KTRH GardenLine Newsletter
June 23, 2011 - Issue #217
Here's Randy's Weekly KTRH GardenLine Tip:

Dessert Willow - This plant grows up to 40 feet high and 25 feet wide. It's like a small tree or a large shrub. The willow-like, light-green leaves grow on branches off the twisting trunk. The narrow leaves reach up to 12 inches long. Its fragrant, funnel-shaped flowers reach up to 1.5 inches long in shades of dark-pink or purple with yellow, white or purple streaks in the throat. The blooms appear after summer rains and continue to bloom sporadically into fall. Once the flowers fade, greenish-brown seed pods appear, growing up to 10 inches.

Gulf Coast Muhly (and other ornamental grasses) - A clumping grass with very fine foliage, native to Houston and the surrounding areas, Gulf Coast Muhly is a showstopper in the fall with an absolute cloud of pink flowers! It makes a great border specimen and is spectacular in mass plantings. It's also a great grass for coastal gardens, averaging 2 feet tall. Planted in moist but well drained soil, it's drought-tolerant once established.

Cannas - These tropical bulbs come in too many varieties to name, but there are enough sizes and colors to fit almost any need or desire. They naturalize easily, multiplying through bulb creation and seeds. Ideally, you should plant several varieties to ensure that you get an extremely long bloom season and flower production from mid-spring right up until the first sub-40s hit. Much like my Esperanza, they were knocked way back by the last two freezes, but always come back from their bulbs below ground.

Mexican Flame Vine - This twining, evergreen, sprawling vine has four-inch-long, coarsely toothed, dark-green leaves and terminal clusters of one-inch orange-red, daisy-like flowers with golden centers. Although it appears throughout the year, peak periods of bloom are spring and summer. The quick growth of Mexican flame vine is ideal to add interest to palm trunks, to soften fences, or to veil a trellis. Occasional heading helps some foliage and flowers at the bottom of a fence or other structure supporting the vine. Left unpruned, foliage and flowers accumulate at the top.
Firebush - The groupings of tubular red flowers appear like an explosion or burst of flame. This short shrub takes in the heat and direct sun like few plants can. It is another tender perennial, unfortunately, but it is a fantastic summer survivor that likes to show off its prolific blooms at the peak of the summer.
Firecracker Plant - With flowers similar to the firebush mentioned above, firecracker plant is a perfect complement to any summertime garden or landscape. This tender perennial or sub-shrub has interesting, dense foliage, and you can enjoy its blooms from late spring right up until the first frost.
Several dense, many-flowered, spike-like inflorescences are formed from a cluster of plants during spring. The inflorescence lengthens as the flowers open and can become over two feet tall. The bright yellow flowers are star-shaped with bearded stamens and mature from the bottom of the inflorescence, with about 10 flowers open at a time. The stalks of the old flowers and fruit are straight and project at almost right angles from the central axis of the inflorescence. Mature fruits are black and often covered with the faded perianth (flower petals) persisting as a cap.