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Archive for October, 2009

Perfect for Pots

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

For some of us gardening in pots or containers is a necessity.  If you live in an apartment or condo with only a balcony, you are probably delighted to be able to grow ornamentals, vegetables or both in pots.  Or, maybe you’re like me and you can’t resist trying the latest and greatest plant you fell in love with at the nursery but don’t really have a spot for in your garden.  Whatever your reason is for pot gardening, there are unlimited choices of what you can grow in containers including dwarf conifers, trees, shrubs, perennials, annuals and bulbs.

Yucca aloifolia Purpurea Heuchera Caramel Graptopetalum

Yucca aloifolia 'Purpurea' Heuchera 'Caramel' Graptopetalum

If the containers you planted up with summer color are beginning  to fade, now is the perfect time to refurbish them by adding seasonal color like pansies or violas (I’m growing Peach Sorbet from the Sorbet series  this year)   parsley, snapdragons and ornamental cabbages and kale.  You can also plant spring flowering bulbs in decorative pots and over plant them with these same winter annuals, which will make for a fantastic display next spring.  A single specimen like a Japanese maple, Harry Lauder’s walking stick, Corylus avellana ‘Contorta,’  dwarf conifer or a weeping tree will provide color and interest in every season.  In winter berried shrubs like deciduous hollies lift our spirits even on gray days.

A group of containers makes an effective display but even one potted garden that includes perennials, annuals and woody plants can make a big impact.  Containers can be used to enhance an entrance, brighten an area of your garden that needs color or grouped together to create garden scenes.

Chamaecyparis x 'Spirited,' Magnolia virginiana 'Sweet Thing,' and Nandina 'Filamentosa'

Chamaecyparis x 'Spirited,' Magnolia virginiana 'Sweet Thing,' and Nandina 'Filamentosa'

When I visited GardenHood last week (newly opened nursery in the Grant Park neighborhood of Atlanta)  I was inspired by some of the combinations they put together including a pot with the succulent Graptopetalum,  Heuchera ‘Caramel,’  Heuchera villosa ‘Autumn Bride,’ Euphorbia ‘Rudolph,’  a hardy red bottlebrush called Callisetemon ‘Woodlanders Hardy,’  Juncus ‘Occidental Blue’ and Yucca aloifolia ‘Purpurea.’  The combination of colors and textures promises to please for months.  Another container featured dark foliage and flowers with Euphorbia ‘Blackbird,’ bronze fennel, black mondo, Heuchera ‘Mocha’  and Heucherella ‘Alabama Sunrise.’

Recently I was talking about plants for pots with  Dianna of Scottsdale Farms Nursery in Alpharetta, GA  and she likes the teddy bear arborvitae  Thuja occidentalis ‘Teddy’ for containers.  It has blue-green foliage and is so soft looking, “you just want to pet it.”

Cryptomeria japonica 'Little Diamond'

Cryptomeria japonica 'Little Diamond'

I am not a big fan of Nandina’s but the thread-leaf  Nandina domestica ‘Filamentosa’ with its deep cut lacy foliage looks like a fern and is also perfect for growing in a pot.    Boxwoods are ideal for container culture and there are many choices including the littleleaf types like Buxus microphylla ‘Golden Dream’ which has bright green leaves edged with a golden border.

Succulents provide bold architecture and many are happy growing in containers.    I grow a few agaves but would like to try some more and plan to grow them in pots.

Beyond beauty, gardening in containers makes it easy to adjust the soil according to the needs of the plants you’re growing.  And, you can move pots as needed to make sure they receive the proper amount of light.  If a plant dies, you can replace it with something else.  Gardening in containers gives me an opportunity to try more plants and combinations that I might not otherwise grow.

Erica’s Pick

Little Diamond  Japanese Cedar

Botanical name: Cryptomeria japonica ‘Little Diamond’

About the plant: This tidy looking evergreen conifer has soft bright green  foliage.  Selected in Holland it is reported to grow only 2’ tall and 3’ wide in ten years.

Use in the garden:  This dwarf conifer is perfect for pots or planted in a group to mark an entrance.  You can also include it in the perennial border to provide evergreen color throughout the year.

Planting and care: Plant ‘Little Diamond’ in full sun or part shade in a moist, well-drained soil.

Source: GardenHood, 353 Boulevard SE, Atlanta, GA 30312

404-880-9848, www.gardenhoodatlanta.com

Fall Lecture at Macon State College

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

There’s still time to register for my lecture: Designing A Garden For Four Seasons at Macon State College on Friday, October 30, 2009.  For more information visit www.maconstate.edu/continuinged

Fall

Fall

Saturday, Oct. 24 – Your personal plant shopper

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

On Saturday, October 24 at Ashe-Simpson Garden Center, 4961 Peachtree Industrial Blvd, Atlanta, GA 30341 join me and other garden lovers, we will help you shop.  I will be there from 10am until 12 noon but the event lasts until 3pm.  Fall is for planting and they will have a large assortment of perennials, shrubs, trees and conifers.  Free!!! Call 770-458-3224 for more info.  

Container garden for year around color

Container garden for year around color

Designing a Garden for Four Seasons

Monday, October 19th, 2009

On Friday, October 30, at 7pm I will present an illustrated lecture titled: Designing a Garden for Four Seasons,  for more information  Cost is $20 for those who register by October 1. After that, cost is $25 per person. Register online at www.maconstate.edu/continuinged/, or call Macon State’s Continuing Education Department at (478) 471-2770.

Fall is For Planting

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

It’s mid-October and color in my garden comes in shades of peachy apricot, lavender and rose from Rosa ‘Perle d’Or,’ single apricot chrysanthemums, lavender asters and the faded flower heads of Hydrangea paniculata ‘Tardiva.’  Still to come is the show that Amsonia hubrichtii puts on when its mass of willowy foliage turns brilliant yellow and  the Japanese maple Acer palmatum ‘Sangu Kaku’ whose leaves  turn yellow before they drop off  to reveal red stems and a red  trunk.

Osmanthus fragrans aurantiacus

Osmanthus fragrans aurantiacus

The Southern autumn garden offers an abundance of interesting plants, including those with fabulous flowers, striking foliage and colorful fruits.  And, let’s not forget our extended growing season.  Fall with its cooler temperatures (and this year plenty of moisture) offers the ideal time to add plants to our gardens.  This includes winter vegetables, shrubs, trees, perennials, bulbs and cool season annuals like pansies and violas.    I have already planted some Peach Frost Sorbet violas with wonderful pastel colors and this weekend I  will add  Darwin Hybrid red tulips called ‘Comeback’ which Brent Heath of Brent and Becky’s bulbs (www.brentandbeckysbulbs.com )  says will come back reliably.

As a garden writer often I am challenged to come up with sources for new and unusual plants that I am excited about so I was thrilled to visit GardenHood, an inspiring  new garden center in Atlanta with an extensive offering of  ornamental plants.  Don’t expect your standard nursery with plants grouped by type, instead they have created rooms of color combinations.  One that I really like is the yellow group, highlighting plants with yellow flowers, foliage and even bark.  A sampling includes the selection of Florida anise, Illicium floridanum ‘Florida Sunshine’ with golden leaves and red stems, a juniper, Juniperus conferta ‘All Gold’ and the striking bark of the Japanese maple, Acer palmatum ‘ Bihou.’

Acer palmatum 'Bihou'

Acer palmatum 'Bihou'

A variegated Chinese holly, Ilex cornuta ‘O’Spring,’ with foliage that is green, cream and gold, is a plant I have written about but this is the first place I’ve seen it offered for sale.   A selection of Arborvitae, Thuja plicata ‘Daniellow’ also grabbed my attention.

In an effort to address the needs of  urban and surburban gardeners with small or tight spaces, GardenHood offer a number of shrubs and trees for special situations such as fastigiate trees for narrow planting spaces like the sweet gum Liquidambar styraciflua ‘Slender Silhouette,’   the fringe tree, Chionanthus retusus ‘Tokyo Tower’ and the columnar  hornbeam Carpinus betulus ‘Franz Fontaine.  A dwarf parrotia called ‘Henny Dwarf’ grows only 15 to 20’ tall with colorful fall foliage and handsome peeling bark.  Perfect for containers is the dwarf Japanese zelkova, Zelkova serrata ‘Goblin’ which matures at 4’ tall.  I have always enjoyed our native sweetbay magnolia and was charmed to meet the  dwarf cultivar, Magnolia virginiana var. australis ‘Sweet Thing.’   For the winter color in pots, the tiny  Chameacyparis pisifera filifera ‘Snow’ is ideal especially in combination with colorful violas.

Ilex cornuta 'O'Spring'

Ilex cornuta 'O'Spring'

Screening is an issue for gardens, both large and small, and some of GardenHoods offerings include hardy Loquats and evergreens like  Viburnum tinus ‘Spring Bouquet, ’ Viburnum odartissimum ‘Awabuki ,’ and, covered in fragrant orange flowers in autumn, the selection of tea olive, Osmanthus fragrans aurantiacus.

Many of the plants I talked about as well as numerous  others are available for purchase at GardenHood, located at 353 Boulevard, Atlanta, GA 30316, 404-880-9848  www.gardenhoodatlanta.com

Fall Flowers in my Garden

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009
Apricot Single mum, euphorbia and Heuchera 'Citronelle'

Apricot Single mum, euphorbia and Heuchera 'Citronelle'

October in the South can be delightful, with late season roses, asters, chrysanthemums and more.  Here’s what’s blooming in my garden today.

Hydrangea paniculata 'Tardiva' and Asters in October

Hydrangea paniculata 'Tardiva' and Asters in October

a new patio

a new patio

GardenHood Opens – new garden center

Monday, October 5th, 2009

Thursday, October 15 from 10am-1pm, GardenHood will be open for business.

Located at 347 Boullevard Dr, SE, Atlanta, GA 30316.  Check out the new venture of David McMullin and Scott McMahan – new and exciting plants for your garden!!