Bold gardeners
create daring landscape look
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
There
is a new, bold gardener out there stirring up excitement.
What I like about the bold gardener's style is that it uses
plant selections or combinations in atypical ways. The
result is that we're pushed outside our comfort zone -- we
are challenged.
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The
blue agave, usually listed as a Deep South
plant, is being seen from the Coast to the
Delta and back eastward across the state
and performs quite well in
Mississippi.
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One
instance of this bold style involves plants thought of as
only for the arid west or perhaps Mexico. These plants
typically have sword-like leaves and even
prickles.
One of
the most beautiful is the blue agave. This plant, usually
listed as a Deep South plant, is being seen from the Coast
to the Delta and back eastward across the state and performs
quite well in Mississippi.
Plant
the blue agave in the warmest microclimate of the landscape,
usually the south or east side of the home. One common
characteristic of any successful location is very good
drainage.
One
breathtaking Coast planting featured three blue agave plants
in front of a scenic waterfall. In the Delta, the huge blue
leaves were paired with the fiery red and orange of an
equally drought-tolerant lantana.
Another
choice plant is the yucca. This one is really gaining in
popularity and is actually being grown and produced in the
Carolinas. The most popular selections feature a gold and
green variegated stripe.
At the
Truck Crops Branch Experiment Station in Crystal Springs,
we're growing a yucca called Gold Garland that we got from
Cairo, Ga. We may have stretched its comfort zone a little
because we used ours as understory plantings to large,
tropical bananas. While it is unusual to combine a desert
plant with a tropical one, these have partnered well and
complement one another in the garden.Even more unusual but
very impressive was a group in the Delta that had red spider
lilies popping up through the dagger-like yucca leaves.
Folks at the Gulf Coast Garden and Patio Show oohed and
ahhed over photos of this one.
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The
fans formed by the New Zealand flax are
reminiscent of a yucca or perhaps some
kind of dracaena. These can get quite
large, reaching 4 to 5 feet in
height.
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Yuccas
are much more cold-hardy than agaves and can be grown easily
over the entire state provided you meet that same
requirement: good drainage.
Another
bold plant is called New Zealand flax, botanically known as
a Phormium. Bodger Botanicals out of California introduced
the Lancer series to the gardening world, and just about
everyone wants one.
The
plant was a virtual unknown to most gardeners in the South
until the Lancer series made its debut. As the learning
curve was developing, many suggested it would not survive
the winters, but reports from Texas say it will remain green
with temperatures in the mid-teens and root-hard to the
single digits. The reddish flowers have lots of nectar for
hummingbirds, and it is drought-resistant once
established.
The
fans formed by the New Zealand flax are reminiscent of a
yucca or perhaps some kind of dracaena. These can get quite
large, reaching 4 to 5 feet in height. The most sought-after
have dark burgundy and gold variegation. So far it seems the
most popular use is as a center plant in a large, mixed
container.
It is a
fun time to be a gardener whether you want to be bold with
desert-like plants and tropicals, or traditional with a
simple cottage garden. Whatever your style, make plans to
attend the Mississippi Garden and Patio Show in Jackson
March 13 and 14. For more information on the show, call
toll-free (866) 919-8111.
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Released:
March 4, 2004
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.
Publications
may download photograph at 200 dpi: Agave
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