Monterey Herald

Game plans for garden plants

- Tom Karwin can be reached at gardening@ karwin.com

Proactive gardening: we are now in the planting season, acquiring and installing new plants in preparatio­n for the burst of foliage and blossoms in the spring.

Reactive gardening, in comparison, involves waiting for local garden centers to trot out small plants in bloom, then paying the price for an instant garden.

By planning ahead, gardeners benefit from a good range of options, larger plants, lower costs, and greater sense of accomplish­ment.

Once synchroniz­ed with the seasons, we have the challenges and opportunit­ies for choosing plants.

For some gardeners, plant selection is easy. For example, when you have a gap in your rose bed, the project is to find a new rose that appeals to you.

At the other extreme, when you have a pressing urge to beautify your landscape, somehow, you could encounter the many, many choices in a mailorder catalog or garden center, and experience informatio­n overload. This is not uncommon, given the great number of garden-worthy plans and the continuing introducti­on of new hybrids.

One approach to being botanicall­y overwhelme­d is to throw several figurative darts, resulting in a hodgepodge garden that falls short of your vision.

Better, take an organized approach to improving your landscape.

Here are suggestion­s for game planning your garden planting.

First, define your garden as a collection of distinct areas, and decide on your priorities for developmen­t. It’s good to have an overall design concept for your garden, and you could work on more than one element during this season, but good practice favors working with manageable elements of a larger project.

Second, you should be aware of your target area’s basic cultural conditions: climate, soil structure and chemistry, sun exposure, and drainage. These are all important, but let’s focus on the selection of plants that would succeed under the conditions of the area on which you are working.

Third, decide on the overall effect you want to achieve for that area. Some designers speak of the “story” told by a grouping of plants. This suggests a narrative with a beginning, middle, and end, but I prefer the concept of a statement.

For example, you might want

your target area to be a highlight, showstoppe­r, knockout display.

Alternativ­ely, you might want an attractive backdrop for a patio area.

Between such extremes, you might just want a pleasing vignette to view from a window in your home.

There are other possible statements. The point is to express your vision for this target area.

The fourth step is to select a theme for the target area. A theme could take any of several forms. It could focus on blossom color (the white garden is a classic), a combinatio­n of colors (a coordinate­d array in a border), a genus (e.g., a rose bed), or a plant type (e.g., succulents, tropicals). You might have other thematic concepts in mind, but choosing a theme helps in narrowing the range of possible plant selections.

The fifth step is to narrow the range of plant types that would work well for your target area. Depending on the size of the area, several plant types could be suitable. Here are examples: tree,

shrub, columnar shape, fountain shape, vine, espalier, trellis, container, groundcove­r, and bulb. The combinatio­n of plant types for a given planting area could follow basic landscape design principles, including the everpopula­r “larger plants in the back,” but still reflect your individual inspiratio­n.

The sixth step (we shouldn’t have an even number of steps!) is to follow your heart. Select the plant that charms your eye, that stirs fond memories, amazes your friends, or magically succeeds in your unique garden space.

Enrich your gardening days

The stepwise approach outlined in this column might not be your preferred way to select plants, but more intuitive or spontaneou­s or expert methods probably go through similar steps at high speed. For those gardeners, that’s fine, and I congratula­te you for reaching successful results.

Still, if you should feel botanicall­y overwhelme­d, try game planning your plant selection.

Advance your gardening knowledge

LeeValley, which I know as a source of excellent tools for gardening, woodworkin­g, and other activities, has posted “The Gardening Journal with Niki Jabbour,” a series of brief videos with “useful tips, techniques, and tool demonstrat­ions to help you to grow the garden of your dreams.” The website also offers welldone articles on aspect of gardening. Visit leevalley.com/, click on “Discover,” and then click on either “GardenVide­os” for Niki Jabbour’s videos or “Garden Articles” for informatio­n on gardening (mostly about edibles).

Garden Gate magazine offers a series of brief garden-related video recordings online. To check them out, visit youtube. com, search for “garden gate’ and scroll down a little way to see the list of video recordings.

If you should feel botanicall­y overwhelme­d, try game planning your plant selection.

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 ?? TOM KARWIN — CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Blooms of a San Pedro cactus.
TOM KARWIN — CONTRIBUTE­D Blooms of a San Pedro cactus.

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