Add spice to
gardens by varying heights, textures
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When
gardeners discover the harmony that
results from using varying colors and
textures, what was once considered simply
a flower border takes on the look of a
real garden.
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By Norman
Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
For
years I have written about combining colors in gardens to
add that desired sizzle. The great flower displays that
catch gardeners' eyes most surely had color, but other
variations can also help create that spark.
This
really hit home while on a Southern Gardening television
shoot in Ocean Springs. In this garden right off the beach,
it became quickly apparent that varying the heights, shapes
and textures of both flowers and leaves plays as important a
role as color in the design of flower borders. The garden
was stunning!
When a
child is asked to draw a flower, what shape does it have?
Most likely the flowers are round. After all, first flower
encounters are often with daisies, marigolds, petunias,
sunflowers or zinnias. Round flowers do seem to dominate.
Flowers
actually come in three distinct habits, or forms, and create
distinct moods in much the same way as colors.
Rounded
or mounded flowers offer calmness and continuity. For
cool-season planting, consider pansies as an example. Plant
petunias in the spring and summer.
Spiky
flowers add a vertical element, breaking the horizontal
plane and yielding a look that is daring and exciting.
Choose snapdragons in the cool season and salvias for the
summer.
Finally
there are those that are prostrate, or ground-hugging. These
flowers are the "icing on the cake" and add a professional
look. They should be planted at the front of the border so
observers see them first.
Sadly
many gardeners forget about this all-important element to
the flower garden. For cool-weather planting, try sweet
alyssum. The New Wonder scaevola is great for
summer.
In
addition to shapes, varying the heights of the plants also
adds great interest to gardens. Make beds large enough to
add a layered look of heights -- tallest in the back, medium
and short in between, then prostrate up front.
Although
texture most often refers to the visual appearance of a
plant's foliage, flowers certainly offer real texture as
well. The three basic textures are fine, medium and coarse.
Examples
of plants with fine-textured leaves are ferns, ornamental
grasses and African irises. Fine-textured flower examples
are gaura and strawberry geranium. Observers must look
closely to see the intricate features of these
plants.
Medium-textured
examples are Purple Heart, Mexican mint or Plectranthus
plant leaves, and flowers like phlox or marigolds. These
stand out from a distance, causing the passerby to glance.
Coarse-textured
leaves add incredible boldness to gardens. Plants like
bananas, elephant ears and cannas create a tropical look.
Coarse-textured flowers like the Moy Grande hibiscus with
12-inch blossoms will literally stop traffic.
With an
understanding of gardening colors and textures it is easy to
add interest to any landscape. For instance, while a
monochromatic scheme might seem boring, it can be made much
more lively and interesting by using flowers of differing
heights, shapes and textures.
When
gardeners discover the harmony that results from using
varying colors and textures, what was once considered simply
a flower border takes on the look of a real garden. Try this
rewarding technique now, and again with spring
planting.
-30-
Released:
November 6, 2003
Contact: Norman
Winter,
(601) 857-2284
Editor's
Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns
are within one month of their release. Editors should
examine older columns carefully for any information that
could be time sensitive.
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