urban growth
Give your garden an evergreen thumb
MARK AND BEN CULLEN SPECIAL TO TORSTAR
Remember those who were there for you when life was looking a bit grey? In the garden, those are evergreens.
Many of our garden plants have now awoken from winter slumber and grown a new cloak of green. Leaves suddenly block our view where, for about six months of the year, we could see through the skeleton of deciduous tree and shrub branches.
Surrounded by the season’s leafy wonder-world, it is easy to forget the benefits of evergreens. They, too, sleep through winter but they don’t lose their foliage, thereby providing yearround interest.
Evergreens make a great screen or permanent hedge. Large evergreens - like spruce, pine and fir - provide privacy and nesting areas for song birds. Evergreens smell good and at Christmas you can cut branches to bring indoors for the colour and the scent, reminding you of happy times in the garden.
Some outstanding evergreens that should be on your radar:
BOXWOOD: Here in Southern Ontario, we are blessed with winters just mild enough that we can grow outstanding Korean boxwood. Better still, the hybrids produce a deeper green, more dense foliage and are generally more winter hardy.
Look for Green Gem and Green Mound for a natural, mounding shape that requires very little pruning and produces a deep, green colour. The redeeming features of boxwood are many:
They are short. Most only mature to about 80 centimetres or so. Perfect as specimens in a perennial border or for use as hedges.
They grow slow. This is a benefit when you are looking for an evergreen feature in your garden that will last for (almost) ever. Some boxwood will grow for more than 70 years here. Evergreens smell good and at Christmas you can cut branches to bring indoors for the colour and the scent, reminding you of happy times in the garden.
They are broad-leafed. Boxwood does not have needles, as many other evergreens do. Their broad leaves look deciduous but provide the benefits of evergreens.
YEWS (taxus): You plant them, water them for a year or two and walk away. The wide selection of varieties is worthy of most anyone’s attention. Hicks yew is the most popular for hedging, growing up to about two metres, while Hill’s yew grows to a metre or so.
Pyramid or Japanese Yews are great specimens that will grow to about three metres.
All yews lend themselves marvellously to pruning. Len Cullen, Mark’s dad, used many yews at his once famous Cullen Gardens and Miniature Village, in Whitby, to craft his topiary figures. Nothing conforms to shape by pruning quite like yews do. And nothing beats a yew clipped into the shape of a duck. Or whatever.
Taxus originally got their name from the Greek word “taxon,” a bow; the wood was used for making bows long ago.
Yews enjoy full sun to partial shade.
OREGON GRAPE (mahonia): Technically, this is a deciduous plant that holds its peculiar holly-like foliage over the winter. Come spring it pushes the old leaves off as it creates new ones. Matures to about 1.5 metres and equally wide. A native of the Canadian west coast. Shade tolerant.
JAPANESE SPURGE (pachysandra): An excellent permanent ground cover that takes a beating. We had a dog that stomped through it for years - and no damage.
Even the people can walk on it from time to time and pachysandra will continue to look good. Matures to about 20 cm high. Plant on 15 cm centres to create a grid that will naturally fill for a carpet of evergreen.
EUONYMUS (sarcoxie): Few garden plants are as versatile as euonymus. Look for the dark-leaved sarcoxie wintercreeper for a selfclinging vine that will grow up to two storeys high or can be trimmed into a small shrub.
Emerald ’n’ Gold euonymus features bright gold variegation on the narrow leaves.
Surespot provides colour with the variegation is reversed: gold in the centre of the leaves with dark green margins.
Still looking for an evergreen solution? Here are our recommendations.
Best evergreen hedge: native white cedar
Best permanent screen: Colorado spruce
Best ornamental value: Silver fir (Mark); weeping false Cypress (Ben)
Best native evergreen: White spruce
If you consider evergreens in June, they’ll be there for you in January. Now is a good time to plant.
Mark Cullen is an expert gardener, author, broadcaster, tree advocate and holds the Order of Canada. His son Ben is a fourth-generation urban gardener and graduate of University of Guelph and Dalhousie University in Halifax. Follow them at markcullen.com, @markcullengardening, on Facebook and bi-weekly on Global TV’s Morning Show.