Flowering Archives - El Mesteño Ranch and Arboretum https://elmestenoranch.com/category/flora/flowering/ Hidalgo County, Texas Thu, 15 Aug 2024 23:52:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7 https://elmestenoranch.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/cropped-20180808_093253-1-32x32.jpg Flowering Archives - El Mesteño Ranch and Arboretum https://elmestenoranch.com/category/flora/flowering/ 32 32 194751585 “Roemer’s Acacia” by C.M. Rich, Texas Master Naturalist https://elmestenoranch.com/2024/05/_/5909/ Sat, 18 May 2024 19:45:00 +0000 https://elmestenoranch.com/?p=5909 Roemer’s Acacia Senegalia roemeriana “This is a prickly, 3-7 ft., round-topped shrub or, more rarely, a small tree to 20 ft. with spreading branches. Branchlets with scattered straight or recurved prickles. Leaves divided into numerous leaflets 1/2 inch long or less. Fragrant, cream to greenish flowers 3/8 inch wide arising mostly from the axils of the leaves are followed by a narrow, leathery fruit. Fruit a brown to reddish, flat, curved pod up to 4 inches long and 1 1/8 inches broad. Young trunks are covered with smooth bark, becoming scaly with age. Twigs are armed with short, curved

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Roemer’s Acacia

Exquisite blooms…
Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center 
Native Plant Society of Texas

Texas Native Plant Database

Texas Native Plant Database

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“Blooms on the South Texas Sand Sheet,” by C.M. Rich, Texas Master Naturalist https://elmestenoranch.com/2024/05/_/5888/ Sat, 18 May 2024 15:49:44 +0000 https://elmestenoranch.com/?p=5888 Blooms on the South Texas Sand Sheet Want to share this with others? Archives

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Blooms on the South Texas Sand Sheet

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“Loeflingia Squarrosa” by C. M. Rich, Texas Master Naturalist https://elmestenoranch.com/2024/03/_/5823/ Thu, 07 Mar 2024 01:35:30 +0000 https://elmestenoranch.com/?p=5823 Loeflingia squarrosa Spreading Pygymyleaf Family:  Caryophyllaceae (Pink Family) Flower Month:  February – August Bloom Color:  White, Yellow Duration:  Annual Growth Form:  Forb Armed / Unarmed:  Unarmed Leaf Complexity:  Simple Leaf Shape:  Subulate Size Notes: Up to 5” tall Fruit Type:  Capsule Online sources for the information presented in this photo story:

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Loeflingia squarrosa

Spreading Pygymyleaf

Online sources for the information presented in this photo story:

  1. Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center
  2. U. S. Fish & Wildlife Service
  3. United States Geological Survey
  4. Burke Herbarium Image Collection
  5. iNaturalist
Lovely microplant!

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“Where the Water Trough Overflows,” by C. M. Rich https://elmestenoranch.com/2023/05/_/4995/ Sat, 20 May 2023 16:03:22 +0000 https://elmestenoranch.com/?p=4995 Where the water trough overflows, a dirt border is built to contain and hold precious drops of water as it spills out over the top and out onto the South Texas Sand Sheet. Where the water trough overflows, a young Brasil tree’s roots are like anchors, providing excellent erosion control as they dig and cut deep down into the loose, red, sandy soil. Where the water trough overflows, after a fashion, green, native plant material begins to spring up next to sturdier shrubs that have been by the water trough’s

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Many miles walked in that footwear dragging hoses around to water livestock and native plant material.

Where the water trough overflows, a dirt border is built to contain and hold precious drops of water as it spills out over the top and out onto the South Texas Sand Sheet.

Where the water trough overflows, a young Brasil tree’s roots are like anchors, providing excellent erosion control as they dig and cut deep down into the loose, red, sandy soil.

Where the water trough overflows, after a fashion, green, native plant material begins to spring up next to sturdier shrubs that have been by the water trough’s side from years before. 

Where the water trough overflows, Cowpen daisies Tiny Tim, and Three Lobed Florestina grow, thrive, and feed a plethora of pollinators, including an American bumble bee.

Where the water trough overflows, Pipevine Swallow tails float on warm, breezy currents as they dart in and around mature Wild Olive trees sporting fresh, crisp, white blooms and bright green, soft leaves.

Microecosystems spring up and offer native fauna respite from the drought conditions.

Where the water trough overflows, Hummingbirds, Green Jays, Northern Cardinals, Long-billed Thrashers, Pyrrhuloxias, Groove-billed Anis, Northern Bobwhite, Great Kiskadees, and White-winged Doves take refuge in the arms of Lotebush and Colima.

Where the water trough overflows, native plant material provides shade and cover for insects, birds, lizards, and all manner of creeping, crawling, slithering, living things.

Where the water trough overflows, an unexpected, wonderful microecosystem will spring up and sustain life when significant amounts of native habitat have all but dried out to mere sticks and twigs due to lack of precipitation.

An American bumble bee nectaring on Cowpen daisy.

Where the water trough overflows, flora will grow and all manner of fauna will be attracted to it.

A new frog species was discovered in the wet earth where the water trough overflows.

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“How an American bumble bee changed the way I accomplish things,” by Camille M. Rich https://elmestenoranch.com/2023/05/_/4983/ Fri, 19 May 2023 22:11:36 +0000 https://elmestenoranch.com/?p=4983 On one particularly hot, humid Spring Day, back in 2022, before I began working on my chore list at the ranch and arboretum for that day, I took a few moments to glance around at the habitat to see if anything of note stood out that needed to be addressed first.  Although I did not see anything that warranted it be urgently moved to the top of my chore list for that day, one thing was glaringly apparent. There were no blooms on any plant material to speak of. Drought

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On one particularly hot, humid Spring Day, back in 2022, before I began working on my chore list at the ranch and arboretum for that day, I took a few moments to glance around at the habitat to see if anything of note stood out that needed to be addressed first.  Although I did not see anything that warranted it be urgently moved to the top of my chore list for that day, one thing was glaringly apparent. There were no blooms on any plant material to speak of. Drought conditions had negatively affected the entire Tamaulipan Thornscrub habitat, right down to the lack of wildflowers.   As I skimmed and scanned, I was disheartened to note that there were very few native pollinators out and about either.

As a Citizen Scientist and Texas Master Naturalist, the lack of bountiful blooms, and just a handful of native pollinators observed on a quick walking tour that day, was both troubling and problematic. Truthfully, I was horrified and saddened.   I felt an overwhelming need to try and arrive at some sort of solution to the current state of the dry, arid, bloomless habitat on the spot.  However, temperatures rose quickly, and I needed to get to work.  Therefore, I tucked the dilemma away for future contemplation and moved forward with my list of chores.

After almost a full day of work in the hot sun, I was exhausted.   Consequently, I took a moment to stop and enjoy the beautiful clouds that hung effortlessly in the sky for a few minutes so I could catch my breath.  That is about the time I noticed an extremely large black and yellow bee on a Cowpen daisy. A pollinator! I quickly grabbed my cellphone and began recording video of this large, fuzzy bee.  Almost as soon as I began recording the bee, it flew off. I hoped that I had been able to get enough video of the bee to distinguish which native bee it might have been. 

I stepped over into the shade of a Mesquite tree and reviewed the video.  Much to my surprise, the bee I had recorded was an American bumble bee!  I was ecstatic as this was my first American bumble bee sighting on the property.  Additionally, given the fact that just hours before I had observed a mere handful of native pollinators flying, buzzing, and darting around, it lifted my spirits and gave me hope.  I prolonged my rest break and spent a few more minutes trying to figure out why an American bumble bee had visited the property.  Was there something I could learn from this large, fuzzy bee?

After a few minutes of staring at the little green patch of blooming native plant material where I had seen the bee, it occurred to me that the reason the bee was on the Cowpen daisy was because it was one of the few plants that was in bloom at the time. That made perfect sense.   My mind quickly moved on to the question, “Why was the daisy blooming?”  The daisy was blooming, because it had grown up beside the livestock water trough and had access to water that overflowed out of the trough and out onto the soil. 

It was at that precise moment that I had my epiphany: “What if I corralled the water overflowing out of the livestock trough to help increase blooming, native plant material year-round?”  That question was quickly followed by, “How could I corral the water?”  The answer to that question was immediately obvious to me.  After watching my grandparents working in their yard for years, I knew I could install a dirt border around the low spot that had naturally formed beside the livestock water trough.  That was simple enough, and totally doable.  All I needed was my shovel and time dedicated to both creating and maintaining the dirt border.  I immediately got back to work and took my shovel and created a dirt border around the edge of a single livestock water trough.

Things have not been the same since I began corralling “overflow” water in 2022. I am happy to report that areas around numerous livestock water troughs are now sporting dirt borders of their own and boasting lush areas of native plant material loaded with blooms.  All manner of pollinators, as well as other wildlife, have also come to rely on these small microecosystems, if you will, for their food, shelter, and nesting material.  That single, solitary American bumble bee gets all the credit for flying into my life and getting my attention, causing me to ponder and extend my thinking to methods that I could find and utilize to increase thriving, blooming, native plant material for pollinators that involved minimal cost and minimal labor. 

In closing, I must share the latest, extraordinary chapter in this story.  On a hot, humid spring day this year, I observed and documented another single, solitary American bumble bee visiting a Cowpen daisy not ten (10) feet from the exact spot where I spotted an American bumble bee visiting a Cowpen daisy on that fateful hot, humid day back in the Spring of 2022.  Pretty cool, right?

Microecosystem of various native plant material in the area surrounding this livestock water trough.
Where the water trough overflows…..

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The Scarlet Musk Flower https://elmestenoranch.com/2023/05/_/4970/ Thu, 18 May 2023 03:30:46 +0000 https://elmestenoranch.com/?p=4970 The indescribable beauty of the Scarlet Musk Flower is best illustrated with a picture.  This picture was snapped on a somewhat cloudy day in Starr County while I was out and about on a driving tour of the countryside.  Recent, ample rains had helped native flora spring forth with renewed vitality, luster, and brilliance.  Sharp pops of bloom colors, ranging from blues, purples, yellows, creams, and whites, just to name a few, were generously scattered and strewn up and down the lone gravelly road that my vehicle crept along for

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The indescribable beauty of the Scarlet Musk Flower is best illustrated with a picture.  This picture was snapped on a somewhat cloudy day in Starr County while I was out and about on a driving tour of the countryside.  Recent, ample rains had helped native flora spring forth with renewed vitality, luster, and brilliance.  Sharp pops of bloom colors, ranging from blues, purples, yellows, creams, and whites, just to name a few, were generously scattered and strewn up and down the lone gravelly road that my vehicle crept along for as far as my eye could see.   

At a certain point in my driving tour, I parked my vehicle, and got out to walk amongst the many low-growing, blooming, wildflowers so that I could get a closer look at each of them.  I treaded as lightly as I could to avoid crushing any flowers underfoot as I continued to meander through the blooms. Soon, I spied a plant sporting something bright red.  Could this be a red bloom?  Whatever this plant was, it towered at least four (4) to five (5) inches above its plant neighbors.  I picked up my pace and soon I arrived at this breathtaking Scarlet Musk Flower.  (Nyctaginia capitata) This flower was mesmerizing, gorgeous, exquisite, and delicate.   It was hard for me to move forward on the path after gazing upon its beauty.    

As soon as I got home, I had to consult a few of my go-to plant books for more information on this member of the Nyctaginaceae family. This plant also goes by the name Devil’s Bouquet.  It is a perennial that grows from a tuberous root, can grow up to heights of sixteen (16) inches, and is an excellent nectar plant for butterflies.  Geographically speaking, this plant is “widespread from Cameron County north through Edwards Plateau, west throughout Chihuahuan Desert.  Grasslands, fields, prairies, open desert scrub, roadsides, and other open areas.  Summer, fall.  Common.” *

*“Wildflowers of Texas,” by Michael Eason.  Timber Press Field Guide.  Timber Press, Inc.  Portland, Oregon.  2018

Additional source of plant information:

“Plants of Deep South Texas,” by Alfred Richardson & Ken King.  Texas A & M University Press.  College Station, Texas.  2011.

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Tulipán Del Monte ~ Heart Leaf Hibiscus https://elmestenoranch.com/2022/11/_/4438/ Sat, 19 Nov 2022 14:55:17 +0000 https://elmestenoranch.com/?p=4438 Tulipán Del Monte, also referred to as the Heart Leaf Hibiscus, is a strikingly beautiful plant native to the Rio Grande Valley. Noted as being found in Cameron, Hidalgo, Willacy, and Starr counties, it naturally grows among woodier shrubs and can be difficult to locate unless it is in bloom and its gorgeous, velvet-like petals are unfurled and on display for all to see.  After years of trying to grow this beauty from seed, I gave up.  Much to my pleasant surprise, it came up years later in a pot

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Tulipán Del Monte, also referred to as the Heart Leaf Hibiscus, is a strikingly beautiful plant native to the Rio Grande Valley. Noted as being found in Cameron, Hidalgo, Willacy, and Starr counties, it naturally grows among woodier shrubs and can be difficult to locate unless it is in bloom and its gorgeous, velvet-like petals are unfurled and on display for all to see. 

After years of trying to grow this beauty from seed, I gave up.  Much to my pleasant surprise, it came up years later in a pot filled with recycled potting soil, native seeds from some species that, now, escapes memory, and mulch from previous native seed-starting attempts.  This flower’s beauty never fails to take my breath away as I marvel at its striking color and am mesmerized and dazzled by the visually fascinating intricacies of its overall structure.  I hope that this image will bring a smile to your face and brighten your day!

If you would like to learn more about this beauty, you can find additional, detailed information in the following two (2) books that I absolutely cannot be without:

Plants of Deep South Texas:  A Field Guide to the Woody and Flowering Species,” by Alfred Richardson and Ken King.  Texas A & M University Press.  College Station, Texas.  2011.

Wildflowers of Texas,” by Michael Eason.  Timber Press, Inc.  Portland, Oregon.  2018.

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Organ Pipe Cactus or Pitahya (Stenocereus thurberi) https://elmestenoranch.com/2020/05/_/1638/ Sun, 24 May 2020 20:09:31 +0000 https://elmestenoranch.com/?p=1638 This wonderful cactus is native to both the United States and Mexico. It’s a great source of nectar for a multitude of bugs and pollinators. Check out the Gallery for a few more photos!

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This wonderful cactus is native to both the United States and Mexico. It’s a great source of nectar for a multitude of bugs and pollinators.

Check out the Gallery for a few more photos!

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Blooms on the Sandsheet… https://elmestenoranch.com/2020/02/_/1512/ Tue, 11 Feb 2020 01:26:23 +0000 https://elmestenoranch.com/?p=1512 One of my first ranch chores before I do much else is to crank up the Kawasaki Mule 4 x 4 and go check the fence line. A lot can happen in a day much less in a week. Call this “perimeter check” an old habit that harkens back to the days when a couple of head of cattle and several horses roamed a much larger spread than what I now currently traverse at El Mesteño. What I am looking for? Anything, really…. However, some of the things that I

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One of my first ranch chores before I do much else is to crank up the Kawasaki Mule 4 x 4 and go check the fence line. A lot can happen in a day much less in a week. Call this “perimeter check” an old habit that harkens back to the days when a couple of head of cattle and several horses roamed a much larger spread than what I now currently traverse at El Mesteño. What I am looking for? Anything, really…. However, some of the things that I am looking for are holes in the fencing, signs of trespassers or travelers (sagging fencing), burrows created by critters under the fencing between my place and neighboring properties, broken strands of old barb wire, feathers, fur, a piece of glinty gum wrapper that is out of place, pull tabs from gallon water jugs, snare traps, and tracks—human, animal, heavy equipment, and vehicle,—just to name a few.

On this particular day, however, something other than any of those aforementioned things caught my eye! It was a scraggly, short little Black Brush (Acacia rigidula) sporting a lovely corsage of creamy, white blooms gently swaying back and forth in the light breeze. It was only about three (3) feet tall, but, foot for foot, it was one of the flashiest things on the place just now! Wow! Has Spring sprung early, is it going to rain, or both?

As I continued on my merry, fence-checking way, I decided to head over and visit the “Belle of the Ball” (Huisachillo Acacia schaffneri) and see if she might be blooming. She was! Hardly a leaf on her spring sundress, yet tiny, delicate, yellow puffs of fragrant blooms were already bursting forth to adorn her bare branches! The color! The perfume! Her spring sundress will eventually be covered with fine, delicate greenery comprised of alternate, twice compound, very narrow leaflets and even more yellow puffs (radial, globose clusters about 3/8″ broad) which will become THE MOST FRAGRANTLY FANTASTIC sundress you will ever both see AND smell.

POPS OF COLOR HERE AND THERE…..

Even the Spanish Dagger, or Palma Pita, (Yucca treculeana), in all of its majestic glory, has been standing at attention, as if guarding the ranch cabin, adorned with lovely flowers that resemble a magnificent, billowy, ivory plume—both greeting and entertaining pollinating visitors at dusk—for the last couple of weeks.

Fishhook Cactus Echinocactus scheeri
Black Brush (Acacia rigidula)

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Texas Rain Lily https://elmestenoranch.com/2019/10/_/1470/ Wed, 30 Oct 2019 04:06:07 +0000 http://elmestenoranch.com/?p=1470 Click to see it in bloom! Cooperia pedunculata

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Click to see it in bloom!

Cooperia pedunculata

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