Wildflowers Archives - El Mesteño Ranch and Arboretum https://elmestenoranch.com/category/wildflowers/ Hidalgo County, Texas Tue, 08 Oct 2024 14:31:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://elmestenoranch.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/cropped-20180808_093253-1-32x32.jpg Wildflowers Archives - El Mesteño Ranch and Arboretum https://elmestenoranch.com/category/wildflowers/ 32 32 194751585 “Mesoxaea texana nectaring on Waltheria indica on the South Texas Sand Sheet!” https://elmestenoranch.com/2024/09/_/6117/ Mon, 02 Sep 2024 03:38:17 +0000 https://elmestenoranch.com/?p=6117 by C. M. Rich, Texas Master Naturalist

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by C. M. Rich, Texas Master Naturalist

He’s BACK!!!!!
A “hovering” display….
A green-eyed male Mesoxaea texana is a repeat visitor to the South Texas Sand Sheet!
This rare, ground nesting bee has earned a few terms of endearment: “MT” and “El Guapo!”

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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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The Purple Pleat Leaf https://elmestenoranch.com/2020/06/_/1671/ Tue, 16 Jun 2020 16:38:42 +0000 https://elmestenoranch.com/?p=1671 What a vision of loveliness lay before me as I rounded the corner the other day in the Kawasaki Mule 4 X 4 on a routine “fenceline check.”  There she was!   Had I not glanced back a second time,  I would most surely have missed her—the Purple Pleat Leaf!  Almost as soon as I spotted her, after searching for the last fifteen years (15) years for any sign of her continued presence on El Mesteño, I began to doubt what my very own eyes beheld.  It was, indeed, the Purple

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SHOWSTOPPER in the Sand Sheet!
Family:  Iridaceae

What a vision of loveliness lay before me as I rounded the corner the other day in the Kawasaki Mule 4 X 4 on a routine “fenceline check.”  There she was!   Had I not glanced back a second time,  I would most surely have missed her—the Purple Pleat Leaf!  Almost as soon as I spotted her, after searching for the last fifteen years (15) years for any sign of her continued presence on El Mesteño, I began to doubt what my very own eyes beheld.  It was, indeed, the Purple Pleat Leaf.  What a beauty!

In the heat with the glaring midday South Texas sun beating down upon us both, I knelt down in the red, sandy soil to get a better look at her.  Using my hat to block the bright sunlight, I attempted to snap a few pictures with my cellphone that would be worthy of showing the world how intricately and exquisitely designed this perennial native wildflower truly is.  Even though I have been looking for her return for years, it turns out that she is a common occurrence in the Sand Sheet and other parts of Texas.

In Plants of Deep South Texas, by Alfred Richardson and Ken King, page 40, the Purple Pleat Leaf (Alophia drummondii), “is a plant of sandy soils.  This species was named in honor of Thomas Drummond, from Scotland, who made extensive collections of plants in Central Texas in the 1830’s.”

In Wildflowers of Texas by Michael Eason, page 433, the common names for this flower are listed as, “Purple pleat-leaf, propeller flower, prairie iris.”  Their habitat is listed as, “Fields, meadows, grasslands, roadsides.”  Their bloom time is listed as, “Spring, summer.”  Their occurrence is listed as “common.”  Their location range is given as, “Found in South Texas and eastern third of state.”

In A Photographic Guide to the Vegetation of the South Texas Sand Sheet, by Dexter Peacock and Forrest S. Smith, page 62, this plant is also called a “Purple Nymph.”  Additionally, the guide states, “This flower has many names, and it is one of the most striking wildflowers in the Sand Sheet.  It blooms throughout the year following rain.”

The moment of discovery…… Delight! Joy! Happiness!

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