Thursday, July 14, 2011

Xeriscape Garden Haiku...


Careful choice of plants
Suited to a dry landscape
Saves our resources


I began to think about my new garden as an experiment for native, drought tolerant planting. I wanted a garden with colour, with texture, and an overall bold presence. Most importantly I wanted a garden that needed little maintenance and little watering! The backdrop will be native and ornamental grasses, and these will be surrounded by native perennials, or similar cultivars...

this triangular bed will be the new xeriscape garden. The skyrocket juniper will stay for now as will the japanese barberry and euonymus at the back...

after removing the last of the wayward perennials from this section, the new grasses and perennials were spaced out and planted! I was able to save and move some purple coneflowers to this location...

Xeriscape Garden Plants:
  • 5 x Big Blue Stem (Andropogon gerardii)
  • 1 x Red Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum 'Hanse Herms')
  • 2 x Tall Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum 'Strictum')
  • 3 x Feather Reed Grass (Calamagrostis x acutiflora 'Karl Foerster')
  • 9 x Black Eyed Susans (Rudbeckia fulgida ‘Goldsturm’)
  • 8 x Purple Coneflowers (Echinacea purpurea)

The ground was so dry at this point in July that I had to water the soil for over an hour to get it moist enough for planting. I also watered the large Silver Maple that overshadows the entire front lawn - I hope that amount of shade wont be a problem for this xeriscape garden!

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Simplify...

I begin with my first project: turning the front yard into a more manageable space. The extensive gardens that came with the house had become quite unruly due to inattention over the last 4 years...


In order to simplify the chaos, drastic measures had to be employed!!!


this is the front garden in early June - a hodge-podge of perennials and shrubs that were once tended by a retired couple (wife's grandparents). Notice the several large invasive Buckthorn, and even a Black Cherry sapling that I had left to flourish due to ignorance and denial...




over the next month, we prepared for these drastic measures, and after giving as many perennials away to friends and family, the garden still looked full! By this time in July, everything was looking quite dry during the mini-drought we had here...



my wife and I decided that as much as possible along the front should be turned into grass in order to simply the landscape. A lot of shrubs and perennials still had to be moved or destroyed!



this area is to become my xeriscape garden, with native grasses and drought tolerant perennials...