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    Tattered Jeans

    Houston's own secret Garden of Eden: Retired engineer turns an esplanade into a green wonderland

    Katie Oxford
    Aug 4, 2014 | 9:02 am

    Going to the post office has become downright pleasurable. On the way home, I make it a point to turn on Bonnie Brae Boulevard and drive west. The esplanade there, once a turn around place for a train years back, now lays out like a little Garden of Eden. Thanks to Willem Kegge.

    The first time I met Willem, a Dutchman and retired engineer, he was standing in a blanket of marigolds that spread to the curb. I stopped my car. “Are you the gardener of this gorgeous place?” I asked. He beamed. Then, he pointed to his house across the street.

    “Willem can take a broom stick,” Dieter said, “jam it into the ground and it’ll not only grow, it’ll bloom!” Looking around, I believed it.

    Since then, whenever I stop there to appreciate Willem’s work, I’ll run into half a dozen others, passing by to do the same thing. This includes bees, butterflies and birds.

    Recently, I was admiring a bed full of blue dwarf petunias Willem planted when his next-door neighbor walked up. “Willem can take a broom stick,” Dieter said, “jam it into the ground and it’ll not only grow, it’ll bloom!” Looking around, I believed it.

    But, if you ask Willem, he’ll give a lot of the credit to another neighbor, John Andrews, who moved there long before Willem and his wife did two years ago. I haven’t met John yet but, supposedly, folks in the neighborhood call him Johnny Appleseed. John originally planted most of the trees on the esplanade.

    After Willem and his wife moved into their home, Willem started gardening a section of the esplanade. It’s grown in size ever since.

    Today, his neighbors bring him trees, plants, and sometimes money for plant materials. Typically, Willem rescues plants from places that are about to be demolished so he seldom has to purchase any. Moving them, “costs just sweat,” he told me. “I can’t throw good plants away.”

    You’re likely to see Willem rooting around the esplanade almost every morning. “I meet a lot of people stopping by,” he smiled.

    During one of my visits with Willem, an ex-neighbor drove up and stopped his car. “I wish this looked as nice when Shelley and I lived here!” he told Willem.

    For The Love Of Plants

    As Willem and I meandered on through the esplanade, he pointed out a peach tree that puts off sweet and wonderful peaches. His favorite tree, a Japanese Zelkova, makes a nice canopy so that things can grow underneath, he explained.

    If you look closer, you might find other things of interest. My favorites? Three miniature cars that you’d never know were made of concrete unless you picked them up. Willem said that when he put them there, he thought they’d last only a day (meaning, thievery). Maybe, I shouldn’t mention them, I worried. “That’s OK,” Willem said, shrugging his shoulders. “Someone might need them more than me.”

    “The hobby I’m most passionate about is music,” he said. “Of all genres.” Looking down the Bonnie Brae Esplanade you could've fooled me.

    Willem talked about his other hobbies like computers and ancestry.

    “The hobby I’m most passionate about is music,” he said. “Of all genres.”

    Looking down the Bonnie Brae Esplanade, you could’ve fooled me.

    I wondered if Willem had been a gardener all his life.

    “No, I came to gardening thanks to my wife. I learned about it from her,” he said, pausing.

    “When she died last year, our friends wanted to know if they should send flowers or plants.”

    He looked down, opening his hands over two rose bushes planted in her memory.

    “I told them plants of course,” he said.

    If you look closer, you might find other things of interest.

    4. Katie Oxford Willem Kegge garden August 2014 If you look closer, you might find other things of interest
    Photo by Katie Oxford
    If you look closer, you might find other things of interest.
    unspecified
    news/city-life

    h-town tenacity

    Houston punches in as one of 2026's most hardworking American cities

    Amber Heckler
    Feb 25, 2026 | 4:30 pm
    Drone shot of Houston at night
    Photo by Jeswin Thomas on Unsplash
    Houstonians are hard workers.

    Houston and its residents are proving their tenacity as some of the hardest-working Americans in 2026, so says a new study.

    WalletHub's annual "Hardest-Working Cities in America (2026)" report ranked Houston the 37th most hardworking city nationwide. H-town last appeared as the 28th most industrious American city in 2025, but it still remains among the top 50.

    The personal finance website evaluated 116 U.S. cities based on 11 key indicators across "direct" and "indirect" work factors, such as an individual's average workweek hours, average commute times, employment rates, and more.

    The U.S. cities that comprised the top five include Cheyenne, Wyoming (No. 1); Anchorage, Alaska (No. 2); Washington, D.C. (No. 2); Sioux Falls, South Dakota (No. 4); and Irving, Texas (No. 5). Dallas and Austin also earned a spot among the top 10, landing as No. 7 and No. 10, respectively.

    Based on the report's findings, Houston has the No. 31-best "direct work factors" ranking in the nation, which analyzed residents' average workweek hours, employment rates, the share of households where no adults work, the share of workers leaving vacation time unused, the share of "engaged" workers, and the rate of "idle youth" (residents aged 16-24 that are not in school nor have a job).

    However, Houston lagged behind in the "indirect work factors" ranking, landing at No. 77 out of all 116 cities in the report. "Indirect" work factors that were considered include residents' average commute times, the share of workers with multiple jobs, the share of residents who participate in local groups or organizations, annual volunteer hours, and residents' average leisure time spent per day.

    Based on data from The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), WalletHub said the average American employee works hundreds of more hours than workers residing in "several other industrialized nations."

    "The typical American puts in 1,796 hours per year – 179 more than in Japan, 284 more than in the U.K., and 465 more than in Germany," the report's author wrote. "In recent years, the rise of remote work has, in some cases, extended work hours even further."

    WalletHub also tracked the nation's lowest and highest employment rates based on the largest city in each state from 2009 to 2024.

    ranking

    Source: WalletHub

    Other Texas cities that earned spots on the list include Fort Worth (No. 13), Corpus Christi (No. 14), Arlington (No. 15), Plano (No. 17), Laredo (No. 22), Garland (No. 24), El Paso (No. 43), Lubbock (No. 46), and San Antonio (No. 61).

    Data for this study was sourced from the U.S. Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Travel Association, Gallup, Social Science Research Council, and the Corporation for National & Community Service as of January 29, 2026.

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