Cactus gardening in Zone 8b. Desert plants and Cacti in a water wise rock garden. Cacti like Echinocereus and Echinopsis to Ocotillo and Agave, beautiful flowers, bold evergreen structure, and blooms all colors of the sunset. A trial and error journey to discover cold hardiness where only the fittest will survive hot temperatures, high humidity, and frosty nights in the teens, not to mention an onslaught of rock squirrels and cactus beetles.
Sunday, April 21
Tuesday, April 9
First Flowers
Originally I planned to only purchase plants native to Texas or at least the Chihuahuan desert. In this picture you can see several cactus purchased at the Chihuahuan Desert Research Institute. However as soon as I started seeing cactus with flowers I immediately lowered my standards and bought anything that had even an outside chance of being cold hardy in the Texas Hill Country. Many times these Central and South America species were cheaper which made them worth the gamble in the cold. Unfortunately, I quickly also learned that we had other cactus killers in Texas: extreme heat, humidity, rock squirrels, cactus bugs, cactus beetles, rain and sunburn just to name a few. Who knew cactus growing could be so difficult. I often wondered why with so many incredible native cactus species in Texas why the general public here is barely aware of their beauty and so few significant public examples exist. |
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