Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Container Planting VS Jewel Box Garden

Pamela Crawford:

Plant the tallest plant in the middle and smaller plants around it. What could be easier! The big plant is called the centerpiece.

A centerpiece can be any type of plant as long as it remains taller than the surrounding plants for the life of the arrangement. Choose a plant that is full, or combine several tall, skinny plants together so the centerpiece doesn't look too skinny. Be sure the centerpiece like the same growing conditions (light, temperature, water) as the smaller plants going around it.

Pamela Crawford Easy Container Combos: Vegetables and Flowers pg. 72

Example: Lavender centerpiece, ornamental kale, violas


[The lavender looks like rosemary to me. It will grow much taller, I expect, with purple spikes and this arrangement will look very different then, less balanced than now.]
_____________________

Thomas Hobbs:

Really good gardeners don't hold back. Mesmerizing memorable plant pictures are created by the brave. Spines, teeth, spikes, thorns, and even seed capsules add an edginess to plant compositions. "Safe" gardeners rely on flowers alone and leave theatricality out of it. Gardening is a chance to spread your wings -- why do so many people never fly?

Beware of the botanical quicksand sold as "annuals." This huge industry dispenses humdrum goop like "supertunias" and the insanely popular bacopa (Suteria cordata). This trailing, white-flowered annual is the botanical equivalent of icicle lights -- so overused and trite it has lost any attractiveness through overexposure.  The discerning eye learns to avoid most popular plants. Why be like everyone else?

In a mixed planting, never put the tallest plant in the center of the pot. Doing that immediately gives one away as artless. If a pot is to be seen from all sides, plant three tall things, in the middle instead of one, They don't all have to be the same, either. Try combining a young New Zealand flax (a Phormium cultivar of your choice), a bronze Carex Flagellifera and a dark-leaved dahlia such as 'Bednall Beauty' or 'Ellen Houston'. This is much more visually interesting than a green dracaena 'spike' (Cordyline australis), the last refuge of the truly desperate.

Thomas Hobbs, The Jewel Box Garden pg. 71


 bacopa (Suteria cordata) ↑


New Zealand flax (a Phormium cultivar of your choice) ↑


bronze Carex Flagellifera ↑


dahlia such as 'Bednall Beauty' ↑


Ellen Houston ↑


green dracaena 'spike' (Cordyline australis) ↑
the last refuge of the truly desperate.

5 comments:

Eric the Fruit Bat said...

Okay. So I was down in the basement, doing cuttings of Philodendrons. Two reasons why I wasn't lifting. One, I injured myself, so lifting is rough. Two, the dog won't eat, so I'm in charge of force feeding her. It chops about 45 minutes out of my day, before and after work. Scheduling is rough.

Anyway, I was listening to music, down there, and I'd like to share.

Gentle Jazz.

Gentle Rock. (Pretty good song. Pretty crappy video.)

Gentle Giant. (That just popped into my head, is all.)

Gentle Gentile.

Ha!

ndspinelli said...

It's the 7th game of the World Series. I know the teams of the folks here aren't in it, but flowers. FUCKING FLOWERS? How about a little shout out to baseball. Put on your big boy pants. I'll stop in Colorado and teach Chip Ahoy how to throw on my way west.

Lem the artificially intelligent said...

I'm watching the game with the folks visiting from Ga. Maybe after they leave I can post something

Chip Ahoy said...

Hey! Calm down.

I'm trying to get you prepared for next year.

ndspinelli said...

Sorry. But, I only grow stuff you can eat..or smoke.