Whanganui Chronicle

How to be really cool

Stay cool this summer with a shade tree, suggests

- Gareth Carter. is general manager of Springvale Garden Centre. Visit www.springvale­gardencent­re.co.nz.

ON A HOT SUMMER’S DAY, the value of a tree is sought-after. At parks, a tree becomes the favoured place to put the picnic rug and bask in the cool dappled shade it offers. In a carpark, having the car under a tree will help keep the vehicle cool. Planting trees on the west side of your house will provide shading to your abode that will reduce the solar gain and temperatur­es inside the home.

I was talking to a passive house expert this week who gave the example that, during the summer months, windows in a home are like a heat pump, adding kilowatts of heat into a home.

Going further with this thought — if a tree blocks out the heat, your house will not overheat as much on these super-hot summer days.

This is where planting deciduous trees which drop their leaves in the autumn offers so much value. They provide shade during the hot months and allow sun through during the cooler months, when more solar gain is advantageo­us and desired.

A shade sail could provide the same sun protection, but it does not have the same cooling effect as a tree. The mass of water stored in a tree, which travels from the soil into the roots, through the trunk and branches then evaporates out the leaves, provides a cooling effect that is unsurpasse­d.

In situations where you need the tree to also provide privacy from neighbours or remove an object from view, an evergreen may be a better choice.

There is a great selection of trees that will provide excellent shade. Things to consider are what size you would like, what space is available, if you would like it to flower and if you would like something with good autumn foliage colours for seasonal interest. These need to combine with practical considerat­ions, such as soil type, exposure to wind, frost, cold, coastal salt spray etc, to ensure the tree’s successful growth.

For a smaller town section, one must consider the shade a tree may create for a neighbour, so smaller growing varieties or trees that respond well to pruning will be a better choice.

Here are a few good options:

Cercis Forest Pansy is a stunning smaller growing deciduous tree suitable for many town gardens. Popular for its deep burgundy foliage colour, Forest Pansy can be kept tidy to around three metres tall and three metres wide, providing a wonderful shade tree for a small courtyard situation. If left untrimmed, Forest Pansy will grow to about five metres.

Flowering cherries (prunus) are a very popular choice of shade tree. There are a number of varieties that all have slightly different growth habits. Kanzan is a taller growing variety with spectacula­r double pink flowers and forms a vase-shaped head, while Pink Perfection has a very similar flower, but its growth habit is far more spreading, so it forms a better shade tree if it’s width you need. Jim’s Delight is a relatively new release and only reaches three metres high - a real little gem if you want a small shade tree for a tight corner. A top-selling flowering cherry tree is

Shimidsu Sakura. This has an excellent spreading umbrella-shaped growth habit. It will grow to about four metres high by five metres wide and, as well as being an excellent shade tree for the summer, it puts on a spectacula­r show in October, with deep pink buds opening to double white flowers with pink tones. Shimidsu Sakura also has a good display of autumn colours, with leaves turning tones of orange and yellow before dropping.

Silk tree (Albizia julibrissi­n) is another excellent shade tree. In flower at the moment, you will be able to spot them around the city, with their mass of fluffy pinky-red flowers covering the trees. Hotter summers seem to improve the flowering of these trees. The silk trees have distinctiv­ely soft, ferny foliage which lends itself to providing good dappled shade from its naturally spreading branches. These trees, if left to grow, will reach about six metres tall and five metres wide, but they are easily pruned to a much smaller size. They grow quickly, so good shade can be establishe­d in three to four years.

Driving around the city, I have also seen some magnificen­t jacaranda in flower, with their cool bluey-purple blooms. These can also be kept smaller with pruning.

Fruit trees can also make good shade trees. A plum tree at the bottom of the garden can make an excellent shade tree, with a mass of white blossom in the spring and then an abundant crop of fruit around Christmas. The added bonus is the fast growth rate of plum trees, from which shade can be establishe­d, and they can be pruned to size. Cherry trees also make good shade trees. I have talked about the beauty and good growth habits of flowering cherries, but you can also consider a fruiting cherry. The blossom isn’t as spectacula­r, but the bonus of growing your own cherries is an option worth weighing up.

Evergreen shade trees tend not to change through the seasons and, apart from flowers and sometimes berries, they will offer a very similar look year-round. If you are wanting to use your shade tree as a year-round screen to offer privacy, an evergreen tree will be a better option. A lot of the larger growing native trees make spectacula­r shade trees, but in a town section, these will usually grow too big for the space available.

There are some good evergreen trees for smaller and town sections. Leptosperm­um Copper Sheen forms a good shade tree when its lower limbs are pruned. It has a lovely weeping habit, with its coppery-burgundy red foliage making it an attractive tree. It also becomes covered in a mass of white flowers in summer. This tree is very fast-growing, which makes it a good option for quickly establishi­ng privacy. It responds well to trimming and can also be grown as a hedge.

Some michelia varieties form lovely shade trees. I say “some” because there are varieties that simply don’t grow large enough, and their habit is shrubby. However, the dolstopa variety and its hybrids form good evergreen trees. These varieties will form a trunk with a rounded head of branches and foliage that will offer good shade from the hot summer sun. A real feature of michelia is an amazing display of highly fragrant, white flowers in the late winter and early spring.

Gareth Carter

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 ?? ?? A Liriodendr­on tulipifera provides magnificen­t shade in Washbourne Gardens, Richmond.
A Liriodendr­on tulipifera provides magnificen­t shade in Washbourne Gardens, Richmond.

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