Have you heard of Fruitful Commons?

You may have heard me talk about my volunteer organization, Central Texas Seed Savers, centexseedsavers.org. We prevent extinction of rare plants by sharing seeds. We support the seed collection at the Austin Public Library Central branch I providing seeds when the collection runs low. Katrin Abel, the librarian who cares for the seed collection shared this with me today “Here’s a fun stat for you: At the Sunshine Community Garden outreach on Saturday, attendees checked out 83 seed packets from the collection, which brings our total seed checkouts to over 25,000 packets since opening the collection in 2019.  Hooray!”

If every packet holds 10-20 seeds, you can estimate how many plants have been grown from those seeds. This impact is huge, and that is just one seed library. There are new seed library collections popping up every month around Central Texas, the newest being Del Valle Public Library Garfield Branch.

All of this impact is supported by Central Texas Seed Savers’ sponsorship organization, Fruitful Commons. The hardworking folks at Fruitful Commons make it possible for us to focus on the impact that we have on the community and saving seeds. They provide administrative backup for us like liability insurance, fundraising help and they connect us to a broader network of resources and organizations to collaborate with. Their support is crucial to CTSS’s success and we literally could not do it without them.

I am asking you today to support Fruitful Commons by donating at least $5.

https://betterunite.com/fruitfulcommons-fruitfulcommonssustainingmembership

Thanks!

Upcoming Classes!

With the recent cold snap you might be wondering how to care for your plants. I have 2 classes coming up At the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center that can help. Hope to see you there!

Tree Pruning January 27 from 10 to noon. Register here: https://www.wildflower.org/event/tree-pruning

Winter Care for Native Plants Feb 3 from 10- noon. Register here: https://www.wildflower.org/event/winter-care-plants

The Old Farmer's Almanac Episode of Horticulturati Podcast OUT NOW!

Are you a fan of the Old Farmer’s Almanac, that iconic paperback tome with the yellow cover and the hole in the corner? Are you a fan of my podcast, the Horticulturati, that not-yet iconic digital fount of Texas gardening info and feelings?

Well, the two are colliding in this episode! I grew up reading the Old Farmer’s Almanac and in this episode I tell Leah, my co-host and landscape designer friend, all about it. I explore my feelings about the past and future of the almanac. Is the Old Farmer’s Almanac it out-of-date and defunct? Is it spreading harmful lies? Or is it what hurried and harried Americans need to slow down our fast-paced lives nowadays?

Also in this episode I explain my latest endeavor that relates to almanacs: a digital fruit tree care calendar that will populate your calendar with the right dates for pruning, harvesting and more in Central Texas!

Listen to the latest episode on Apple podcasts here or listen wherever you get your podcasts.

2024 FRUIT TREE CALENDAR FOR SALE NOW

2024 Fruit Tree Calendar Has Arrived!

I am excited to announce my new downloadable  2024 fruit tree calendar. Get automatic reminders for fruit tree care in your digital calendar. My universal .ics file is viewable on any device. It's like having me in your back pocket to remind you when to prune, feed and harvest! Get it before the end of 2023. It makes a great gift for the aspiring orchardist in your life! The file comes with both written and video instructions on how to download and install it on your device. Thanks, Colleen

Example of Fruit Tree Care Calendar Item

Seed Swap Success!

October 28 2023 at the Austin Public Library Central Branch

I had so much fun at the Central Texas Seed Savers seed swap last week. It was our annual swap at the Central Library. About 100 people attended and everyone was smiling and having fun. In addition to preventing extinction by sharing hard to find local plants and seeds, we exchanged how-to grow info and made new friends. We had a huge amount of seeds thanks to community donations, swap participants who brought seeds and a donation from David’s Garden Seeds.

Sign up for the Central Texas Seed Savers newsletter here, and you can also subscribe to the CTSS events calendar to automatically get all of the CTSS events populated into your google calendar.

We had a great write up in the Daily Texan about the seed libraries and our seed swap too.

Houseplant cuttings are a popular item at the Central Texas Seed Savers seed swap!

Fruit Tree Care Calendar

Do you have big dreams for your home orchard? What if you could glance at your phone and read the fruit tree tasks for the day, would you check it out? If so, Colleen will help you maximize your harvest with her Texas Fruit Tree Care Digital Calendar. ATXGardens.com has you covered! The calendar includes timing for fruit tree pruning, feeding and other tasks that integrate directly into your calendar. With this superpower in your back pocket, you will be empowered to care for your fruit trees. You’ll receive the file, link and instructions in an email after you purchase. Here’s what you can expect: ATXGardens.com Digital Calendar files come in a universal ICS format, Compatible with Google Calendar and iOS Calendar. Viewable on any device. Suitable for any level of gardener because my descriptions help you understand the tasks. Tips for Figs, Citrus, Apples, Peaches, Pears, Plums are all included.

Click here to buy!


How to Water Your Trees

As an ISA Certified Arborist with a Tree Risk Assessment Qualified, I’m getting lots of questions from Red Wheelbarrow customers and from callers on the Horticulture Hangover radio show about watering trees during this (2023) drought. Here’s an example of an exchange I had with a customer today.

Dear Colleen, We had a consult with you back in May of this year...we haven't done much beyond doing some rocks for edging yet because of the heat but you mentioned we could send you quick questions...Our trees are looking a bit bleak and need watering beyond the once a week sprinklers we've been doing...can you tell me how much, how often and the method (eg not just doing it at the base I'm guessing further out?)?

Thank you,

Dr. Dry in Austin

My response:

Hi Dr. Dry, can you tell me if you planted the trees and if so how long ago you planted them? If you did plant them do you remember what size container they came in at planting time? If they have been in the ground for less than 5 years, they generally need 15 gallons of water once per week. If they came in a container that is bigger than a 15 gallon container, then give them the same amount as the container they came in. For example if the tree came in a 45 gallon pot, then the tree needs 45 gallons of water once per week. Treegators are wonderful for trees that were planted less than 5 yrs ago. 

If the trees were planted more than 5 years ago then watering can be a challenge. Water under the “drip line” of the tree. The “drip line” is at the tips of the branches, far from the trunk. Let the water soak in slowly. For my mature trees that are more than 5 years in the ground, I like to use about 15 gallons of water in 4 spots (N,S,E,W) around the tree’s drip line once per week. Get some 5 gallon buckets a drill small holes in the bottom to let the water drain out slowly. That way you know if you fill the bucket 3 times it’s about 15 gallons. This will deliver some water more deeply into the soil than your irrigation system. The tree roots are a little deeper than the other plants in general. 

This is a good video to help too:

https://youtu.be/bHsNwpPzK2U?si=WkdXLAiCSFNiH40i

Hope that helps,

Colleen


The Rare Trees of Pease


Samaras on the Bigtooth Maple at Pease Park

In spring 2023 I led a Tree Identification walk at Pease Park, and I am delighted to repeat that activity coming up on September 9, 2023. As an ISA Certified Arborist at ATXgardens.com, I am a tree enthusiast, to say the least. When Luis from Pease Park Conservancy gave me a tour of the park I was surprised to find some rare tree specimens planted as part of the recent restoration.



The area near the “TreeHouse” is home to a Bigtooth Maple, Acer grandidentatum, one of only two native maple species in Austin (the other is Box Elder, Acer negundo, a sorely underrated tree). Maples have samaras, the most fun fruits of all trees. The seed is held in a capsule with a wing, and when they fall from the tree they spin like a helicopter. The kernel inside the capsule is edible. Typically they grow near streams and rivers and they are most at home with high canyon walls surrounding them. But I have found a few very beautiful Bigtooth Maples growing in home landscapes around Austin, and they seem to do particularly well in narrow spaces with afternoon shade. They are slow growing to become medium-sized trees at maturity but worth the wait. Bigtooth Maples are easily identified by their opposite leaf arrangement, samaras, and leaves that resemble the leaf on the flag of Canada. 🇨🇦 Made famous by Lost Maples State Natural Area, these maples can be tapped to make syrup and they have unrivaled fall color.



Bigtooth Maple Leaves at Pease Park

If Austinites planted a greater diversity of native trees we would have a better color show each fall. Due to livestock overgrazing, severe deer pressure and lack of availability at nurseries, many climate resilient, native tree species with landscape value (including fall color) are rare.




Bigtooth Maple next to the “TreeHouse” at Pease Park

That’s why TreeFolks and Central Texas Seed Savers have partnered to create the Seed To Tree Pipeline. TreeFolks is the leading local tree planting organization and they cannot find enough trees in the marketplace to meet the needs of their planting programs. They asked my organization, Central Texas Seed Savers, to recruit and train volunteers to collect seeds to send to TreeFolks. TreeFolks will grow their own trees in their nursery and also plant seeds directly into the ground at their planting sites. If you attend our Tree ID classes you will be equipped to collect seeds. You will be empowered to prevent extinction of our special Texas tree species.





I hope you will join me for the Tree ID Walk at Pease.

Other unusual trees found at Pease Park that also offer fall color:

Rusty Blackhaw Vibirnum

Roughleaf Dogwood

Flameleaf Sumac

Peach

Written By Colleen Dieter

Tree ID for Seed Savers Walk

Colleen Dieter (that’s me) will be leading a FREE Tree Identification walk at Pease Park in Austin on Sep 9 2023 from 10:30-12:30. You’ll learn how to identify trees and collect seeds from them to contribute to Central Texas Seed Savers’ Seed to Tree Pipeline Program. Register here.

Flyer for Tree ID class

"Let's Care for Texas Plants" Got a Rave Review!

Hi Gardening Friends, 

I was delighted and surprised when well-known author and garden blogger, Pam Penick, reviewed "Let's Care for Texas Plants"! Pam wrote "Colleen’s plant care 'zine is the how-to that every new gardener in Central Texas needs — or new homeowner, if you’ve inherited a bunch of plants you have no idea how to care for...It’s a must-have for any gardener in Central Texas, especially newbies. But even experienced gardeners will learn something new". 

Here's a good deal! Now you can get a bundled version of both the digital version and the hard copy version of "Let's Care for Texas Plants", my 3 volume set of booklets about how to trim, feed and water your landscape for only $50 plus $10 shipping. The digital copy typically sells for $28 so this is a big discount.

“Let’s Care For Texas Plants” is a ‘zine that I designed to help gardeners know when and how to trim, feed and water their landscapes. It includes how-to tips for trees, soil, lawns, perennials, grasses and succulents.

Got Milkweed? You might already have it!

Lately I, very happily, have been having the same conversation over and over again with lots of friends and Red Wheelbarrow customers. There’s a peculiar plant lurking in many yards that is being mistaken for a pest. I most recently saw it growing on a railing at the Becker Green Classroom where I did a consultation last week about tree planting. Even though we were talking about trees I took a minute to point out their big crop of Talayote. I still can’t pronounce “Talayote” but I will get there.

Talayote, the common name for Cynanchum unifarium, is the most underrated plant found around Austin and most of Texas. Often mistaken for bindweed and other members of the Morning Glory family, this native vine is in the Milkweed family aka the Asclepiadaceae. Yes, there are milkweed vines. In my experience, they are the most common milkweeds around town. If you are a butterfly or wildlife gardener, you definitely need to know this plant!

You may have heard that the famous Monarch Butterfly, Danaus plexippus, is listed as an endangered species by the by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. It hasn’t been listed as an endangered species on the US Federal Endangered Species list yet, but I understand that is in the works.

Adult monarch butterflies drink nectar from many different garden plants including mistflowers and asters. But the caterpillars, the baby Monarch larvae that will grow up to become monarch butterflies, can only eat plants that are in the  Asclepiadaceae family.

Each year, Monarchs complete a bewildering multi-generational migration across North America between Canada and Mexico. The original butterflies leave their overwintering homes in Mexico and start their journey north, laying eggs on milkweed plants and then dying along the way. Their grandchildren are born in Canada and the Northern U.S. In the late summer the grandbabies, now transformed into adult butterflies, find their way back to the same overwintering site in Mexico. Some of them even fly across the Great Lakes, landing on boats to rest along the way. HOW DO THEY KNOW WHERE TO GO?!?!? They do not have brains! Butterfly epistemology, anyone?

I learned about this migration when I watched this 2011 episode of Nova, and it ignited a passion for butterfly gardening in my heart, especially since I made a similar migration in my life, growing up in Cleveland, OH and landing in Austin, TX. I remember seeing the big orange butterflies in my mom’s garden when I was growing up, but I had no idea they migrated. I remember eating lunch outside of the Perry Casteneda Library when I worked there in autumn 2001 on the University of Texas campus. I saw big groups of Monarchs soaring high above the building and felt perplexed. Where were they going? How could a fumbly bumbly flutter-by butterfly suddenly start soaring?

Their migratory path and the geography of our continent concentrates their numbers into dense populations traveling through Texas, so it is crucial for Texas gardeners to preserve milkweed plants for their little baby caterpillars to munch on.

Many passionate butterfly gardeners have braved the local plant sales and thrown elbows in a smash-mouth rush to grab milkweed plants, only to be disappointed when the plants die in their new homes. Milkweed plants are notoriously hard to propagate and grow in nursery culture and they often do not survive transplanting. It is also really hard to get the seeds to sprout in the garden.

Most gardeners have forgotten the most important step when setting up a garden: identify the plants you already have before you start tearing them out. Plants that have “volunteered”, a term I use for plants that grew without humans planting them, can be some of the most valuable plants in the landscape. Talayote is at the top of the list of wonderful volunteer plants, and it seems to be having a banner year, because I am seeing it everywhere.

I found it in my backyard in 2021, tangled up with perennial morning glory growing all over a firebush. Fortunately, due my 20 years of plant ID experience, I noticed it was different from the morning glory. I still couldn’t ID it on my own so I added it to INaturalist. I was delighted to find a native volunteer milkweed thriving in my yard where so many milkweeds came to die previously. I built a trellis for it and it has been thriving ever since.

I added some photos here for you to study. Talayote is different from bindweed and other morning glory vines several ways. 1. When you tear a stem or leaf Tayalote has milky sap, like most members of the milkweed family. That is where they get their name. 2. Tayalote has small clusters of yellow flowers, not big showy flowers like morning glory. 3. The heart-shaped leaves of Talayote are more open at the top, with space between two lobes. 4. Talayote has a big seed pod that will split in two when ripe and dried. The seeds inside will be attached to fluff to carry them away on the wind.

Talayote leaf. Some of the plants I have seen around town, including the ones in my yard, have yellow spots on the leaves. I don’t know why.

Talayote seed pod. This one is still green and young, not ready yet.

Talayote flower- it’s not showy. Note

Learn more about butterflies by listening to this episode of the Horticulturati podcast:

And if you haven’t seen this movie yet, you gotta.

http://www.flightofthebutterflies.com/

Maintain and Chill

Summer Trimming Time!

Hi Y'all! Summer is a really important time for maintaining your plants. Salvia greggii benefit from being trimmed at this time by removing the bottom branches and dead flower stems. Mexican Bush Sage, Mealy Blue Sage and their relatives all need to be cut in half around July 1 to keep them from falling apart in the fall. For more tips like these, get a copy of my 'zine! I created a 3 volume booklet set, full of helpful information and unique art. Available in hard copy or as a digital version, it makes a great gift. Also just in time for Father's Day I am offering digital gift cards too!

The Phosphorus Paradox

The new episode of The Horticulturati podcast is out! This episode Leah and I tackle a topic that has been haunting me for years: Phosphorus. This macronutrient element has caused problems for me as a gardener and caused horrific problems for humanity on the whole. We give some tips for local Austin gardeners who might not realize how common high phosphorus levels are around here and give a glimpse into the environmental and political issues caused by our need for phosphorus.

Big News: I’m on the radio! Introducing The Horticulture hangover Show

Hey, y’all, Colleen Dieter here. My friend Leah Churner and I recently started hosting The Horticulture Hangover on KLBJ every Saturday morning from 8-9 AM. It is a call-in show where listeners text or call us with gardening questions. You can listen live on the radio by tuning your dial to KLBJ 590 AM or 99.7 FM in Central Texas. You can also stream the live show here. Leah and I share our expertise and experiences to help listeners with common yard problems. You may already be familiar with our podcast, The Horticulturati, which Leah and I have been recording since 2020. We'll still bring you deep dives into topics on the Horticulturati podcast . If you subscribe to our podcast on your favorite podcast platform then the new Horticulture Hangover show will automatically appear in your feed. If you’re a longtime Horticulturati listener, please become a Patron to get early access to episodes and bonus material!

What’s a Horticulture Hangover? It’s when you buy too many plants at the nursery, and then you don’t have enough time or space or energy to plant them all!

Colleen Dieter Red Wheelbarrow austin texas gardens lawns yards landscape studio radio show
Leah Churner radio gardening lawns studio yard landscape design horticulture

100 Days of Hell, for the 20th Time

Spring is here in Austin! This will be my 20th spring season, last month (Feb 2023) I celebrated 20 years owning my business! I celebrated by asking customers and loved ones to sign a virtual card for me. Their kind messages warmed my heart, and they will sustain me this spring. Some of my industry colleagues refer to this time of year as "100 Days of Hell", when gardeners all over Texas scramble to get plants in the ground during our short spring season. I've done it enough times now to know I always start out bushy-tailed and energized by  wildflowers, redbud trees and peach blossoms...AND I know by May 15 I will be needing a massage and a margarita as I mop the sweat from my face. My secret to surviving the spring season each year is to put kindness first, especially kindness to myself. My natural pace is tortoise-like. I have gotten plenty of grief over the years from strangers and loved-ones alike for my chronic mosey. But my wise self insists that hurrying is overrated and I can be kind to myself by embracing my slowness. Spring often forces us to hurry, but I'm stopping to smell the roses, literally, and also the Texas Mountain Laurels.

So I won't try to hard-sell you or tell you that you should hurry to make an appointment with me. But I am always here when you need me!

Peach Blooms make promises of fruit! I hope they keep their promises. Did you know I am a fruit tree expert too? If you are interested in orcharding, book an appointment to learn about our fruity friends.

Another Winter Storm Disaster

I’m feeling climate crisis grief today. I made a collage of photos that friends, customers and I took since the ice storm that hit last week. One of the sadder collages I have ever made, I circled broken and bent branches along with wounds where tree branches broke off. The storm started a week ago today on Tuesday with cold rain. Wednesday more and more rain came and coated all of the trees and streets with ice. As hours went by the forecast got worse and worse, much worse than predicted. Very similar, in that aspect, to the Feb 2021 storm. Thousands of households in central Texas lost power including us. We also lost phone and internet for a couple days. Fortunately our power was restored after about 12 hours. Though the temps in our house we uncomfortable they were never dangerous. Many people still don’t have power today, the following Tuesday. By Friday all the ice had melted but the damage was so severe, things were not back to normal. I tried to shop for trees for a customer on Friday, as that was what I had planned for the day and I was eager to get back to normal. Many businesses including nurseries were closed due to power outages and severe damage. Many traffic signals were still out and lanes were blocked by downed trees and power lines. We had to cancel our Horticulturati recording because Leah’s power was out and my internet was still out last Friday. Nonetheless I was able to shop for and deliver all the trees I promised to my customers. Seeing the progress they are making in their yard really cheered me up.

I have heard a few people mention that tree pruning is key to preventing this kind of damage. I guess that is not an untrue statement. But it’s only one factor.

One of the most common trees in Central Texas is the Live Oak. They are semi evergreen so they have leaves during the winter (they fall off in March and then grow back right away). The extra surface area on these trees with the leaves collects more ice. Plus the weight of the leaves contributes to tension in the branches. Much of the tree destruction in the storm was on Live Oak trees. As much as I love live oak trees, they are over planted we need more tree diversity in our urban forest. I have a Bur Oak and Chinqupin oak in my yard and neither sustained any damage, because they have good branching structure and no leaves.

I’ve also seen a lot of damage on elm trees. Elm trees are wonderful natives and a crucial part of our local forests. They are prone to certain structural defects. Pruning can help prevent these trees from falling apart but eventually they’re all going to fall apart. We got half an inch of ice! No amount of pruning can stop trees from collapsing under that weight.

On Monday on my way to my first appointment I was drivin’ and cryin’. I was thinking about how much I love trees, and how much we need their help in the climate crisis. But at the same time the climate crisis is damaging and killing the trees. The trees are some of the best carbon sequesterers (is that a word?) in the plant kingdom, and having them in our cities cushions the impacts of most storms. But when a storm caused by climate change rips apart the trees…it’s depressing. Today we are expecting thunderstorms which will knock down most of the hanging branches left from the ice storm…may make things even worse. We’ll see!

On a happier note the ice storm did not damage any of my smaller plants. The warmer temps and being encased in ice prevented more cold damage. Some of the stuff that was damaged in December is fine after this one.

Got tree damage and questions? If you lost a big tree and need to re-do the landscaping underneath, that is one of my specialties. Make an appointment today before I get booked up in Spring.