Date: Fri 20-Feb-1998
Date: Fri 20-Feb-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: JUDYC
Quick Words:
Twombly-Gardener-Suburban
Full Text:
Suburban Gardener: A Beautiful Garden, In Winter!
"The chill hand of winter cruelly exposes the skeleton of a garden as
efficiently as a butcher's boning knife on a carcass. "
--Geoff Stebbings
BY ANTHONY C. BLEACH
Without flowers and foliage, a garden relies on design and permanent features
to retain its interest and character. You need the undulation of the
landscape, the skeletons of the trees and shrubs, the shape of rocks, the
masses and forms of evergreens.
Line becomes important too. The tracery of leafless boughs, the edges of
paths, fences, trellises and walls. We become aware of new ranges of colors,
like the bronze of the bark of black birches, the yellow of willow branches or
the purple haze of a hillside covered with second growth. The flowering
dogwood, with stratified, exquisitely sculpted branches stretching to the sky,
has never looked more beautiful through the front window.
Recently we toured a winter garden planted at a popular nursery in Monroe. We
were introduced to this magical place by Jay Nathans, whose enthusiasm warmed
us through the frozen morning. He showed us at least fifty plants that are
outstanding for winter interest. I was scribbling as feverishly as a
Washington reporter.
Viburnum sieboldi is one of the few viburnums that are completely successful
as a specimen. It is handsome throughout the season, but at the end of it, is
amazing. The fruit is prodigious and is held long into winter.
Malus ("White Angel") was still carrying a huge crop of dark-red fruit.
Hawthorn ("Winter King") is also a great bearer of winter fruit.
In front of a backdrop of evergreens was a small coppice of Red Twig dogwood,
both "Cardinal," Jay's favorite, and "Elegantissima," which in summer has
blue-green leaves with creamy margins. It was a wonderful effect, only
surpassed by spectacular plantings of Winterberries Ilex verticillata
("Sparkleberry"), "Winter Gold," and best of all, "Winter Red."
As Geoff Stebbings wrote in a recent article, "Nature has no greater contrast
in color than snow-white frost and fiery red berries."
Magnolia virginiana ("Greenbay") was still leafy, like an apple-green
rhododendron, but 20 feet high. M. grandifrond ("Edith Bogue") had lustrous
dark green leaves.
In June, Cladrastis lutea ("Yellowood") is covered with panicles of fragrant
white flowers, but now it is still as impressive, with its bark, like
sculptured stone.
The most important plant element in any winter garden is usually evergreens.
But one does not want to plant too many of them, as the overall effect will
probably be gloomy. Also, chose some for specimens, that are a little unusual.
Pinus strobus ("Contorta") as an example. It has twisty needles that are also
of interesting texture.
Another would be the Japanese Plum Yew, Cephalotaxus harringtonia . It is a
superb, shade tolerant evergreen, with long black needles arranged in a
bottlebrush effect. And resident gardener Ken Twombly asserts it is deerproof.
I did not note but now remember how effective and colorful were the Japanese
Andromedas too. Lots of glossy red leaves in the middle of shapely green
shrubs. New growth was also a brilliant red on Leucothoe fontanesiana
("Scarletta"). It has a cascading form and is a choice shrub for shade.
For sun, "Gray Owl" juniper, at three feet high, is a very useful and elegant
fowl. There were lots of Japanese maples in bright colors and interesting
shape and beautiful cinnamon skinned Paperbark Maples (Acer griseum).
One of the best cures for my late winter blues was a crimson patch of the
heather "Robert Chapman." It has red and yellow leaves in winter and lavender
colored flowers later. But I marveled most at Witch Hazel, "Arnold's Promise,"
covered with honey yellow blooms encrusted with icicles.
(Anthony C. Bleach coordinates the horticulture degree program at Naugatuck
Valley College in Waterbury.)
