Enliven winter
gardens with
form and texture
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension Center
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MULBERRY
-- Not all winter landscape appeal comes
from colorful bark. The weeping mulberry
may be unsurpassed in beauty because once
its leaves have dropped, it reveals its
fantastically twisted and gnarled
branches.
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There is
so much to enjoy and see in the winter garden once trees and
shrubs have been stripped bare of foliage. The dormant
season reveals whether or not we planned for form and
structure in our gardens.
Bark
can play an important role in winter landscapes if we choose
the right trees. Deciduous trees make a dramatic landscape
impact once leaves have fallen and the bark is exposed. We
can certainly make gardens more interesting in the winter by
planting trees and shrubs that offer striking
bark.
Notice
how the patterns of bark vary from tree to tree. As trees
and shrubs get older and grow wider, the bark may peel,
split or shed to create a wonderful new look. Some surfaces
are smooth, some textured, and beautiful patterns and colors
come alive in the winter.
The
river birch bark is among the most beautiful. It loses its
bark in papery plates, exposing the inner bark that is
colored gray-brown to cinnamon-brown. The Heritage variety
sheds to white or salmon-white bark.
River
birch is well suited to the portion of the landscape that
stays wet. They may become dry in the summer. It thrives in
soils that have a pH below 6.5. These trees are medium- to
fast-growers, reaching 30 to 40 feet in 20 years and
eventually topping out at 70 feet.
Crape
myrtles always have pretty bark, but some of the new
varieties are outstanding. Crape myrtles are known for their
beautiful summer flowers, but smooth, twisted, gray-brown
bark makes them an outstanding choice for winter wood, too.
The bark looks like it has been sanded and then
polished.
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LACEBARK
ELM -- Lacebark elms (also called Drake
elms) possess some of the most striking
bark seen anywhere. They almost look
camouflaged with exfoliating sheets in
gray, brown and orange.
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The crape
myrtle breeding program began in 1962 at the U.S. National
Arboretum when researchers crossed Lagerstroemia indica with
another from Japan called Lagerstroemia fauriei. One of the
resulting traits was dark, reddish-brown, mottled
bark.
One of
the hybrids is the Natchez, which after about 5 years of age
develops a dark, cinnamon-brown, mottled exfoliating bark.
This is a large crape myrtle that reaches 21 feet high and
wide. It has pure white flowers, and the leaves turn orange
to red in the fall.
The
Apalachee is about 12 feet 6 inches tall and 8 feet 6 inches
wide with light lavender flowers and foliage that turns
purple-red in the fall. The bark sheds to reveal cinnamon to
chestnut-brown coloring.
Zuni is
a semi-dwarf, multi-stemmed crape myrtle reaching 9 feet
tall and 8 feet wide. The flowers are medium lavender. The
leaves are glossy and become dark green before turning
orange-red to dark red in the fall. The wood becomes gray,
then turns light brown and gray on older branches and the
trunk.
On the
Mississippi State University campus there are several
Lacebark elms (also called Drake elms) that possess some of
the most striking bark seen anywhere. They almost look
camouflaged with exfoliating sheets in gray, brown and
orange.
One of
the most exotic-looking and greatly underused trees is the
Chinese parasol tree (Firmiana simplex). This tree is
suitable for most of the South and reaches 30 to 45 feet
tall. The bark is smooth and green, and gives a tropical
appearance.
But not
all winter landscape appeal comes from colorful bark. The
weeping mulberry may be unsurpassed in beauty because once
its leaves have dropped, it reveals its fantastically
twisted and gnarled branches.
Gertrude
Jekyll wrote: "In summertime one never really knows how
beautiful are the forms of deciduous trees. It is only in
winter, when they are bare of leaves, that one can fully
enjoy their splendid structure and design." I
concur.
-30-
Released:
January 13, 2005
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 photographs at 200 d.p.i. Mulberry
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