Home GardeningGarden Diary Wildflowers while climbing Old Baldy in Wimberley

Wildflowers while climbing Old Baldy in Wimberley

by NORTH CAROLINA DIGITAL NEWS


June 25, 2025

In early June my family met up in Wimberley, Texas, to celebrate Mom’s birthday. One morning we got up early and drove to Old Baldy Park to climb that rocky peak and see what we could see.

Much like Blue Hole, which is another beloved natural area in Wimberley, Old Baldy was saved from potential development by citizen action. Back in 2015, Old Baldy was put up for sale. Fearing public access would be stopped, people in Wimberley banded together with the city to purchase the property and turn it into a city park. Well done, Wimberley folks!

The park is located in a residential neighborhood 2-1/2 miles from downtown Wimberley. Limestone steps — 218 of them — lead you up a half-mile trail to the top. That’s double the number of steps at Austin’s Mount Bonnell, as a frame of reference for my fellow Austinites.

I stopped frequently along the way to admire early-summer wildflowers. Deep-blue widow’s tears, aka dayflower (Commelina erecta), was growing in rubbly limestone, and I couldn’t resist the deep blue of these tenacious flowers.

Stunning color! The weedy patch of widow’s tears growing in my garden, which I can never defeat though I try, is a paler blue and not as beautiful.

The usual suspects — native twistleaf yucca, prickly pear, and cedar (juniper, actually) — thrive on thin limestone soil too.

Natural texture

At the top, I admired a 360-degree view of Wimberley from Old Baldy’s limestone pate. Despite humidity haze, I could see for miles. I’m glad I finally made it to this high point of Central Texas.

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All material © 2025 by Pam Penick for Digging. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.



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