San Antonio Express-News

The plants doing their part to color our world

- Calvin Finch Calvin Finch is a retired Texas A&M horticultu­rist. calvinrfin­ch@gmail.com

In a normal year, more blooming and other plants would be providing color than what we are seeing so far this year. The plants that are doing their part contributi­ng to the 12 months of color that most gardeners desire include Texas mountain laurel, redbud, peaches, pansies, violas and dianthus.

The Texas mountain laurel is a favorite full-sun landscape plant in the San Antonio area, and despite the exceptiona­l freezes and low rainfall over the last three years, the blooms are well spread on Texas mountain laurels. The individual blooms don’t seem to be as large as usual, but their purple color and grape Kool-aid fragrance are noticeable.

Another of the early bloomers, redbud, has started to bloom along with the Texas mountain laurel. It is less clear, however, how the pinkflower­ed tree will respond to the freeze experience­s.

The Texas and Oklahoma versions of the species fare better in the heat than the Eastern selection, but all three are planted in San Antonio landscapes. Although I suspect the Eastern selection is more sensitive to cold, just as it is to heat, we will have to see how they perform over the next few weeks.

One of the tree species that is responding positively to the cold weather — temperatur­es between 32 and 45 degrees — are peach trees and some of the other fruit species. Most peach and other fruit trees require a varying amount of chill hours for their chemistry to reload and their flowers to bloom in the spring.

A number of the low chill fruit varieties are blooming right now, including one of

our area’s gardeners’ favorites, Florida King. A second selection, Red Baron, will soon start blooming if the cold weather continues. Red Baron produces a spectacula­r, longer-lasting bloom.

Another winter blooming plant, snapdragon, is beginning its second phase of blooming as we move further into the winter. Snapdragon­s experience this bloom pause most years. Based on the fast recovery that the foliage has made after being subjected to the Christmas week freeze and the restart of blooming, this favorite flower for flower beds and cut flowers has a wide range of cold temperatur­es that don’t seem to disrupt its normal bloom pattern.

Pansies are traditiona­lly the most reliable blooming plant in our winter gardens. The Christmas week freezes were severe, but most pansies were able to maintain most of their

blooms. Gardens in full and partial sun have maintained white, purple, yellow and orange flowers with both clear and dark centers. Retail nurseries continue to offer transplant­s

in bloom with the expectatio­n they will continue blooming until early May.

Violas are closely related to pansies and are one of the favorite winter flowers for color in small containers. They offer even more color versions than pansies, and along with pansies, they are being used to fill gaps in plantings of other winter color that did not survive the freezes.

In addition to Texas mountain laurel, fragrance is being provided in many flower plantings by dianthus. Other gardeners and I planted dianthus this fall because it stimulated so much response from monarchs and other butterflie­s seeking a nectar source. It, of course, is a nectar source that survived the freeze experience much more than blue mist, zinnias, porter weed, salvias, lantana and other nectar sources.

 ?? Wolfgang Kaehler/lightrocke­t/getty Images ?? Reliable pansies are bringing shades of white, purple, yellow and orange to winter gardens.
Wolfgang Kaehler/lightrocke­t/getty Images Reliable pansies are bringing shades of white, purple, yellow and orange to winter gardens.
 ?? Getty Images ?? The freezing conditions this season so far aren’t subduing the pink blossoms of redbud trees.
Getty Images The freezing conditions this season so far aren’t subduing the pink blossoms of redbud trees.
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