Date: Fri 02-Aug-1996
Date: Fri 02-Aug-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: CHRISL
Illustration: C
Quick Words:
Gardener-wildflowers
Full Text:
(Suburban Gardener on wildflowers, 8/2/96)
Suburban Gardener-
Approaches To Wildflower Gardening
By Anthony C. Bleach
"Think of the flowers growing in the fields; they never have to work or spin."
-St. Matthew
Two beautiful flowers blooming now are chicory and Queen Anne's lace. Chicory
has deep blue flowers that seem to last for weeks. The roots can be ground and
are apparently popular as an addition to coffee grounds in Louisiana. (I
remember the reaction to chicory in the austerity days of World War II as
universal grumbling.)
Queen Anne's lace is a beautiful feathery umbrella-like flower and must be the
most well-known flower in the state. Freshmen to any horticulture class always
seem to know it, if few others.
Both are good cut flowers, too. Always give them time to revive after cutting
as they droop for an hour or two.
Last week I was in St. John's Church, Watertown, during a service. I looked up
at the cross and then to a vase at the side. I twitched with shock when I
recognized not lilies but Queen Anne's lace. What a profound idea!
The road sides, the neglected waysides, the natural world in all its
untampered state was thus present at the sacrament. It gave it a radically
broader dimension.
The quotation at the start of this week's piece is, of course, misleading.
Making a wildflower garden or a wildflower meadow is certainly not Julie
Andrews running across the hills scattering seeds as she goes to the sound of
music. There are painstaking techniques that must be carried out through the
years to maintain a precarious balance of the flowers you want against
competing weeds. (Remember, a weed is a flower you do not want.)
There are two approaches to wildflower gardening. The first is passive, where
you let birds or the wind bring in seeds, and then you work with the results.
This means you pull out what you do not like or stop the spread of things that
were getting out of hand.
For example, brambles will need a very determined effort to keep them under
control. People who garden this way say one of the pleasures of it all is you
are always learning about the new plants that appear year by year.
There is one thing you must do and that is mow it all down in the fall - and
then rake up the dead grass. You can leave it over winter to act as a soil
cover, as long as you remove it before the meadow sprouts again in the spring.
Once the meadow has grown up again you can let this go until the end of
spring, and then you can mow areas with unsightly flowers before they seed. In
this way you are consciously and continuously selecting the varieties you
want, like daisies and black-eyes Susans. You can also change the plant
community by adding your own favorites like daffodils, poppies, irises, wood
hyacinths or fox gloves.
The other way is to cut and rake, and then rototill and start afresh; a more
active intervention. This is essential if you are going to broadcast
wildflower seeds. You can seed in the fall or spring. There are lots of
mixtures available, or you can experiment with your favorites in particular
areas. Some of the more popular ones would be yarrow, gaillardia, lupine and
coreopsis.
It is nice to put in some bulbs, but you should only consider this when the
meadow is established as you cannot rototill with bulbs in. Select them so
they bloom at intervals through the season, and plant them in September to
give them enough time to establish good root systems before frosty ground
prevents it.
If you wait until October, bulb prices will be lower. They will not bloom so
well in the first year but will then fall into the normal pattern.
There are two ways to plant the daffodils. You can plant them in clouds on
drifts of single varieties separated by a 10- or 20- foot space of grass. The
effect is elegant and harmonious.
The other way is to mix many varieties for a prolonged bloom and a variety of
colors and sizes. This gives a very cheerful and informal effect.
White Flower Farm in Litchfield has a collection of 100 daffs called "The
Works" that is delightfully successful. The wrong way is to dot them around
the place in singles, which will just look sad.
With the more aggressive approach you need to mow three times a year: once in
late June after the bulb leaves have yellowed off; once in early September;
and finally in November.
Make sure you rake up all the dead grass, as you want to start with clean land
in the spring where you can see the bulbs as they come through. Also
recommended in meadows are columbine, asters, sea holly, helianthus (a sort of
sunflower), beebalm and milk weed, whose coral red flower heads look wonderful
in meadows in Cape Cod.
Sometimes you will have to vary your mowing according to what you grow. All
the above plants will keep reseeding themselves, but some, like bachelor's
button, will die out after a few years and so you will have to rototill every
few years.
Finally, do not fertilize. A poor soil will more easily maintain the various
species in balance. Wait until the second week in August, and you can
transplant wild ferns and other wild flowers. Be sure you are not digging up
an endangered species.
It is important for you to notice the conditions under which the plant grows
naturally. Although some plants are more adaptable than others, the closer you
get to the original conditions the better. Mulch the planting spot well with
straw to help keep down competition until plants get established. Water
generously until fall, but do not fertilize.
A mixture sold by the Park Seed Company and recommended for Connecticut were
these ingredients: yarrow, butterfly weed, New England aster, cornflower,
wallflower, ox-eye daisy, coreopsis, foxglove, coneflower, blanket flower,
baby's breath, rocket, butter and eggs, scarlet flax, evening primrose, corn
poppy, black-eyed Susan and tall catchfly.
It was strange to find a new flora when I came to the states and even more
curious to find that the many plants had crossed the water long before we had
different names. For example, butter and eggs in England is Toad Flax, and
Queen Anne's lace is Cow parsley.
The American may be the older, more rural version. Roger Torey Peterson's
guide to wildflowers was my bible when I was learning about wildflowers. A
guide like that would increase your appreciation enormously, too.
I was helped in writing this week's column by a chapter from Lee Bailey's
Country Flowers - a book not from one of these insufferable horticultural
experts but by a wise gardener still patiently learning.
(Anthony C. Bleach organizes the horticulture degree program and teaches
landscape maintenance at Naugatuck Valley Comm-Tech College.)
