Rewilding My Lot

Converting a new developer lot into a nature ecosystem — my journey


Plants That Thrived After Ten Days Of 100-Degree Texas Heat With No Rain And No Watering

Native plants tend to put down deep roots and can tolerate drought conditions well. After a 10-day July vacation during which time the garden got no rain or watering, I was interested to see how the plants here would fare in the blistering heat. Almost all of the native plants that had been planted this spring looked just fine and some of them thrived beyond my expectations.

These were the happiest:

Desert Willow tree
Desert Willow tree
Not only did the tree put out new leaves, it also decided to produce some buds even though the usual blooming season has passed.

Huisache tree
Huisache tree
This is a strong and feisty tree and I expected it to do well. Even so, I was impressed by the several inches added to lower branches. (Look how brown and crispy the Bermudagrass is behind it.)

Frogfruit
Frogfruit
This spreading ground cover increased its reach by several inches, and the flowers were being visited by a variety of tiny butterflies.

Scarlet Sage
Scarlet Sage
There are two of these plants in front of the house (replacing “non-useful” plants that the builder installed), and they continued to stand strong and produce flowers. There are already some offspring plants from earlier dropped seeds, and they also did well.

Texas Barometer Bush
Texas Barometer Bush
This hasn’t flowered yet but it has grown several inches.

Young native grass seedlings
Native Grasses
Several native grasses have been planted here. I don’t know yet which these are (I seeded a mixture of three in this area), but they remained green while the builder-laid Bermudagrass turf turned brown.


4 responses to “Plants That Thrived After Ten Days Of 100-Degree Texas Heat With No Rain And No Watering”

  1. Meredith Clarage Avatar
    Meredith Clarage

    Very interesting! How long ago were these survivors planted?

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    1. March to May this year. I won’t be planting anything more over the summer — it’s just too hot to get things established well.

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  2. Meredith Clarage Avatar
    Meredith Clarage

    It’s almost miraculous how they could get established so quickly to be prepared for the extremes of this summer!

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    1. I was impressed too. The heat and lack of rain here are brutal!

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About Me

Nature Lover.
Inquisitive Observer.
Student Gardener.

I invite you to join me on my journey to convert my sterile (from a nature point of view) new house lot to a healthy and diverse ecosystem, as I make discoveries, mistakes, and hopefully progress. I am not an expert or professional. The project started in February 2023 and the location is Seguin, Texas, USA.