Tag Archives: spring

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Florida landscape plants offer such a stunning array of vivid flower colors, it can be difficult to decide which one is your favorite.  From the deep reds of Hibiscus, Ixora, and Passion Vine to the brilliant purples of Bougainvillea, Crape Myrtle, and Azaleas, one can fall in love with all of the color ranges!  As, well, when one visits a well-stocked nursery in the spring, when everything is in bloom, it can be overwhelming.

While it is natural to gravitate towards the more striking flower colors that stand out amongst a sea of green foliage, one should never overlook the simple grace and elegance of the white flower, or even more so, the white foliage of a plant.  Traditionally, using white as a landscape color has not been promoted as a viable or desirable landscape concept, and I suspect it is because it is simply misunderstood.   With that said,  let's explore the ways that using white as a landscape color can be best utilized:

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1.  Not all flowering plants can tolerate shady or part-shade light conditions, and continue to bloom.  However, some can, such as this white Angel's Trumpet, pictured above.  Using white as a landscape color is unique, in that white flowers and white-striped foliage will stand out in dark and shady light conditions.   Whether it is planted under an Oak tree, or even against a fence, these white flowers will stand out in the day time, and almost cast a ghostly hue at night, in places where other dark colored flowers will hardly be noticeable.  Some other white flowered or white-striped foliage plants to consider for similar site conditions are:

  • White Azalea
  • White-striped foliage Bromeliads
  • Variegated Minima Jasmine
  • Gardenia
  • Pinwheel Jasmine
  • Aztec Grass
  • African Iris
  • Peace Lily
  • White Bleeding Heart vine

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2.  White flowers and foliage can be used as a "buffer plant" separating other bold colors.  As you can see in the photo of the Bromeliads above, the white plant in the upper left corner, as well as the white trim on the center plant help all of the plants in the grouping stand out, highlighting their particular features to an advantage.  When you are considering using white as a landscape color with other colors, position the white plants in such a manner as to bring out the colors of the surrounding plants.  For example, if you are considering planting an annual bed with dark purple Petunias, or deep red Begonias, make 20% of the plants white, and randomly intersperse them throughout the bed to help the darker colors pop.  Some options for lower growing plants that make great white color buffers are:

  • Aztec Grass
  • Variegated Flax Lily (Dianella)
  • Variegated Minima Jasmine
  • White Dwarf Penta
  • Sun Hosta

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3.  Using white as a landscape color is particularly effective when creating a design for a dark-colored house paint.  Some plant features can seem to be lost when used as a foundation plant against a dark paint, to the point that they almost blend it.  If you select a white colored flower or foliage plant as a foundation plant, not only will that plant stand out, but it will set the stage for the other plants in front of it.  Consider the example above, of a Pinwheel Jasmine, that blooms almost all year.  It not only will stand out against a dark brown paint, but all other plants in front of it will shine in their own right, as well.  Keep in mind, though, that the opposite is true for a light colored house, such as white or yellow paint.  Some plants to consider as a foundation plant for dark-painted houses are:

  • Variegated  Pittosporum
  • Sinesis
  • Jasmine, many varieties to choose from
  • Silver Queen Hibiscus
  • Snowbush, or Snow on the Mountain
  • White Oleander
  • Chinese Silver Grass
  • White Fountain Grass

4.  Lastly. using white as a landscape color can be a complete landscape design concept whereupon the ONLY flower color being used is white.  In cases such as this, the design concept usually incorporates plants with dark foliage, with white used to highlight the dark foliage of other plants, with the primary focus being about texture and foliage contrasts.

Now that you have a better understanding of how white can be used as a landscape color, you will never see white flowers in the same light, again!  As always, half of the fun of gardening is to experiment, and see what works for you, as there is no wrong way, just a better way, when it comes to design.

So, let's get designing, folks, with white!

Donell

 

 

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Adding annual flowers to your landscape is a great way to bring fabulous bursts of color to your garden, even though they are usually temporary.  Annuals are seasonal plants, that are sometimes called bedding plants, and they are narrowly defined as plants that grow, and  reproduce (which means to flower) and die, with a one year time frame.  In the landscape world, then, when they are flowering, they are at the peak of their life when you buy them, and will only live for a few more months, in your garden.   Most annual plants are designed to live for 3 or 4 months after purchase, with the expectation that they will be replaced out, seasonally, with another annual of a different type, that prefers the new season.    With that in mind, adding annuals to your landscape can bring a wonderful pop of color, seasonally, with an expected rotation of changing them out 3-4 times a year, given their limited lifespan and preferred season.

Adding annuals to your landscape can bring  a wonderful and changing variation to the look of your landscape, but it is not for everyone.  While some annuals can be low maintenance and seem to free-seed and live on their own, others can require dead-heading of old seed pods and pinching back when they get leggy and spindly.  More so, most annuals have a preferred season, and do require a rotational change-out.  However, if you are willing to do the work, no matter how large or small the designated area for planting, you will rarely find the colors to add to your landscape, that annuals can bring.  They bring vibrant colors in a big way on a small scale, that no other plant can do!

If you do decide to add annuals to your landscape, here are a few tips:

  • Annuals always will need a bed of fresh potting soil to be planted in.  Do not plant them in regular Florida soils and expect success.
  • If you want to mulch your annual bed, do not mulch the annual.  Leave a 1" clearance around the stem of annuals, and only lightly mulch the soil bed, as most annuals are very sensitive to materials around their stems and can die from root rot or too-deeply planting.
  • Know the preferred season for your annuals.  Many nurseries and almost all box stores sell annuals (and vegetables) out of season.   A smart man told me recently that he simply watches for what annuals are planted at the subdivision entrances and  commercial buildings, and he follows suit.  He is absolutely right and this is an awesome way to get it right the first time.  The pros are not guessing about the right season/ right annual.
  • Some annuals are more prone to insect and fungal problems, so if you opt to select those plants that are, stay vigilant with your pest control, for ultimate success.
  • Lastly, as always, have fun with your landscaping and don't give up!   I don't believe in black thumbs, and some plants just have rules or natures that have to be followed.  Follow them! and you will be successful.

As a note, and as a landscaper, I do not install many annual beds, but when I do, this is my philosophy:

  • Keep the bed small, within 1-2 trays of plants, always in a bed of potting soil
  • I prefer a 3 time a year rotation:  Begonias in the spring, as they can handle the heat, but hate the rain; Coleus in the mid-summer as they love the rain and the heat;   Petunias in the winter, as they can handle some heat but love the cold.

There is so much to know about gardening and landscaping, and IFAS is the source.  For more information about annuals, and seasonal tables, click on this link:

http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/mg319

Let's get gardening, Folks!

Donell

bee-on-sunflower

Today is the first day of Spring!  Please, enjoy this beautiful Ode to Spring, by Elizabeth Bentley:

 

Elizabeth Bentley 
Ode To Spring

WELCOME, sweet season of delight,
What beauties charm the wond'ring sight
In thy enchanting reign!
How fresh descends the morning dew,
Whilst op'ning flow'rs of various hue
Bedeck the sprightly plain.
The artless warblers of the grove
Again unite in songs of love,
To bless thy kind return:
But first the lark, who roaring seems
To hail the orb of day, whose beams
With fresh refulgence burn.

The limpid brook that purls along,
The tuneful blackbird's joyous song,
The softly-whisp'ring breeze;
The mossy hills, which now invite,
These with the verdant meads unite,
Th' elated mind to please.
The mind with thoughts of good possest,
With innocence and virtue blest,
Untaught in vice's ways;
May taste those joys by nature giv'n,
May lift th' enraptur'd eye to heav'n,
And their great Author praise.
Stern Winter's gloomy season past,
We see fair Spring advances fast,
With Summer in the rear;
Soon Autumn's shades will interpose,
And a succeeding Winter close
The swift-revolving year.

Of human life an emblem true,
The early morn of youth we view,
In Spring's delightful face;
Meridian life's a Summer's day,
With Autumn fades; its quick decay,
In winter's blast we trace.
Then let us prize each fleeting hour,
Improve the moments in our pow'r,
E'er time shall cease to be;
Then shall our spirits, taking wing,
Be crown'd with an eternal Spring,
From Wint'ry storms set free.

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Spring is here, and has been here in Tampa, for the last few weeks.  Tomorrow, though, is officially the first day of Spring.   Of course, we welcome it, even though we had a relatively mild winter, as our gardening and outdoor activities can begin in earnest.

Our friends and family members up north, though, have not been as similarly blessed.  For them, Spring still feels weeks away, and I suppose it is.  To show our compassion and solidarity, I have this ode to spring, to share with all:

Ode To Spring

It snowed today
Again
Like yesterday
And once more
Snow tomorrow

A harsh winter
That's what they say
Colder than it's ever been
Snow like we've never seen
Spring... it will be late

But I will wait, for like fate
Spring always follows
Spring always comes
Spring has never failed me

Even under 6 feet of sorrow
No matter how long I burrow
Spring somehow always finds me

Submitted: Sunday, January 18, 2009
Edited: Thursday, July 07, 2011
website link:  http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/ode-to-spring-2/
It is a beautiful ode, so soulfully written and emotionally expressed, wouldn't you agree?

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St. Patrick's Day is the day that we show off our green!   We wear green, we drink green beer, and we eat cabbage....and we write Limericks to celebrate Ireland, also know as the Emerald Isle!  So, we should be talking about plants with Emerald green leaves, but instead, I am going to talk about plants with Lime foliage, my little twist on "Lime-rick"!  I know, it's a stretch, but what better day to talk about plants that bring something different to the garden?

When designing your landscape, you can add interest to the final plan by including plants with varying textures, flowers, mature height, and foliage color.  There are an endless number of plants that have various hues of green, all the way from a dark emerald green to almost a bluish-silver hue.  And, surprisingly, there are a handful of plants that offer a shade of lime green that will make your landscape pop, especially when paired with other plants that help them stand out and shine.

If you are considering adding some lime green foliage plants to your landscape design, be sure to place them next to plants that will highlight their uniqueness.  Lime green foliage can really pop when planted next to dark greens, reds, and oranges.  Conversely, it can be lost or washed out when planted next to a white or yellow house paint, or white and light colored green foliage plants.   If you are uncertain as to what will work in your plant combinations, try a few pairings at your local nursery before making your final selections.  Ultimately, you want all of your plants in your design to compliment each other, to bring out the best features of each individual plant.  As always, half of the fun of gardening is experimenting, and going bold can bring a delightful result!

Considered any of these lime green foliage plants to add to your landscape.  All of them are low maintenance and easy care plants for our Tampa landscapes:

  • Foxtail Fern, added bonus of unique texture
  • Coleus, available in many varying leaf colors with limes, yellows, and reds (in picture above)
  • Potato Vine
  • Gold Mound Duranta (in picture above, with Coleus)
  • Ti Plants, either Kiwi or Lemon-Lime varieties

So, let's get growing, Folks!  This St. Patrick's Day, let's really show of our greens.....with Lime greens!  You just can't go wrong, and you will be bringing something new to table, so to speak!

Donell

carolina-yellow-jasmine

Spring can be elusive, especially in Florida where the sun is shining, birds are singing and plants are blooming, while snow is falling in record numbers once again, in the north.   So, when and how do we determine if Spring is here?  When can we start our spring cleaning of our landscape and gardens?  Well, I would say that the time is now, and I will tell you why I think that and what I look for.

Firstly, I look for blooms on Day Lily and Carolina Yellow Jasmine.  Day Lily are mostly an "iffy" plant for Tampa, but when planted in their perfect place, they are one of the earliest bloomers, and can provide a welcome display of fabulous colors, for those weary of gray days, typical of Florida winters.  Not to be outdone, Carolina Yellow Jasmine is another one of those plants that welcome in the spring, with small yet fragrant flowers that can surprise you with it's deceptively small "rest of the year" presence, both with it's mass of flowers and it's subtle perfume scent that carries through the dense evening nights.  It's a true "wallflower", until Spring.  While many plants will bloom throughout a mild winter, these two plants are a true harbinger of Spring.

Secondly, I watch the trees, particularly the large hardwood shade trees.  While some large trees like Sycamore and Maple drop their leaves early, Oaks take a little longer.  With that said, Live Oaks seem to be the most stubborn, waiting to the very last minute to drop the rest of their leaves, even to the point that Maples have already seeded and begun new leaf growth.  With the Oak's last leaf drop, they will soon seed (called catkins), and drop them within weeks, which can create as much of a mess as the leaf drop itself.

Lastly, I watch the moon phases and trust my instinct, after 25 years of experience.  Old timers say that there will be no frost after the full moon in February, and I would say that prediction has held true 90% of the time.  Of course, it's the other 10% of the time that is the concern.

Today, I see Carolina Yellow Jasmine blooming, and Day Lily with buds.  The Maples have seeded already, and are putting on new leaves.  The Oaks have dropped most of their leaves, and some are even flushing with new leaves.  The majority of Live Oaks, though, have not seeded and dropped their catkins, but I do believe that will happen soon, and it will be a small production yield this year, not near as bad as last year.

With that, Spring is very near, and it is time to make your plans.  To get the full benefit of what a Spring garden can bring to your home, now is the time to prepare to take action, with regards to Spring cleaning of your landscape, seasonal plantings, new plantings, vegetable and herb gardening, as well as fertilizing and pest control.

In the next few days, I will post a guide as to what to do and how to get started.....Don't let Spring pass you by, with all of it's glorious wonder.  Let's get growing, Folks!

Donell