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GO VERTICAL! (IN THE GARDEN)

It’s often said that winter is the perfect time to study your garden’s bones.  As you do so, look up!  Pay special attention to your garden’s vertical elements.  Incorporating walls, fences, arbors, trellises, trees and shrubs  can solve many problems and will add interest and beauty to your landscape.

SEPARATION

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Whether you want to screen a driveway, gain a bit of privacy, or just provide transition from one garden space to another, vertical elements will do the job. A trellised fence takes up little space (depth) and provides a support for plants. In the picture above, Climbing Hydrangea (Hydrangea anomala subsp. petiolaris)  covers a fence.

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The tall picket fence and arched gate above tackle three issues:  they create separation  between front and back yards with a light touch, connect the buildings and provide support for roses.

 

At Dumbarton Oaks, below, a chain connected to stone pillars supports a Wisteria vine and creates a sense of enclosure.

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In another area of the gardens at Dumbarton Oaks in Georgetown, Wisteria is pruned to frame the beautiful latticework that physically separates the amphitheatre, without visually screening it. Beatrix Farrand, who designed the  gardens, was masterful in using vertical elements to shape the sloping land into separate terraced gardens with brilliant circulation from one garden to the next.

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The latticed fence below, anchored by variegated Hosta, defines property lines and provides a connection between the neighbors’ gardens.

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The front entrance, below, in this Kansas City neighborhood is beautifully defined by the stone and wrought iron fence and gate.

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SEPARATION WITH PLANTS:  This fruit tree in Lasham, England (I think it was a Pear), one of several along an axis,  has been trained to bear fruit and separates the garden into two distinct spaces.

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Charleston gardeners are some of the most talented vertical gardeners.  In the picture below, the hedge, punctuated by a line of Palmettos, is an effective screen of the parking area. While the English gardener uses the fruit trees, above,  only for definition, the Charleston hedge below is tasked with being a visually impenetrable screen.

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I love the contrast in the English hedge below — tightly clipped (with flanking clipped sentries), yet with a fuzzy unkempt crown and surrounded by unmowed fields.

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AN EXCUSE TO GROW PLANTS

Give a gardener a structure, and he or she will find a creative way to adorn it with plants. In the pictures below, a talented Princeton gardener espaliers Japanese Maples (Acer palmatum) and Japanese Hollies (Ilex crenata) on a humble cinderblock wall.

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In the same Princeton garden, Climbing Hydrangea  frames a window.

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Below, trellises supporting roses complement the architecture and strengthen the symmetry of a  formal garden.

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No room to grow Figs or other fruit trees?  Espalier them along a wall or strong fence, as is done below.

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Below:  Wall?  What wall?

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The pale pink and white Camellias (Camellia japonica) growing on the simple gothic trellises transform an otherwise empty weathered concrete wall along a Charleston driveway.

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Below, roses smother a thatch-roofed cottage in Lasham, England.

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Vertical features don’t just create enclosure and define boundaries.  A tuteur or other plant support, like the one below sporting the native Passionflower Vine (Passiflora incarnata), acts as a focal point at Whilton, an exquisite garden near Charlottesville.

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CANOPY

A mature tree canopy is an almost indispensable vertical element in the garden. Not only does it provide vertical interest, it offers shade and dappled light in the garden.   In the pictures below, allees are used to define space, act as a guide to a destination and reinforce a strong axial line.

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Dumbarton Oaks, above.  Whilton, below.

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Below, Plane Trees (Platanus x acerifolia) somewhere in Europe (9 years ago — can’t remember!).  The width of the path is inexplicably out of scale with the allee.

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What a beautiful “ceiling” the mature canopy makes  at Dumbarton Oaks below.

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The native Sycamore (Platanus occidentalis), below, is host to a Climbing Hydrangea.  Never allow English Ivy (Hedera helix)  to climb a tree.  When growing any other vine, be sure to keep it under control, so that the vine does not inhibit the tree from producing the leaves necessary to thrive.

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The streetscape in Savannah, below, gives me hope for urban planting.  This strip bordering a commercial property was used to maximum effect.  The evergreens  were planted effectively between windows, then expertly pruned to frame the windows,  show off the multi-trunk effect artfully against the pale wall, and allow pedestrians to pass below the canopies.  They are underplanted with a simple ground cover.

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And finally, have some fun with your vertical elements, as they did in the gardens at Whilton, below!

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LATE SPRING GARDEN CHORES

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Winter took quite a toll on our gardens this year. On the plus side, we got a decent amount of rain/snow and the sustained low temperatures made for a delayed onset of mosquitos.  But with the good comes the bad, and our Gardenias and Hydrangeas, among other plants, took it on the chin.

Well, that’s nature.  Keeps us on our toes!  Winter finally gave way to spring, and summer is almost upon us, so it’s time to:

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Prune spring-flowering shrubs, if needed.  Most shrubs and trees that flower in spring (like the Vanhouteii Spirea above) begin to set their flower buds for next spring within 4 to 6 weeks of blooming.  Thus, if you wait to prune the plant after that 4 to 6 week window, you will be cutting off next year’s blooms.

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Only prune your shrubs if they need it to control size or to shape the plant or to remove dead or diseased branches.  Use hand pruners, and be sure to take a branch all the way back to a lateral branch (vs. shearing all of the top growth).  Camellias (above) need very little pruning, as they have a graceful growing habit.  Mock Orange (Philadelphus coronarius, below) is a straggly grower, and can use more help.  Mock Oranges are best planted toward the back of a mixed border where they recede after blooming.

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deadheading daffs

Cut back dying foliage of spring-blooming bulbs, including Daffodils, Tulips and Hyacinth.  Capital Trees members Mary Anne Burke and Noni Baruch, above, deadhead the Daffodils planted along Dock Stree in Shockoe Bottom. Spanish Bluebells (beautifully photographed below by Helen Horseley) multiply over the years.

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lady banks

Cut out all rogue branches on your Lady Banks Rose.  You can tell a rogue branch -or sucker – because it is thicker, straighter, and produces no lateral branches.

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Continue to train other climbing roses.  Don’t be shy about removing many older canes to allow for a lighter, more elegant climber, like the one in Charleston, above.

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Continue to deadhead repeat-blooming shrub roses.  Some of the heritage roses at Hollywood Cemetery, including the Doswell Rose, above, are still blooming.  I did a blog post recently about the incredible treasure these roses are at the historic cemetery.

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Remove spent flower stalks from perennials, such as Bearded Iris (Iris germanica), above, and Peonies (Paeonia), below. Some Bearded Iris will bloom again in late summer or early fall (wish Peonies did the same, alas).

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Vinca minor

Keep Vinca minor (pictured above) and other aggressive ground covers, pruned for a neat appearance.

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Most Gardenias did not fare well this winter. The Radicans Gardenia, (above, in my garden in better days)  was pretty much nothing but bare branches at the start of spring this year.  I shook out all the dead leaves, and waited.  And waited. And now, it is producing new growth. It will be a long journey back, but it IS coming back.  If your Gardenia suffered a similar fate, you may have already ripped out the compromised plant.  If you kept it — whether due to hope and devotion, or due to benign neglect, it will hopefully reward you with rejuvenation.

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Hydrangeas also suffered from this winter’s harsh temperatures. Most Macrophyllas (your classic Mopheads, Lacecaps and newfangled repeat bloomers) died back to the base, or produced very little growth from existing branches.  If you have not yet done so, go ahead and cut back to the ground the bare or sparsely producing branches and allow the plant to create new branches. You may get very little bloom this year, but the plants will rebound over time.  Look at it as a forced reduction in size, something most Hydrangeas can use every few years.

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Prune Climbing Hydrangea (Hydrangea petiolaris)  after it finishes blooming.  Climbing Hydrangea is not just for walls — it’s fun to let it scamper across a bed or a low stone wall, above.

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Most Helleborus blooms are beginning to brown.  Cut the flower stalk off at the base.  Also  cut back any old leaves beginning to die off.  Both Lenten Rose (Helleborus orientalis, above) and Stinking Hellebore (Helleborus foetidus, below) will generously self seed if not heavily mulched.

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Prune multi-branch trees, such as Sweetbay Magnolias (Magnolia virginiana, above), Vitex (Vitex agnus-castus), Japanese Maple (Acer palmatum) and Serviceberry (Amelanchier, spp.) to open up the plant and assist in developing a beautiful shape, by cutting out any volunteer sports and straggly branches.

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Prune Wisteria before it sets next year’s flower buds.

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Consider planting Morning Glory seeds for old-fashioned late summer blooms.  The vine twines through Japanese Anemone, above.

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Plant fall-blooming bulbs, such as Colchicum autumnale, above, in areas where spring blooming plants such as Virginia Bluebells or Bleeding Heart go dormant. Plant the bulbs this fall.  Foliage appears in spring, then bulbs go dormant, and blooms emerge in early fall.

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If you have a water garden, consider planting a Lotus (the native Nelumbo lutea).  I’d given mine up for dead and yanked the empty pot (empty except for mud) this spring.  As usual, my procrastination saved a life.  I went to toss the pot last week and, lo and behold, new Lotus leaves were emerging.  Can’t wait to see it bloom like it did last summer, above.

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And finally. fill your containers with summer annuals, which will reward you until a hard frost.  Be sure to regularly fertilize, as frequent watering depletes the nutrients from the soil. Fill “the can” with Iris,  as was done at Long Vue in New Orleans, above — naturally fertilized! — or plant a window box with Begonia and Fern, as was done on Meeting Street in Charleston, below,  Now, get out there and tame that garden!

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