By
Norman Winter Have you
ever shopped for a house and discovered you liked the ones
with gorgeous landscapes better? Homes with attractive
landscapes generally bring a premium price. While we
don't necessarily plant a landscape to help sell our home,
we should avoid anything that hurts our investment,
including a mundane landscape. Trees
and shrubs for the landscape can be expensive, but it is
well worth the investment. Carefully design and plan such an
investment to provide years of pleasure. Garden
centers and nurseries are full of fresh trees, shrubs and
roses, but they have much more than plants. They have
experts to assist you with landscape design or a home
improvement plan. After
carefully making plans, people often fail to properly place
the individual plants in the landscape. Putting a $5 plant
in a $10 planting hole does have merit! Successfully
starting new shrubs and trees in the landscape often depends
on planting techniques and care. You only have one chance to
get a new plant off to a good start. Shrub
beds should be well-drained to moist, loose, nutrient- and
humus-rich with a layer of mulch to prevent moisture loss,
deter weeds and moderate summer temperatures. This soil will
be the home for the life of those plant's roots. Metal
edging, landscape timbers, brick and masonry work well to
separate turf from beds and allow the soil to be raised with
organic matter. Nurseries
and garden centers have a prepared landscape mix for raised
beds of new azaleas or hollies. Purchase these soil mixes by
the bag, cubic yard, pick-up or truck full. The economical
price of the cubic yard will make you wonder why you have
been torturing your plants with heavy clay. Dig the
planting hole three to five times wider than the diameter of
the root ball but no deeper. Gently tease the roots to break
the circular root pattern. If the plant is pot-bound,
separate the roots by making three vertical cuts through the
root system. Historically,
shrubs hid the ugly foundation of a house. Today, shrubs
often frame trees or other plantings. Some are planted in
masses to create a thicket appearance. Avoid
planting in straight lines. Try to use bold curves to create
a mystery for what lies around the next turn. Use three to
five basic plants that you repeat elsewhere in the
landscape. Growing one or two of every shrub available may
look like an unplanned arboretum. Instead, plant in
groupings of odd numbers like seven, nine and 11. Use
shrubs as background for color. Azaleas offer the ability to
have an attractive shrub that also combines well with other
spring colors such as bulbs, phlox or pansies. For the rest
of the year, we can use them as a background for pockets of
color in the summer from petunias, verbenas or
melampodium. It seems
the majority of homeowners fail to use azaleas in this
manner. They are content to relish the azalea in bloom and
ignore them for the rest of the year. But the most beautiful
landscapes are those that put the azaleas in bed with other
plants rather than scattered under pine trees without
purpose. When the
pocketbook is tight, buy larger container-grown shrubs and
smaller trees. It might seem expensive, but you will not
need as many and you will be more likely to plant at the
correct spacing. Released:
March 6, 1997 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.
Southern
Gardening
Attractive
Landscapes Improve Home Values
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
|| USDA
Search our Site ||
Need more information about this subject?
Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:30:06
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/sgnews/sg97/sg970306.htm
Mississippi State University
is an equal opportunity institution.
Recommendations on this web site do not endorse
any commercial products or trade names.