TREES AND SHRUBS
Planting for winter picking
Planting for winter picking
Filling vases with beautiful bits of nature picked from your very own garden is one of winter’s best morale boosters.
While the days are short we can still enjoy the heartwarming effect of flowers and foliage long after the sun has gone down, simply by bringing a bit of nature indoors.
Indoor plants are worth their weight in gold at this time of year. Or take a stroll around the garden, secateurs in hand and it can be surprising what can be found for creative winter arrangements. And filling vases with beautiful bits of nature picked from your very own garden is one of winter’s best morale boosters.
Here are some treasures to look for when planting a garden that will always have lots of flowers and foliage for picking.
GREENERY
Every flower arranger needs an unlimited supply of attractive green foliage. The big leaves of the evergreen magnolias are a florist’s favourite with leathery leaves that are glossy dark green on one side and bronze velvet on the reverse. Magnolia ‘Little Gem’ is a compact form for town sized gardens. If you have the space for a large tree, consider planting a native puriri tree for its lovely dark green puckered leaves. Viburnum ‘Emerald Lustre’, Prunus lusitanica and Griselinia lucida are other examples of large shrubs with attractive glossy leaves.
FINER FOLIAGE
Small leaves contrast beautifully with big leaves. The New Zealand pittosporums offer some of the best foliage for picking with long straight stems and wavy edged leaves for extra texture. The various Pittosporum tenifolium cultivars offer a range of interesting colours and textures that shouldn’t be overlooked for picking. The rich green Pittosporum ‘Stephen’s Island’ makes a very attractive hedge
and is sought after by florists. Other shrubs offering fine textured foliage are Corokia, Meulenbeckia, conifers and rosemary.
SOMETHING SILVER
For foliage in shades of silver, the Australian gums are vase classics but for smaller gardens there are plenty of smaller shrubs in silvery tones including the lovely New Zealand Brachyglottis varieties and silvery corokias. Grey-green olive and feijoa foliage provides subtle contrast. In bright sparkling silver, the South African silver tree (Leucadendron argenteum) is well worth growing if you have very well drained soil, as is the charming little silver cushion bush (Calocephalus) with its lacy foliage. Perennial Artemisia, small shrub Convolvulus cneorum and ground hugging lamb’s ear (Stachys lanata) are other favourites.
SOMETHING VARIEGATED
Variegated leaves provide accent to a vase arrangement just as they do in a garden. There is no need to fill the entire garden with variegated plants but one choice shrub with leaves in shades of cream and green can be a go to favourite for mid winter picking. Lovely lemon scented Pittosporum eugenioides ‘Variegatum’ works well in a vase. Other great variegated shrubs for picking include variegated forms of Hydrangea, Daphne, Pieris, Coprosma, Euonymus, and Hebe.
FIERY TONES
Some shrubs offer bright orange and red foliage that gets even brighter as temperatures drop. The nandinas are excellent long lasting vase fillers. The brightly coloured cultivars of shiny leaf coprosmas are also great for picking.
THE PROTEA FAMILY
Proteas and their close cousins leucadendrons, leucospermums, banksias and grevilleas are among the most valuable shrubs in a winter garden and they make excellent long lasting vase flowers. Choose from a wide range of exciting flower forms, colours and growth habits. Good drainage is essential for these plants, although proteas will grow well on a heavy clay bank where the excess water can drain away. A delightful little protea relative is Phylica pubescens (flannel flower) with furry cream star flowers.
SOMETHING SCENTED
The fresh fragrance of the daphne is one of the most alluring nature has to offer. There are many varieties of daphne to choose from, some with longer stems good
for picking. Cool climate beauty, wintersweet (Chimonanthus praecox) blooms on bare branches. This tall old fashioned shrub produces small pale yellow flowers on bare branches. It’s visually striking in a vase, but best of all is the fragrance. Wintersweet flowers most spectacularly after a good winter chill. Another bare branched beauty is witch hazel (Hamamelis) with entrancing spidery flowers lined up along silvery zigzagging twigs. For warmer climates the subtropical Luculia varieties offer sumptuous winter and spring perfume. Also, don’t overlook plants with aromatic foliage, including the plants in your herb garden.
FURRY BUDS
With some shrubs there’s no need to wait for the flowers to burst their buds before they offer something exquisite for picking. One of these is the star magnolia (Magnolia stellata). But don’t pick too many because the flowers are equally as stunning when they emerge on their bare branches in late winter. Edgeworthia chrysantha is another shrub that’s charming in bud. In August its fragrant yellow flowers open gradually from the outside in.
WINTER FLOWERING HEBES
Hebes are New Zealand’s most diverse and extensively bred flowering shrubs, loved for their compact form and colourful flowers. The flowers bring bees and butterflies to the garden and they’re great for picking too. Many flower for long periods, including winter. Plant a selection and you could have flowers most of the year.
WINTER ROSES
Hellebores fit easily into any garden and are excellent as ground cover in partial shade under trees and shrubs. They all make lovely lasting vase flowers and modern hellebores are being bred with more outward facing blooms. Like camellias, hellebore flowers display beautifully when floated in a bowl of water.
BEAUTIFUL BERRIES
Every winter picking garden should have at least one shrub with beautiful fruit or berries to enjoy as part of an arrangement or simply displayed in a vase of their own. Choose roses with good sized rose hips and delay pruning until the hips have ripened (this is good for the plant too). Glossy evergreen holly (Ilex varieties) is famous for winter colour but needs low temperatures to bring on the berries. Deciduous shrubs to plant for berries include Viburnum trilobum and Callicarpa dichotoma with bright metallic violet berries on bare branches. A beautiful choice for a spacious garden is the elegant berry tree, Idesia polycarpa which holds its grape sized bunches of scarlet berries well into winter. Be sure to plant a female.