong. She behaves weirdly - she is a much different dog/has a different personality than in her earlier years. And we are trying to see how we can best care for her.]

We have been in and out of the house the past couple of days. We have taken only short walks... just before the thunder and rain* or between waves of storms. This almost dry morning gave us the chance for a long walk to the park.

We were the only ones out at first. Newspapers waited to be gathered into the houses. No cats wandered (cats don't seem to enjoy wet paws). Few dog were out in their yards. The trees dripped as we passed under them.

"Look at all the worms," commented DH. "What worms?" asked I. And then I saw them. Enormous earthworms** were all over the park road and in the gutters. Most were motionless, but one seemed to be making the effort to get out of his puddle. I picked him up and moved him to the edge of the grass and I wondered about this wormy reaction to the drenching rains of the past two days. And I thought about all the fishermen and fisher-women who would love to gather these beauties (all a foot long or longer) and head to the river or lake. [When I stopped to check on the worms about an hour after the walk, most had disappeared. It lends credence to the article cited below.]

Not sure what this guy is doing...

This one is trying to squeeze into the crack in the curb...


We stopped at the drainage ditch for a drink and watched the water flowing in the creek.

Our intermittent stream flows out of the woods, across a corner of the park, and on to a spot where it meets the river.

One can never have enough waterfalls...even tiny ones.

This spot always looks so mysterious. I plan to hike down the dry creek bed later in the summer.
A few branches caught up under the bridge.
Water rippled as it flowed...the wind hits it here.

You can see the high water mark in the grass. This stream was really flowing during the heavy rains of last night.

 As we walked towards home we greeted children arriving at the bus stops for the later-running school bus.

NOTES:

*We have had well over 3 inches of rain and loads of thunder. I promised to walk only a short minute last evening. DH started to worry when he heard thunder and I was not home. One block from the house I saw his car turn our corner - dear one heading out to rescue me.

**http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/why-earthworms-surface-after-rain/

Saturday, May 10, 2014

Memory Garden I

Do you have a memory garden? I thought everyone did.

People wax poetic about the sources of their plants and flowers and I suppose it is my turn. As I was replanting a 12-year-old pothos (received when she started college) with my oldest child over the weekend (and as I cajoled her into taking a few more plants with her - bluebonnets, althea, and day lilies) I began to think about people who have shared plants (voluntarily and involuntarily) with me. So I decided to do a little walk around the yard and share some stories.

But first I must start at the beginning. My parents had a big yard and created flowerbeds of joy and sorrow. I still see or smell perennials that take me home again. Daddy grew sweet peas on the back hurricane fencing. They would bloom with abandon and we would cut them all summer long. (We usually put them in a white glass vase that Mom said Daddy gave her filled with flowers when I was born.) He also planted zinnias and calendula. And then there was the time he grew dishrag gourds. (1) [We were supposed to gently lift the vines when mowing (woe be to the child who mowed over the vines --->ME).] For a time Daddy shared a vegetable garden with the neighbor across the alley (she provided the land, he provided everything else), eventually moving it into the back yard after she poisoned an area of her yard too close to the garden (He tilled up a huge chunk of the yard where we played tag and pitched pup-tents and placed it under cultivation).

Mother planted Louisiana iris, gerbera daises, amaryllis, oxalis, ferns, bottle brush, laurel, vinca, elaeagnus, trumpet vine and, in later years, a profusion of wildflowers - Queen Ann's lace, thistle, basket flower, gaillardia, and Indian paintbrushes (there are more, but you get the idea. I am sure my siblings will comment with more plants that stayed with them, but were not my favorites.).

Louisiana iris

The yard began with shade from native mesquite trees, but hurricane Celia made short work of them (we sawed fallen trees for days.) and the parents replaced them with live oaks. They also had pecans, redbuds, a wild olive, banana trees, and a date palm.


Most of the plants mentioned above were loved or at least tolerated. Even the nasty-thorned mesquite (with it's huge painful wood ants) provided great climbing for years. The one "plant from hell"  in my memory was the dreaded pyracantha (2) or fire thorn. This horror grew on a fence between our house and Miss Judy's (our much loved next-door neighbor). Pyracantha had to be trimmed. And those trimmings had to be hauled to the alley. And this plant, while beautiful when blooming and fruiting, is a mass of thorns. I hated it. I hate it still. And it mocks me when I drive through central Texas - a showy plant on fences everywhere. It seems many people were enamored of its beauty. They probably found out too late that it is, in fact, the devil. Even today the fence contains reminders - pieces of the pyracantha branches that enveloped the chain-link.

So, we worked in the yard. We planted and grew things. We picked and shared. My baby brother summed up our relationship with plants, "This joys me up!"

We all still grow things. My sister is in the coldest part of the state. We sometimes share plants, but the difference in climate often shows. My just younger brother and I trade plants often. My baby brother still plants the home place where his family now lives. Though they have downsized the flowerbeds somewhat, they still enjoy the shade of the oak trees.

Come with me to see a few things in my garden...


Northern althea:

My oldest child lived just north of Manhattan for a few years before she returned to the state of her birth. Her landlady was a special grandmotherly woman named Louise. Louise lived on the bottom floor of a wonderful house build by her husband. OC lived with a roommate on the second floor. The third floor was occupied by a doctor. The garden of the home was quite marvelous.

I arrived in August of 2010 to help OC pack for her move. Taking a break from cardboard boxes and markers to tour the garden, I developed a plan to smuggle cuttings back to Texas. Any woody "shrub" was fair game and I took some 30 or more cuttings of the altheas and the fig trees. Initially some 5 or 10 altheas rooted as did two of the fig cuttings. But then our erratic weather killed a most of these brave "foreign" plants. Three of the altheas have survived for 4 years. They are all the same type - single white bloom with a burgundy center. This is one of the plants.

Louise's althea
Louise's althea blooming


Yarrow:

The owner of a fabulous local mansion (3) shared plants with a friend and me about 20 years ago.  This is the white blooming yarrow he allowed us to dig up (even has he shamed me for my "dull" sharp shooter - "It is supposed to be a SHARP shooter!"). The yarrow has been moved a couple of times and still grows vigorously. I have tried to add other yarrow (pink and yellow blooming) to this flower bed, but this is the only one that will grow there.



Curtis Mansion yarrow

My first althea:

When we moved to this house almost 25 years ago, I planted a hedge of alternating variegated pittosporum and red tip photinia along the front sidewalk. We are on a busy street and we had three small children. I wanted the plants to be a reminder to the children that they were getting close to the street (For years we didn't let the children play in the front or side yards, but games of tag can get "out of hand"). Eventually the shrubs would grow to form a hedge. (4) A good many years ago a friend (5) asked me to help her trim her althea bushes. I think she had a broken arm or something, so she needed help. She had about 5 plants trimmed to a small tree shape in her back yard and they had grown to the point they were scraping against the facia. They are all gone now (but I gave her a small one to plant near her pet cemetery). I took cuttings from the altheas and discovered that 8 of 10 cuttings rooted (thus began my love affair with propagation of altheas). I have shared many shrubs that originated with these cuttings and have planted four on the yard side of the hedge, one in the flower bed by the driveway, and one along the fence in the backyard. They are one of the few plants that will bloom throughout our hot summers. (6) 

Cathy's altheas
 
Double pink blooming althea (cutting swiped on a walk around SW's old neighborhood 60 miles south of here)


IRIS:

There are too many iris stories!

I have planted iris from many sources. I have been seduced by the pictures of iris on the bags sold at local discount and home supply stores.

Our pale lavender blooming iris were given to me by my friend BC. The rhizomes (a gift from parents of one of our coworkers) sat in a box in her garage for two years. BC gave them to me and I planted them in 1990 as "garden therapy" when my mother was ill. Digging and planting helped me feel better when I was not on hospital duty. Mom got better and the iris bloomed like crazy after two years of establishing their root systems.







These are the only ones pictured that have bloomed so far this year. They came from my friend BC. The others, who knows?




I have stolen iris from abandoned properties, from roadside ditches, and some that moved beyond fences or into the street. I have rescued iris ahead of bulldozers (from Mrs. G from across the street). I believe a few iris came back with us from cemeteries during the boy's Eagle project (he was appalled, but I explained that iris need to be lifted and divided every 3 to 5 years). I have purchased a few iris, but they don't seem to grow as well as the gifted plants (or the stolen ones). And I have my eye on some out in the country near a fence - and that's all I am going to say about that, for now.

Recently a rural road was being widened - threatening a huge iris bed of a bordering property owner. This lovely woman VE shared iris (and bluebonnets - see below) with BC and me. I am potting these for future planting  - some for me, some to share with friends. I won't know what we have until they bloom.

Some iris have come from BC's old house where an iris hybridizer once lived and left an incredible legacy of flowers.

While planting earlier this week I wondered about a particularly lovely deep purple iris given to me by our beloved friend Aunt Joanie W. It came from her house 20 miles from here and was planted in the side yard before the trees created so much shade. There in the spot where I planted it some 20+ years ago was a big purple bloom. It makes me smile to see this flower and think of Joan - how special she was to us.

Aunt Joan's iris (it is more purple than this, but this is the color the camera took.)
Wildflowers:

I usually have no luck with wildflowers. But as I mentioned above, VE gave us iris ahead of the asphalt truck. Then she mentioned some bluebonnets and took me to their location. I potted 4 and they have bloomed and are putting out seed pods (and something has started eating the leaves - snails? pill bugs?


VE's bluebonnets
Redbuds:

I have had pretty poor luck with redbud trees. I planted two from "the store" in my yard. They died after a year or two. Then we planted a couple of purchased trees at the elementary school. They made it quite a long time. I thought they were gone, but there are some small saplings coming up in one spot.

I have had a couple of trees transplanted from a friends yard growing. One is in the side yard near the drive. Another grew huge and then succumbed to bugs and disease. We managed to cut it down before it took-out the cable.

BC's redbud with its heart-shaped leaves
Gardeners - who do you trust?

When we moved here we discovered two of the long-time residents of our town had amazing gardens. After a year or two I learned which garden to trust. Mrs. G lived across the street and had amazing iris, schoolhouse lilies, bur oaks (planted by her son), a large (half the block) pecan orchard, and loads of Texas native plants. (6) Mrs. R. (7) grew things that don't grow here. I couldn't figure it out. She had tulips and peonies and things I saw in no other yard. Finally someone let me in on the secret, Mrs. R had a number of gardeners and she would change her flower beds with the seasons. Things grew there until they didn't and were swapped for something else.

The Episcopal Church once (15 or 20 years ago) had a thrift store downtown with a wide variety of stuff for sale. I purchased a box of oxalis bulbs attributed to Mrs. R's garden and they have grown in my yard ever since.

Mrs. R's oxalis
Co-workers:

My co-worker for years shared a "hen and chicks" succulent with me. It sometimes thrives, but was damaged last year by some insects seeking moisture. I plan to re-pot them and see if I can do better by them.

MG's hen and chicks

Another co-worker has a husband who can grow anything. He regularly rescued the half-dead plants at the garden centers. He gave us ferns that do continue to grow in spite of freezes and ill treatment.

Each year I think a hard freeze has eliminated this fern and then it slowly comes back


Schoolhouse lilies

Schoolhouse lilies (also known as hurricane lilies, oxblood lilies and Berry lilies - after my sister's landlady some years ago who grew them and shared) are seen in old gardens. This often causes their erroneous reputation as a Texas native. They are non-natives. They arrived in Texas from the Andes in the 1800s. They are wonderful bulbs with a rather "stealth" bloom. Related to the amaryllis forced around Christmas, this small bloom lasts only a few days. The plant blooms in late August/early September when school starts, hence the name schoolhouse lily. They bloom after the first fall rain - often from a hurricane in this state. They are the color of oxblood.

I have had a number of sources of these bulbs. Some came from across the street when the new neighbor swapped me bulbs (at least a thousand) for some fig preserves. I believe I got the better part of that deal and I shared bulbs with teachers, Army wives, family members, old friends, coworkers,  and heaven knows who else. I sometimes receive notes letting me know the lilies are blooming. I planted some at my work and at a park in town, but have not seen those bloom. I hope to be surprised one day by a flash of red when I pass by.

Stolen schoolhouse lily bulbs

Schoolhouse lilies

Aspidistra:

My grandmother and mother both had pecan trees surrounded by aspidistra (cast iron plant). My friend SW was removing a bed full of the plant and gave me a container of rhizomes.  I planted them around the pecan in the side yard. They grow thick there, providing shelter for all kinds of creatures. I often find beautiful spiderwebs among the leaves and spied this lizard not long ago.

Anole on the aspidistra around one of the pecan trees
Mallow:

My brother and I regularly swap plants. He gave me a mallow (cousin to the althea) that continues to bloom each year. There is not enough sun for it to grow beyond this small plant, but it has been propagated a few times. I still don't seem to have a good spot to allow it to perform really well. I love that this plant persists year after year.

Mallow




(1) http://www.backwoodshome.com/articles2/yeager85.html

(2) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyracantha

I found a quote from A Terrible Thing, a short story by Shelly Singer, "A thorny pyracantha, trimmed to humility, pressed against the fence." I love that - trimmed to humility.

(3) http://www.stoppingpoints.com/texas/sights.cgi?marker=The+Curtis+Mansion&cnty=bell

(4) We planted all the shrubs, but one before we saw the box that said "Call before you dig." So, we stopped planting and called. The next day we came home to find the phone company marked the buried line. There was a shrub and an orange flag, a shrub and then a flag - all the way down the hedge. The only place that was not marked was where we planned to plant the final shrub. The neighbors got a kick out of it. We left the plants alone, fearing we would do more damage by removing them.

(5) We met at church. She would watch my two legged children and I would care for her 4 legged ones. I also caught over 20 rats at her house when she was infested (they were just after the dog food), but could not manage the traps. I am ruthless. She became rat-less.

(6) Mrs. G's house sold a few years ago. It was on a block by itself. The new owner subdivided the block and built 5 houses on it - bulldozing one flowerbed and cutting down most of the pecan trees. No one could save the pecans, but I have it on good authority that many of the rhizomes and bulbs were rescued (some in the dead of night - with a dull sharpshooter). The rescue was such that the provenance of many iris will remain a mystery. Each bloom is a surprise.

(7) Mrs. R. was a true southern lady. She had a lovely lilting accent. And she came to "call" on me when we first moved to this house. Unfortunately I was teaching a class and DH was home alone with three children. The children were preparing for bed and were in different stages of dress/undress. Our oldest went to the front door in response to the bell and looked through the side window. She yelled to her father, "It's some old lady that we don't know" as her brother stood at the other side window - stark naked. DH reached the door and shooed the children to their rooms. Mrs. R. explained her mission, expressed her regrets at missing me, and never batted an eyelash at the behavior of the kiddos.

On another occasion Mrs. R and another neighbor were on an early morning walk as I backed out of the drive to head to work. I managed to run over a garbage can lid and jammed it between the quarter panel and the wheel. Mrs. R came to my rescue and insisted that she stand on the part of the lid sticking out as I drove the car slowly forward. I had visions of ambulances and emergency rooms, but the plan worked, lid dislodged, and we each headed off to start the day.