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You are here: Home / Garden Chats / Sunday Morning Garden Chat: A Change of Seasons in New Mexico

Sunday Morning Garden Chat: A Change of Seasons in New Mexico

by Anne Laurie|  July 6, 20254:21 am| 21 Comments

This post is in: Garden Chats

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Sunday Morning Garden Chat: A Change of Seasons in New Mexico 4

Thank you, BenInNM:

These photos are actually from Spring of 2024!

Primroses – this is from early March. I was feeling down towards the end of February so I went to buy flowers and all I could find were these Primroses, which I do like. Then we got a light snow in March.

Sunday Morning Garden Chat: A Change of Seasons in New Mexico

Cholla – a cholla from the same snowstorm. This and pretty much all the cacti in my yard I grew from cuttings. I just take a branch – about 1 foot long or so – and just stick it in the ground. Water it well for a couple of weeks and then it just goes. This one is about 7 years old.

Sunday Morning Garden Chat: A Change of Seasons in New Mexico 1

Pyracantha – a pyracantha from the same snowstorm. I don’t think these are native to Albuquerque, but they do very well here. This one gets almost no water and it thrives. It also has nasty 1-2″ long thorns so it fits in well on that score too!

Sunday Morning Garden Chat: A Change of Seasons in New Mexico 2

Tulip – my bulbs did poorly this year, but last year I had some very nice tulip, daffodil, hyacinth, and iris blooms.

Sunday Morning Garden Chat: A Change of Seasons in New Mexico 3

Top photo: Irises – as I mentioned my irises did very well. I really should have divided them in the fall so they were a little subdued this year. What’s interesting is they used to be very prolific in the back yard where it was sunnier and now are prolific on what is the north side of the house and not as sunny.

WindowBox – a variety of flowers just outside my back window. I never remember all their names.

Sunday Morning Garden Chat: A Change of Seasons in New Mexico 5

Roses – this rose bush was here when I bought the house in 2011. Its first bloom of the year is always incredibly prolific although this year it, along with a lot of my plants, really suffered over the winter. We had a very dry winter (not unusual) but it was also fairly warm. My personal theory – based on nothing – is that a lot of the plants weren’t as dormant as the usually would be so the drought affected them more.

Sunday Morning Garden Chat: A Change of Seasons in New Mexico 6

Kita – and of course Kita the Sweet during her supervised outside time. Rolling in the dirt so she can bring it all inside!

Sunday Morning Garden Chat: A Change of Seasons in New Mexico 7

Let me know if you have any questions.

***********

What’s going on in your garden(s), this week?

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Reader Interactions

21Comments

  1. 1.

    JPL

    July 6, 2025 at 5:26 am

    Lovely!

  2. 2.

    sab

    July 6, 2025 at 5:35 am

    I moved last year and left my garden behind to my stepson and his partner. She is an avid and competent gardener and is taking good care of my plants.

    In the new house the yard was a wasteland last Fall. I had no idea what promise there was come Spring.

    Daffodils everywhere. Then daylylies. ( Sic? Bad spelling?) Then wild asters with the bees. And  three huge milkweeds. With their bees and butterflies. Neighbor on our property fringe was mowing the hostas, so I moved them in the dead of night and they are thriving.

    I am old so everything else is in containers. I thought I was moving to a wasteland but plants are growing everywhere here. I spend hours a day just watering the little guys.

  3. 3.

    Baud

    July 6, 2025 at 5:37 am

    Wrong thread

  4. 4.

    sab

    July 6, 2025 at 5:38 am

    @Baud: Those Christianists are slimy little partners, aren’t they?

    Fuck you Baud. Tricked me into commenting to wrong thread.

  5. 5.

    Mustang Bobby

    July 6, 2025 at 5:40 am

    When I lived in Albuquerque, we had a small garden in the back of our patio home that included a lot of native plants, but we also had some roses, morning glories and a small palm that endured the cold and occasional snowfall.  Thanks for the lovely reminder of how beautiful the desert can be.

  6. 6.

    sab

    July 6, 2025 at 6:05 am

    @sab: Also neglected roses. Some climbing, others not.

  7. 7.

    sab

    July 6, 2025 at 6:20 am

    Hot day ahead for us olds. Last coat of whatever (sealant/ no color stain) on our deck. Meant to do it yesterday, but it was 91° at 3 and we are old.  Husband thinks 10 am, so hopefully I can start at 9 and be done before he wakes up.

  8. 8.

    sab

    July 6, 2025 at 6:22 am

    Plants have been glorious this year. Hostas and daylilies.

  9. 9.

    sab

    July 6, 2025 at 6:27 am

    Fireworks are mostly over, and the new cats are trusting that we will protect them. So a good year in cat herding.

  10. 10.

    mrmoshpotato

    July 6, 2025 at 7:18 am

    @Baud: Bones!

  11. 11.

    mrmoshpotato

    July 6, 2025 at 7:21 am

    @sab: Hosta la vista and🎵livin’ la vida loca🎵?

  12. 12.

    mrmoshpotato

    July 6, 2025 at 7:26 am

    Mmmmmm A Change Of Seasons

  13. 13.

    Erin

    July 6, 2025 at 7:26 am

    I’m sorry for the off-topic post, but in the last couple of weeks the RSS feed URLs that I’ve been using have stopped working. What is the current working URL for the RSS feed? Thanks!

  14. 14.

    MazeDancer

    July 6, 2025 at 7:34 am

    Yes, you said just stick it in the ground and water, but still impressed at your propagation of cacti.

    When I lived in Santa Fe, it always snowed in April and October. ABQ is lower and further south, so maybe you have March and November on which to rely.

  15. 15.

    stinger

    July 6, 2025 at 7:43 am

    As a Midwesterner, I have to chuckle at the term “snowstorm”, if that’s what’s there the next day!

    Gorgeous iris and windowbox, especially, but all look lovely. Especially Kita the Sweet.

  16. 16.

    BenInNM

    July 6, 2025 at 8:02 am

    @stinger: Yes – I absolutely love the “snow storms” here. There was once we got 8 or 9 inches of snow overnight and it looked so lovely the next morning. Then the sun comes up and 90% of it is gone by 10 am

  17. 17.

    kalakal

    July 6, 2025 at 8:29 am

    Gorgeous. Love those colours

    Still sticking to the pattern of thunderstorms every day here in West Central Fl, normal for summer except in the past they’d normally be done in an hour, now they last for 6

  18. 18.

    MagdaInBlack

    July 6, 2025 at 9:23 am

    Ahhh, the gorgeous purple Iris. And Kita the Sweet as bonus. Thank You.

    Ruby the Giant Geranium, after being cut back this spring, has 15 blossoms. The cuttings I shoved in a pot ‘o’dirt have 5. Even the little Zebra plant has sprung a blossom, as it does once a year. At least some things like the godawful heat we’ve had.

    eta: I have a ground floor neighbor who has a lovely little flower garden in front of her patio. Her Trumpet Vine is looking very very happy. She doesn’t speak much English and I have no Polish, but we somehow manage to communicate about our “gardens.”  =-)

  19. 19.

    Gvg

    July 6, 2025 at 10:33 am

    It’s amazing how much better things look with regular rain. Florida plants do not thrive when it’s dry. Downside is it always looks like I should mow or edge. Summer is heating up and I will mostly be shade gardening for the next few months. Also collecting seeds. The rainlilies love this weather and produce lots of seeds. I meant to quit propagating more as I have many now, but the habit is strong and I love them so. I have 10 trays of seeds started already. Pentas are recovered from the winter freeze and blooming and so are the crinums and salvias.

  20. 20.

    CaseyL

    July 6, 2025 at 11:04 am

    I have a container garden on the big deck off the living room, which faces east and gets a lot of sun (when there is sun to be had; this is Seattle, after all). This year I added tomatoes to my tiny “farm”: two big containers, with starts bought at a local nursery.

    I water everyone regularly. But something weird happened to my tomatoes: alone among my containers they got SOAKED. Not by me, and I don’t see how it could rain and only flood those two pots. Anyway, when I say “soaked,” I mean flooded: standing water up to the brim of both pots. I poured it off, dug some holes in the dirt, and hoped the poor little plants would survive their near-drowning.

    Well, it’s now 3 weeks later. The taller plant, which seemed to recover first and better, has done very little but get taller. The smaller plant, which looked so much worse off, has grown two little tomatoes! I am flabbergasted and happy and keeping a close eye on them.

    To recap: I don’t know how those two pots got flooded, and the one that looked the worse off is the one making fruit. Go figure.

  21. 21.

    A woman from anywhere (formerly Mohagan)

    July 6, 2025 at 3:23 pm

    Those are pansies and pinks (carnation relatives) on your window box. Pretty!

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