The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center in Austin always gets great reviews as a fun and educational place to spend an afternoon enjoying nature. With free admission for the month of January, it seemed like it’d be a good way to spend my day off, so I drove down to La Crosse Avenue to check it out. I was looking forward to seeing some pretty flowers, snapping some photos, and maybe even composing a few lines of poetry, à la Montrealer Angela Leuck’s A Poet in the Garden (Leuck posts poetry that she writes in the Montreal Botanical Garden throughout the warm months of the year, often bringing special “guest poets” along for the ride).
Unfortunately, I must say that my trip to the Wildflower Center was a disappointment, as there didn’t seem to be much of anything blooming. There were a few tiny flowers hidden here and there amongst the tall grasses that threatened to swallow the place whole, and the hardy yucca and cacti were doing their thing, but for the most part it was obviously winter at the garden.
I was bummed, as I was looking forward to some pleasant scenery and peaceful contemplation, but instead all I saw were hibernating trees and overheard the unmusical sounds of children screaming. (There was, however, a very nice windchime, which offset some of the screaming with its Zen musicality. That was the best part of the experience.)
While my trip was a disappointment, I wouldn’t entirely write this place off, as reports are that wildflower season in the spring (April-May) is simply spectacular at the Lady Bird Center. I checked for photos online when I returned home, and here’s just a handful of the examples that I came up with:
Awesome, right? And that doesn’t even include the vast tracts of land which are currently barren, but which are supposedly filled with flowers as far as the eye can see in the spring and summer months!
So, it looks like I picked the wrong time to hit up Lady Bird, but I’m planning to return in the spring to see the Texas high country in full bloom as promised. For now, I’ll leave you with this lovely photo as an image of what you and I can (and will!) eventually be able to do to the LBJ flowers once they finally bloom in the spring, and a promise of more (and better) plant-related updates to come.
The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center is open Tuesday through Saturday, from 9 AM to 5:30 PM, and noon to 5:30 PM on Sundays. They are closed Mondays. Admission is free throughout the month of January, and is otherwise $7 for adults, $6 for seniors 60+ and students 13+, and $3 for children ages 5-12.







