Monday, May 10, 2021

Landscape Ideas: 10 Problem-Solving Plants - Gardenista Daily - 05/11/2021

0 comments
 
 
 
 

Gardening 101

Firms

Inspiration

Shop

Travel

Our Story

Remodelista

 

In Today's Gardenista Daily

Stay current with the latest posts from Gardenista each day – in their entirety.

 

Landscape Ideas: 10 Problem-Solving Plants

 
 

This edition of the newsletter sponsored by:

image
 
 

Landscape Ideas: 10 Problem-Solving Plants

 
 

Every gardener has a problem. Yours may be a deep pool of shade where nothing blooms. Or a slope that washes away after every heavy rain. Or an old oak tree with roots that have spread, like varicose veins. Mine is deer.

At night, I lie awake and imagine I hear incessant chomping. After they finish off the roses, what will the deer do next—send out for pizza?

"I'm a little obsessed," I admitted to Kathleen Brenzel, the editor of The New Sunset Western Garden Book, the encyclopedic ninth edition of a guide that gardeners in the western United States have revered since its earliest incarnation as a pamphlet, in 1932.

"If deer are eating everything you own, try something they don't like," Brenzel said. "There are some suggestions in the book."

So there are. In fact, in addition to a list of nearly 250 plants deer dislike to eat, Sunset's 768-page edition devotes a full 30 pages to plants that solve a variety of specific problems in the garden. They're not the latest hybrids, but rather basic plants that are useful in temperate climates to both novices (who may find them new) and to experienced gardeners (who may be happy for any distraction from that insatiable chomping sound). Here are some old friends Sunset recommends.

Magnolias

Magnolia bud by Britt Willoughby Dyer Above: Photograph by Britt Willoughby Dyer.

Thwart the deer. It is a truly bizarre thing about deer that they shy from eating magnolias, because the buds on Magnolia x. soulangeana look delicious even to me.

Lady's Mantle

Lady's Mantle alchemilla by Melanie Shaw via Flickr Above: Photograph by Melanie Shaw via Flickr.

Brighten a shady spot. Alchemilla has a nice lobed leaf, forms compact mounds, and sends out stalks of yellow blooms that are "attractive as a frothy mass," according to Sunset.

Hostas

hosta purple flowers by Gary Lerude via Flickr Above: Photograph by Gary Lerude via Flickr.

Cover a shady corner without spending a fortune. Clumps of Hosta will send up spikes of flowers each summer and spread quickly; split the roots with a sharp spade to double the coverage.

Shrub Roses

Rosa Molineux shrub rose David Austin Above: Anchor a flower bed with a rose that blooms all summer.

Other flowers come and go; a shrub like Rosa 'Molineux' has a long blooming season and is disease-resistant; $27.95 at David Austin Roses.

Heliotrope

heliotrope by carl lewis via Flickr Above: Photograph by Carl Lewis via Flickr.

Avoid costly annuals with a perfumed perennial. Although a mature Heliotropium arborescens may achieve a height of 4 feet, according to Sunset, heliotrope's greatest value is as a fragrant bedding plant.

Boxwood

Boxwood via Sunset. Above: Block the neighbors. Or create structure amid the chaos. Photograph courtesy of Sunset.

Even if the rest of your garden has clumps of everything you love plopped willy-nilly in the dirt next to each other, a boxwood hedge will lend an instant air of order and propriety.

Snowberry

snowberry by old blue crow Photograph courtesy of Old Blue Crow.

Above: Stop erosion on a slope. Snowberry will grow happily on a steep hillside and will flower in spring or early summer.

Cranesbill

Johnson's Blue geranium via Sunset Above: Photograph courtesy of Sunset.

Consider a ground cover that won't gobble up space. Such cranesbills as Johnson's Blue will spread via rhizomes through the garden, but always politely.

Periwinkle

Vinca minor periwinkle via Sunset Above: Photograph courtesy of Sunset.

Cover a bare spot under a tree. Periwinkle will thrive where lesser ground covers fail. Don't waste it on a sunny spot; turn it loose in shade under that old oak in the corner of the backyard. As a ground cover, Vinca minor is typically sold in bulk.

Privets

privet berries by Judith Doyle via Flickr. Above: Photograph by Judith Doyle via Flickr.

Withstand wind. Privet doesn't get enough credit. Although often dismissed as a common hedge shrub, it also deserves credit for its ability to protect more tender garden plants from being damaged by high winds.

Above: The ninth edition of Sunset's guide, The New Sunset Western Garden Book is the first to feature color photos of thousands of plants. Photograph by Julie Carlson.

For more plants to solve problems in the garden, see:

N.B.: This is an update of a post originally published March 28, 2012.

 

Forward to friend

Share on Twitter

Share on Facebook

 
 
 
 

This edition of the newsletter sponsored by:

image
 

View email in your browser

Forward to a friend

 

Subscribe to a Remodelista or Gardenista Newsletter

Update your email profile

 

You have opted to receive this email, but you can always Unsubscribe.

 

Remodelista, The Organized Home & Gardenista are part of Remodelista, LLC

 
                                                           

Gardenista's Daily Digest from 05/11/2021

0 comments
 
 
 
 

Gardening 101

Firms

Inspiration

Shop

Travel

Our Story

Remodelista

 

In Today's Gardenista Daily Digest

Stay current with the latest posts from Gardenista each day. Click on a headline or photo below to read the whole story.

 

Landscape Ideas: 10 Problem-Solving Plants

 
 

This edition of the newsletter sponsored by:

image
 

View email in your browser

Forward to a friend

 

Subscribe to a Remodelista or Gardenista Newsletter

Update your email profile

 

You have opted to receive this email, but you can always Unsubscribe.

 

Remodelista, The Organized Home & Gardenista are part of Remodelista, LLC