Date: Fri 09-Aug-1996
Date: Fri 09-Aug-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: CHRISL
Illustration: C
Quick Words:
Bleach-Gardener-Plants-Path
Full Text:
(`Burban Gardener on plants & pathways, 8/9/96)
Suburban Gardener-
Plants Can Soften Steps & Stones
By Anthony C. Bleach
Plants and paving slabs can go together.
Underneath, the soil stays cool in summer and warm in winter. With their heads
in the sun, roots cool and protected, many plants find this an ideal home. It
is a good idea for the gardener to take advantage of this. If you don't,
nature will with a dandelion or grassy weed with roots tucked away under
paving as nearly invincible as any plant can be.
Spilling over the edges of paths or patio pavings, plants will soften lines
and lessen formality. When patio, paths and plantings merge without sharp
transition, the effect is restful.
But give careful thought to color, especially when choosing plants to edge
sunny paths. Bright pinks and purples may enliven shade, but in sun the effect
can be strident. Magenta Phlox subulata wars with red brick in far too many
gardens.
With white you can scarcely go wrong, whatever the color of the paving. The
narrow, dark green leaves of perennial candytuft ( Iberis sempervirens ) are
evergreen in all but the coldest climates. The individual four-petaled flowers
are small, but mass into lace doily heads of shimmering white touched with
pink as they fade. Plants grow up to one foot high, baring with soil, climate
and whether or not they are pruned. Cutting back after the flowers fade
encourages dense, compact plants.
Left alone, candytuft trails and mounds becomingly for several years. It will
renew itself if hard pruned when ragged. Several lower-growing selections are
Purity, Little Gem and four-inch Pygmaea in diminishing order of size.
Christmas Snow often blooms again late in the year, as do the others some
years, especially if spent blooms are removed.
Another beautiful crack filler is Maiden Pink Dianthus deltoides, which trails
over paths on rocks. In spring, they are hidden by the flowers - sun facing
and three-quarter inch across. You can sow the seed in the cracks. The plants
are not long lived but they replace themselves with self-sown seedlings.
If all the intersections of a path are filled with plants, then progress along
it may be awkward to walk along. You may want to mortar some joints, leaving
them open along the edges of the path. Another way is to lay the paving over
black plastic, slitting this with a knife to sow seed or insert a small plant.
A favorite edging plant for such a path is Campanula portenschlagina ,
suitable for sun or part shade. Dense clumps of rounded, bright green leaves
grow only a few inches high. Space them a foot apart and in a year or two they
will meet up, forming a ribbon of starry blue flowers in spring. It will also
spread along the seam where riser meets thread of garden steps.
If a path is shaded and fairly moist, moss will probably arrive of its own
accord sooner or later. Grass seeds itself into moss and you can spend many
hours painstakingly picking this out. But remember that some weed killers kill
the grass without damaging the moss. There are many kinds of moss, so this may
not be true of them all; experiment with a small patch first. Moss-like
alternatives are the plants known as Irish and Scotch moss, the bright green
Sagina subulata , and golden S.S. aurea , both sprinkled with tiny white
flowers.
For edging a shaded path alongside a bed of rhododendrons, azaleas or other
tall or medium-sized shrubs, sweet woodruff is hard to beat. It flows over the
path, filling any chinks and merges back among the shrubs to form a deep pile
carpet of the freshest, brightest green whirled leaves. In early spring, they
are topped with lacy white flowers. Shrubs tower over sweet woodruff, but it
will engulf most things under a foot in height.
The best of the annuals for sowing into sunny crannies is sweet alyssum.
Whites, pinks and purples all blend harmoniously with gray paving, but against
red brick it is best to confine it to white. In warm areas it is a perennial,
but even in cold areas it often self-seeds and reappears of its own accord.
For sunny paved patios with unmortared joints, creeping thyme is the best
choice. It is low and flat, tolerant of being trod upon now and then and
yields a pleasant fragrance. At Knightshayes Court, England (a National Trust
garden open to the public), a charming, much photographed feature in the
middle of a lawn consists of an urn (it could as well be a sundial or
birdbath) surrounded by a circular gray-paved area which becomes a mosaic of
intermingled white, pink and purple thyme.
Other plants that do well between the slabs of a patio are woolly yarrow,
thrift, and such sedums as yellow flowered Sedum acre.
An article by Pamela Harper was the basis of this week's piece. Her book,
Perennials, How To Select, Grow and Enjoy , written with Frederick McGourty,
is also superbly illustrated by her.
(Anthony C. Bleach coordinates the horticulture degree program at Naugatuck
Valley Comm-Tech College in Waterbury.)
