Dayton Daily News

‘Right-Size Flower Garden’ helps gardeners downsize

Culprits usually are wrong plants, old age, overplanti­ng.

- By Kari Richardson

Life became different the instant Kerry Ann Mendez’s husband broke his neck in a 2011 accident. Topping the list of changes: a full-time job with benefits for Mendez and a new role helping her husband with his physical challenges.

Somewhere further down the list was the yard. Before the accident, Mendez had elaborate gardens surroundin­g her upper New York state property, which she enjoyed caring for immensely. But with the new demands on her time, and without her husband to help, she found the job overwhelmi­ng.

“It was done, discussion over, no more procrastin­ating,” said Mendez, by profession a garden consultant, designer, writer and lecturer who had already begun to think about scaling back as she grew older. She promptly set about retooling her garden to be more in sync with the family’s new lifestyle.

The process planted the seeds for a new book. Mendez figured there were others — whether due to advancing age, health or lifestyle issues, or changing interests — who needed to prune back their gardening hobby and could benefit from her advice.

“The Right-Size Flower Garden: Simplify Your Outdoor Space with Smart Design Solutions and Plant Choices” (St. Lynn’s Press) is a guide for garden enthusiast­s and “plantaholi­cs” who find they have more than they can handle in their landscapes. The culprit, typically, is overplanti­ng, choosing the wrong plants — or simply the advance of time.

“People sometimes need reminders that (gardening) is doable and that it’s supposed to be a joy,” Mendez said. “If things are not in balance with what your current lifestyle or interests are, then we need to take the reins and start declutteri­ng. We need to choose plants that work with us and not against us.”

Since plant selection is a critical aspect of getting gardens back in balance, Mendez devotes a large chunk of the book to the topic — desirable and notso-desirable plants are called out.

She suggests supersize perennials, such as joe-pye weed (Eupatorium purpureum), goat’s beard (Aruncus dioicus) and larger varieties of hosta to use instead of shrubs to fill in large gaps — the fringe benefit for gardeners in colder climates is that they won’t need to be overwinter­ed. She also includes lists of shrubs that rarely need pruning, tidy evergreens, droughttol­erant perennials and deer- and rabbit-resistant plants. The plants she wants the time-constraine­d to avoid include those with shabby foliage, a tendency to be overly aggressive or short-lived plants, for example.

Using the “3 Rs” as her guide — remain, revamp or remove — Mendez’s book is a sort of declutteri­ng manual for the outdoors, the gardening equivalent of organizing closets or paring down possession­s.

But just as people sometimes resist getting rid of clothes they don’t wear or toys they no longer play with, so, too, it goes in the garden. Subtractio­n can be unnatural for gardening enthusiast­s, acknowledg­es Mendez. Plants, after all, are living things. But she frequently reminds her readers that, while living, “plants are not children or pets.”

Once people decide to declutter, they may also want ideas for uses for former gardens (seeding with grass and creating a new hardscape are two suggestion­s), the book notes.

Mendez points out that her advice can also help budding plant enthusiast­s, young couples or time-pressed new parents just getting started in the soil — in short, anyone who buys a house with a yard that overwhelms them.

While homeowners wouldn’t think twice about remodeling a dated kitchen or gutting an unattracti­ve bath, they sometimes balk at retooling outdoor areas, she said.

“Start small,” she said. “You can always make gardens bigger as time and budget allow.”

Today Mendez’s husband’s health is improving, but he still can’t work in the garden. Last year they moved to a condominiu­m in Maine to be closer to family.

 ?? MENDEZ
CONTRIBUTE­D BY KERRY ANN ?? Kerry Ann Mendez downsized her New York garden by replacing two-thirds of the existing garden with sod. The plants in the remaining garden, above, were chosen for four-season interest. Part of that strategy is by choosing plants with interestin­g foliage.
MENDEZ CONTRIBUTE­D BY KERRY ANN Kerry Ann Mendez downsized her New York garden by replacing two-thirds of the existing garden with sod. The plants in the remaining garden, above, were chosen for four-season interest. Part of that strategy is by choosing plants with interestin­g foliage.

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