Date: Fri 29-Aug-1997
Date: Fri 29-Aug-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: CAROLK
Quick Words:
Suburba-Gardener-Bleach
Full Text:
SUBURBAN GARDENER: TRYING TO PLANT AROUND WATER
By Anthony C. Bleach
The Perennial Plant Association has chosen Salvia, "May Night," as the plant
of the year. The International Dendrology Society has chosen the Katsura as
the tree of the year. And, after weeding a bank planting of Junipers for the
sixth time this summer, I have chosen Equisitum , Horsetails, as The Weed of
the Millennium.
No wonder it has survived longer than any plant on the face of the earth! It
has rhizomes that run under any obstacle and multiply exponentially every time
you snap them. I have wept with agronomists at the Connecticut Agricultural
Experiment Station as we agreed it is the horticultural equivalent of the
Eboli virus. So why, why should anyone recommend it as "a dramatic curtain
behind a piece of pond statuary?" This is the Kudzu vine of New England, for
goodness sake!
Well, Carrol Bishop Miller in Horticulture did suggest that its "racing
rhizomes can be corralled in a container." She didn't write how you would stop
the spores germinating. But her other choices for "Natives for the Water's
Edge," I found helpful for beginners like me.
As a background screen to a pond the familiar and dramatic common cattail
colonizes densely by rhizomes. In late spring and summer the sleek sword-like
leaves are joined by stiff stalks bearing terminal spikes of densely packed
flowers - golden, pollen-dusty, short-lived male flowers on top, a velvety
soft, brown cylinder of female flowers beneath. A single spike can hold 20,000
seeds. Cattails flourish in full or part sun, in any muck you have.
The southern blue flag ( Iris virginica ) has imposing leaves as well as
height. The flowers appear in mid-spring, are four inches across, their lilac
falls veined and brushed with yellow. Copper iris ( I. fulva ) has brick
colored flowers with outstretched petals that give a flat-topped look.
Irises are best set out in fall to ensure a vigorous show in the spring. If
they are not under water, irises should be mulched.
A less familiar water lover is the sweet flag ( Acorus calumus ). Greenish
yellow aroid flower spikes are sheathed by aromatic sword-like leaves.
"Variegatus" has bold cream stripes on the leaves. These have a citrus
fragrance which persists in dried flower arrangements. Sweet flag forms dense
clumps in sun or shade in damp soil or shallow water.
Arrowhead ( Sagitaria latifolia ) has triangular, tropical-looking leaves and
snow white flowers, carried all summer in whorls on tall stems. Its roots form
numerous potato-like tubers which feed water fowl and beavers. Arrowhead
adapts to a small pool or even a muddy pot on the patio.
Pickerel weed has shiny, heart-shaped leaves topped with pale blue spikes of
flowers that last from late spring until late fall. Native ferns are an
especially graceful complement to these spiky plants.
Grasses are good, too. Spartina pectinata, Aureomarginata , a variegated
version of the North American cord grass, is a fountain of gold whose roots
will anchor an eroding bank. A less aggressive choice would be the dainty
tufted hair grass, with the wonderfully euphonious scientific name of
"Dechampsia caespitosa."
The most colorful choices for a water garden would be the brilliant yellow
marsh marigold ( Caltha palustris ) or the 7-foot swamp sunflower ( Helianthus
angustifolius ); the flamboyant, hugely flowered swamp rose mallow ( Hibiscus
moscheutos ); Lobelias: cardinalis , which is red; siphilitica, deep blue; and
finally the purple-red florets of ironweed ( Veronia spp ) and the pink puff
balls of the imposing joe-pye weed.
And, as Carol Bishop concluded, "Surely Monet would approve."
(Anthony C. Bleach coordinates the horticulture program at Naugatuck Valley
College in Waterbury. The college is offering a new course this fall, called
"Advanced Greenhouse Management.")
