Recognize plant characteristics and functions; identify roles plants play in specific landscape designs. Informed plant selection leads to successful garden landscapes.
Selecting plants for successful garden landscape designs is more or less like planning a party. Plants function in good garden landscapes much as guests interact at a successful party. A good blend of guests is as important as an appropriate setting; suitable plant combinations function in proper site conditions. Careful plant selection for desired characteristics allows plant choices to function admirably in specific roles.
Knowing the mature heights and widths of plants you intend to use is crucial. Similarly, overall shape, texture, and form are qualities that bring diversity and interest to a design. Research mature qualities of desired trees and shrubs in tree books and garden design encyclopedias.
Plant Height and Width
Beware of preconceived notions, advertising expressions, and appealing plants when selecting landscape plants. A common example of where designs can get off track is choosing, without research, miniature or dwarf plants for a design. More often than not, miniature and dwarf cultivars (cultivated varieties of plants) are only as small as the relative to which they compare. Here are two familiar and often-used dwarf woody ornamentals that grow quicker, taller, and wider than commonly expected:
Maximum and beneficial spacing means little or no future transplanting or loss of mature trees and shrubs. A case in point: The lifespan of most commercially planted residential landscapes, especially in new developments, is approximately ten years. Why? Because homeowners want to see an immediate finished design. After ten years, a new landscape is installed because plants are too big and crowded.
Visual Interactions
Various heights, widths, forms, and textures build and shape landscape designs. Plants within a composition must also relate to buildings and other structures present. Common composition problems appear when too many plants alike in shape and texture are used. Disregard for existing buildings also becomes a dilemma. What are some of these problems?
A repetitious and boring landscape. Too many plants are of the same size, shape, and texture such as broad-leaved evergreen shrubs and needle-leaf evergreen trees.
Security hazards and visual obstacles. Broad-leaved shrubs and needle-leaved trees grow past window ledges and reach to second story windows.
Composition Success
A universal inclination among landscape gardeners is the impulse purchase. Avoid acquiring plants because one or two traits are appealing. It takes will power to walk past a plant that seems to be begging for a home.
The question to keep uppermost in mind is: "Will those plants work well within my planned design?" Many times a plant, such as a weeping Higan cherry tree (Prunus subhirtella 'Pendula'), works within a design, but not necessarily well. When the weeping Higan cherry blooms in early to mid-spring, nothing can match it for grace and beauty. On the other hand, it may not be the best to fit the role that the design location needs for the rest of the year.
The copyright of the article Landscape Design: Role of Plants in Landscaping is owned by Georgene A. Bramlage. Permission to republish Landscape Design: Role of Plants must be granted by the author in writing.
Comments
Feb 23, 2007 3:22 PM
Fran Folsom
:
Last spring I spread about 2 inches of buckwheat hulls as ground cover and to keep weeds down where my holly bushes and Japanes quince bushes are. I did not rake up the buckwheat in the fall, let it lie for the winter. Will this cause a problem with my plants blossoming in the spring?
Feb 24, 2007 11:10 AM
Georgene A. Bramlage
:
Fran,
Thanks for taking the time to write.
I have used buckwheat as well as chocolate hulls as mulch. I can foresee only two problems - ones you need to watch out for, but not interfering with your shrubs' flowering.
One - If you weather is dry the hulls will blow, scatter and create a nuisance;
Two - Most probably the hulls will mat down over the winter due to extra moisture and fungi (mushrooms) of all sorts will begin to grow in your beds. If (when) this happens, you'll need to rake out the top bit of mulch, compost the old, and put some new mulch in its place. This is a good habit to get into each spring because the beds then look fresher.
Hope this helps,
Georgene
May 10, 2007 7:33 AM
Dorin Diplas
:
My mother love cactuses. Her backyard is full of them but she keeps telling me they don't match with other plants so well. I love too see a diversity in the garden but I encounter a brick wall every time I tell her. Is there such thing or it is just my mother's Altzheimer? ~~ <a href="http://www.gomvents.com">search engine placement </a>
May 10, 2007 8:07 AM
Georgene A. Bramlage
:
Hi!
It is really possible tat from her point of view they just "don't match!" Even if she is elderly, her idea of what the garden should look like might be very different from your's.
In my opinion, cacti in landscapes need to placed very carefully (no pun intended):) or the result is tough, dry and combative appearing.
Succulents team up well with cacti; colors of both groups of plants can be chosen so that they harmonize.
What immediately comes to my mind is one of my favorite plantings at Longwood Gardens (PA) that is in the conservatory because of possible cold damage. Curators and designers have placed gray- and silver-hued cacti and succulents in a design which is magical in both daylight and moonlight.
Here is a link to the silver garden with some pictures of an amazing agave plant: http://www.longwoodgardens.org/CenturyPlant2007.html
There is more information about this silver garden at the Longwood site.
There are other cacti demonstration gardens that I know of, but need to check links, etc. Check back...
I hope you and Mom can come to some kind of a working agreement, especially with Mother's Day this weekend in the U.S. :)