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Instead of lippia, try these lawn substitutes

Florence “Flip” Manne
Sun Valley

Answer: Florence, you are right — getting rid of grass is a great goal. Traditional lawns take so many resources — water, time, money, chemicals — while contributing so little to the aesthetic of a property.

Before we get into the mystery of lippia’s disappearance, let’s consider a few inexpensive, drought-resistant, readily available lawn alternatives that may suit your design needs. I’m suggesting three of varying heights, all with the qualities you attributed to lippia:

Yarrow

If you prefer a lawn-like look, try Achillea millefolium, commonly known as yarrow, for a year-round deep green. It’s one of the plants my firm uses for its IdealMow alternatives — lawns or meadows consisting of California natives and other plants suited to thrive in L.A. County with little maintenance, scant water and no synthetic chemicals. For the look of a traditional lawn, mow yarrow to a height of 3 inches once a month. A wildly attractive alternative: Don’t mow it, and allow yarrow to develop beautiful stalks of white flowers.

Hummingbird sage

For a rustic design, it’s hard to beat the charms of Salvia spathacea, better known as hummingbird sage. Its large, low, soft leaves will spread on their own, growing 12 to 18 inches high with multi-flower stalks appearing sporadically throughout all seasons. It will happily maintain a mild, shady slope and will thrive beneath fussy oaks with little or no water. As you may have guessed, hummingbird sage also attracts wildlife.

Breath of Heaven

The striking gold foliage of a Coleonema pulchellum cultivar called Sunset Gold grows 2½ feet high and can make a visual effect in groupings. For a contemporary look, place alternating masses of contrasting blue-colored foliage such as Festuca idahoensis adjacent to Sunset Gold. For drama, you could place architectural plants such as Agave attenuata to appear as if they are erupting from a sea of gold. This Coleonema is often sold under the name Breath of Heaven or Golden Breath of Heaven.

Each of these alternatives can be found at nurseries, and yarrow can be started economically from seed. They require no fertilizers to stay in optimal condition, and they demand about 70% less water than a traditional lawn. They have one other benefit that distinguishes them from lippia: They are not invasive.

Now we get to the mysterious disappearance of lippia (Phyla canescens). The plant spreads aggressively, so aggressively that it may invade not only the adjacent garden but also our region’s wild spaces. Much of what we’ve come to see as our inevitable cycle of fires and floods can be attributed to the proliferation of invasive species inadvertently introduced to our wild lands through our home gardens.

Although some of the worst offenders, including fountain grass, pride of Madeira, broom and pampas grass, are still sold in nurseries, standards are evolving. Lippia’s disappearance is part of this evolution.


Our expert

Our answer this week comes from Cassy Aoyagi, co-founder and president of FormLA Landscaping, www.formlainc.com. She is an accredited designer in the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program, a licensed contractor and board president of the Theodore Payne Foundation for Wildflowers and Native Plants.

Instead of lippia, try these lawn substitutes

Florence “Flip” Manne
Sun Valley

Answer: Florence, you are right — getting rid of grass is a great goal. Traditional lawns take so many resources — water, time, money, chemicals — while contributing so little to the aesthetic of a property.

Before we get into the mystery of lippia’s disappearance, let’s consider a few inexpensive, drought-resistant, readily available lawn alternatives that may suit your design needs. I’m suggesting three of varying heights, all with the qualities you attributed to lippia:

Yarrow

If you prefer a lawn-like look, try Achillea millefolium, commonly known as yarrow, for a year-round deep green. It’s one of the plants my firm uses for its IdealMow alternatives — lawns or meadows consisting of California natives and other plants suited to thrive in L.A. County with little maintenance, scant water and no synthetic chemicals. For the look of a traditional lawn, mow yarrow to a height of 3 inches once a month. A wildly attractive alternative: Don’t mow it, and allow yarrow to develop beautiful stalks of white flowers.

Hummingbird sage

For a rustic design, it’s hard to beat the charms of Salvia spathacea, better known as hummingbird sage. Its large, low, soft leaves will spread on their own, growing 12 to 18 inches high with multi-flower stalks appearing sporadically throughout all seasons. It will happily maintain a mild, shady slope and will thrive beneath fussy oaks with little or no water. As you may have guessed, hummingbird sage also attracts wildlife.

Breath of Heaven

The striking gold foliage of a Coleonema pulchellum cultivar called Sunset Gold grows 2½ feet high and can make a visual effect in groupings. For a contemporary look, place alternating masses of contrasting blue-colored foliage such as Festuca idahoensis adjacent to Sunset Gold. For drama, you could place architectural plants such as Agave attenuata to appear as if they are erupting from a sea of gold. This Coleonema is often sold under the name Breath of Heaven or Golden Breath of Heaven.

Each of these alternatives can be found at nurseries, and yarrow can be started economically from seed. They require no fertilizers to stay in optimal condition, and they demand about 70% less water than a traditional lawn. They have one other benefit that distinguishes them from lippia: They are not invasive.

Now we get to the mysterious disappearance of lippia (Phyla canescens). The plant spreads aggressively, so aggressively that it may invade not only the adjacent garden but also our region’s wild spaces. Much of what we’ve come to see as our inevitable cycle of fires and floods can be attributed to the proliferation of invasive species inadvertently introduced to our wild lands through our home gardens.

Although some of the worst offenders, including fountain grass, pride of Madeira, broom and pampas grass, are still sold in nurseries, standards are evolving. Lippia’s disappearance is part of this evolution.


Our expert

Our answer this week comes from Cassy Aoyagi, co-founder and president of FormLA Landscaping, www.formlainc.com. She is an accredited designer in the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) program, a licensed contractor and board president of the Theodore Payne Foundation for Wildflowers and Native Plants.

Home & Garden Briefs

Posted: Saturday, November 9, 2013 8:32 am

Home Garden Briefs

By Staff Reports

TulsaWorld.com

|
0 comments

Tulsa Home Family Expo begins Friday


Whether you are looking for tips on decorating, remodeling or landscaping your home, the 2013 Tulsa Home Family Expo is the place to go.

The event is Nov. 15-17 at the Exchange Center located on the Tulsa Fairgrounds, 4145 E. 21st St.

The expo features exhibitors offering the latest new products and services for your home, inside and out. The hours are noon to 8 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Nov. 16, and 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Nov. 17. 

Winter gardening tasks topic of Brown Bag Lecture 

A successful landscape in the spring often depends on how well the landscape was maintained in the fall and winter.

The Brown Bag Lecture “Winter Gardening Tips” will be presented at noon at the Tulsa Garden Center, 2435 S. Peoria Ave. 

Mark Linholm, supervisor of the Woodward Park Gardeners, will present a program on winter gardening tasks. Just because we’re not mowing and planting in the winter doesn’t mean we should ignore our landscape and gardens.

Our winters are often dry, requiring supplemental watering to keep our shrubs and trees healthy. Linholm will cover the most common tasks that we need to perform.

This lecture is free to the public. Bring your lunch for the educational hour. For more information, call 918-746-5125 or visit our website at tulsagardencenter.com.

on

Saturday, November 9, 2013 8:32 am.

Home & Garden Briefs

Posted: Saturday, November 9, 2013 8:32 am

Home Garden Briefs

By Staff Reports

TulsaWorld.com

|
0 comments

Tulsa Home Family Expo begins Friday


Whether you are looking for tips on decorating, remodeling or landscaping your home, the 2013 Tulsa Home Family Expo is the place to go.

The event is Nov. 15-17 at the Exchange Center located on the Tulsa Fairgrounds, 4145 E. 21st St.

The expo features exhibitors offering the latest new products and services for your home, inside and out. The hours are noon to 8 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Nov. 16, and 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Nov. 17. 

Winter gardening tasks topic of Brown Bag Lecture 

A successful landscape in the spring often depends on how well the landscape was maintained in the fall and winter.

The Brown Bag Lecture “Winter Gardening Tips” will be presented at noon at the Tulsa Garden Center, 2435 S. Peoria Ave. 

Mark Linholm, supervisor of the Woodward Park Gardeners, will present a program on winter gardening tasks. Just because we’re not mowing and planting in the winter doesn’t mean we should ignore our landscape and gardens.

Our winters are often dry, requiring supplemental watering to keep our shrubs and trees healthy. Linholm will cover the most common tasks that we need to perform.

This lecture is free to the public. Bring your lunch for the educational hour. For more information, call 918-746-5125 or visit our website at tulsagardencenter.com.

on

Saturday, November 9, 2013 8:32 am.

Trowel & Glove: Marin gardening calendar for the week of Nov. 9, 2013

Click photo to enlarge

Marin

• The Marin Open Garden Project encourages residents to bring their excess backyard-grown fruit and vegetables to the following locations for a free exchange with other gardeners on Saturdays: Mill Valley from 10 to 11 a.m. on the Greenwood School front porch at 17 Buena Vista Ave.; San Rafael from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. in Sun Valley Park at K and Solano streets; and San Rafael from 9 to 10 a.m. at Pueblo Park on Hacienda Way in Santa Venetia. Go to www.opengardenproject.org or email contact@opengardenproject.org.

• Clarke de Mornay of Flora Grubb Nursery speaks about “Putting in a Xeriscape Garden” at 9:30 a.m. Nov. 9 at the Falkirk Cultural Center at 1408 Mission Ave in San Rafael. $5. Call 473-4204 or go to www.marinmg.org.

• The Marin Bonsai Club’s annual fall show is from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Nov. 9 at the Marin Art Garden Center at 30 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. in Ross. Free. Go to marinbonsai.org.

• Brian Rafferty of Marin Master Gardeners speaks about “Dealing with Wildlife in the Garden” at 11 a.m. Nov. 9 at the Novato Library at 1720 Novato Blvd. Free. Call 473-4204 or go to www.marinmg.org.

• West Marin Commons offers a weekly harvest exchange at 1:30 p.m. Saturdays at the Livery Stable gardens on the commons in Point Reyes Station. Go to www.westmarincommons.org.

• The Novato Independent Elders Program seeks volunteers to help Novato seniors with their overgrown yards on Tuesday mornings or Thursday afternoons. Call 899-8296.

• Volunteers are sought to help in Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy nurseries from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays at Tennessee Valley, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesdays at Muir Woods or 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays or 9 a.m. to noon Saturdays in the Marin Headlands. Call 561-3077 or go to www.parksconservancy.org/volunteer.

• David Hill speaks about “Watering Needs for Stress-Free Trees and Plants” at a meeting of the Peacock Garden Club at 11 a.m. Nov. 13 at the Falkirk Cultural Center at 1408 Mission Ave. in San Rafael. Free. Call 453-2816.

• Jen Strobel teaches a holiday planter workshop is at 1 p.m. Nov. 13 at Sloat Garden Center at 700 Sir Francis Drake Blvd. in Kentfield (454-0262) and at 10:30 a.m. Nov. 16 at Sloat Garden Center at 401 Miller Ave. in Mill Valley (388-0365). $30.

• Anne-Marie Walker of Marin Master Gardeners speaks about “Gifts from the Garden” at noon Nov. 15 at the Civic Center Library at 3501 Civic Center Drive in San Rafael. Free. Call 473-4204 or go to www.marinmg.org.

• Wendy Johnson teaches a “Perennial Propagation in the Autumn Garden” workshop from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Nov. 16 at the Indian Valley Organic Farm and Garden at 1800 Ignacio Blvd. in Novato. $30. Call 473-4024 or go to www.marinmg.org to register.

• The SPAWN (Salmon Protection and Watershed Network) native plant nursery days are from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Fridays and weekends. Call 663-8590, ext. 114, or email jonathan@tirn.net to register and for directions.

• The Marin Organic Glean Team is seeking volunteers to harvest extras from the fields for the organic school lunch and gleaning program at various farms. Call 663-9667 or go to www.marinorganic.org.

• Marin Open Garden Project (MOGP) volunteers are available to help Marin residents glean excess fruit from their trees for donations to local organizations serving people in need and to build raised beds to start vegetable gardens through the MicroGardens program. MGOP also offers a garden tool lending library. Go to www.opengardenproject.org or email contact@opengardenproject.org.

• Marin Master Gardeners and the Marin Municipal Water District offer free residential Bay-Friendly Garden Walks to MMWD customers. The year-round service helps homeowners identify water-saving opportunities and soil conservation techniques for their landscaping. Call 473-4204 to request a visit to your garden.

San Francisco

• The Conservatory of Flowers, at 100 John F. Kennedy Drive in Golden Gate Park, displays permanent galleries of tropical plant species as well as changing special exhibits from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. $2 to $7. Call 831-2090 or go to www.conservatoryofflowers.org.

• The San Francisco Botanical Garden Society, at Ninth Avenue and Lincoln Way in Golden Gate Park, offers several ongoing events. $7; free to San Francisco residents, members and school groups. Call 661-1316 or go to www.sfbotanicalgarden.org. Free docent tours leave from the Strybing Bookstore near the main gate at 1:30 p.m. weekdays, 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. weekends; and from the north entrance at 2 p.m. Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays. Groups of 10 or more can call ahead for special-focus tours.

Around the Bay

• Cornerstone Gardens is a permanent, gallery-style garden featuring walk-through installations by international landscape designers on nine acres at 23570 Highway 121 in Sonoma. Free. Call 707-933-3010 or go to www.cornerstonegardens.com.

• Garden Valley Ranch rose garden is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays through Sundays at 498 Pepper Road in Petaluma. Self-guided and group tours are available. $2 to $10. Call 707-795-0919 or go to www.gardenvalley.com.

• The Luther Burbank Home at Santa Rosa and Sonoma avenues in Santa Rosa has docent-led tours of the greenhouse and a portion of the gardens every half hour from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. $7. Call 707-524-5445.

• McEvoy Ranch at 5935 Red Hill Road in Petaluma offers tips on planting olive trees and has olive trees for sale by appointment. Call 707-769-4123 or go to www.mcevoyranch.com.

• Wednesdays are volunteer days from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at Occidental Arts and Ecology Center at 15290 Coleman Valley Road in Occidental. Call 707-874-1557, ext. 201, or go to www.oaec.org.

• Quarryhill Botanical Garden at 12841 Sonoma Highway in Glen Ellen covers 61 acres and showcases a large selection of scientifically documented wild source temperate Asian plants. The garden is open for self-guided tours from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily. $5 to $10. Call 707-996-3166 or go to www.quarryhillbg.org.

The Trowel Glove Calendar appears Saturdays. Send high-resolution jpg photo attachments and details about your event to calendar@marinij.com or mail to Home and Garden Calendar/Lifestyles, Marin Independent Journal, 4000 Civic Center Drive, Suite 301, San Rafael, CA 94903. Items should be sent two weeks in advance. Photos should be a minimum of 1 megabyte and include caption information. Include a daytime phone number on your release.

Landscape architecture students create plan for campus greenway

Texas AM graduate landscape architecture students developed a master plan for a major addition to the university’s College Station campus — the Texas AM Gardens and Greenway project — a planned transformation of a 46-acre area of West Campus that will include an outdoor classroom, amphitheater, demonstration gardens and nature trails.

The gardens and greenway site, which includes the grounds surrounding the three College of Agriculture and Life Science buildings, is bordered by John Kimbrough Blvd., Discovery Drive and Horticulture Street. The park-like improvements will help showcase the college’s commitment to feeding a growing global population with dwindling natural resources, introduce K-12 students to agriculture and the natural sciences, and provide a place for relaxation amid natural surroundings.

“We envision school buses full of youngsters unloading at the entrance, agriculture students digging in the soil, music majors practicing in open areas, and recreation, parks and tourism students hosting events and nature tours,” said Doug Welsh, horticulture professor emeritus and the project’s coordinator. “We hope that families will stop in for an afternoon stroll and that birders will visit to watch the more than 50 avian species in the area.”







 

The students, led by Jon Rodiek, professor of landscape architecture, developed a plan that includes teaching and demonstration gardens, a wildflower-covered meadow, a rose garden, trails with boardwalks over wetland areas, a visitor center and an amphitheater for the performing arts, films, and social events.

The plan also includes Feed the World Plaza, an area with displays commemorating Texas AM researchers such as Nobel laureate Norman Borlaug, whose breakthroughs in agriculture led to the “Green Revolution,” which helped prevent famines in India and Pakistan in the 1960s.

The landscape architecture students worked with Texas Parks and Wildlife to plan for the restoration and preservation of the area’s White Creek habitat, which sustains native plants and animals, including numerous bird species. White Creek runs through the length of the proposed project.

“The concepts, site plans, computer graphics and innovative use of the site are representative of professional work,” said Rodiek, whose students developed the master plan in three phases.

They began in the summer of 2012, performing a site inventory and researching similar projects. In the fall, they developed the plan based on their summer work and feedback from Welsh and a College of Agriculture and Life Sciences committee, and in the spring, they added designs for demonstration gardens and landscaping for the AgriLife building complex.

Rodiek’s students presented several concepts to the committee, which critiqued each iteration, suggesting modifications and new elements for incorporation in the master plan.

Welsh is using the plan to gather financial support for the project, which is to be built and maintained with private donor funds. For more information or to make a contribution to the Texas AM Gardens and Greenway project, visit give.am/tamugardens or contact Monica Delisa at the Texas AM Foundation at m-delisa@tamu.edu or 800.392.3310.

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English Gardens, Elephant Ears among new tenants – The Ann Arbor News

Related story: Ann Arbor’s Briarwood Mall completes 1st large-scale renovation in 10 years

A locally owned children’s clothing and equipment store and a Metro Detroit-based landscaping store are among two recent tenant additions at Ann Arbor’s Briarwood Mall.

Elephant Ears, which operates a store in the Kerrytown Market Shops building, and English Gardens, which has a store on Ann Arbor’s North Maple Road, both signed leases to open at Briarwood Mall.

Elephant Ears opened a store last week in Briarwood Mall. 

“Having a secondary location in town, it starts to make sense,” said Denise Murray, Briarwood Mall’s marketing director. “Elephant Ears is a well known local company. …English Gardens is thrilled to be here.”

Elephant Ears opened its Briarwood store last week in a portion of the former Tricho Salon Spa space in the Von Maur wing of the mall. Tricho recently consolidated its two locations and opened one 6,500-square-foot salon and spa near MC Sports.

“(Tricho’s new space) used to be a pub over 10 years ago and it sat vacant,” Murray said. “It was a large space that went unused for a long time.”

Tricho Salon Spa consolidated its two Briarwood Mall locations into a 6,500-square-foot space near MC Sports. 

She added: “We have no more in-line spaces to lease. That’s the first time I’ve been able to say that.”

Founded in 2006, the family-owned Elephant Ears store sells children’s clothing, accessories and equipment.

Meanwhile, English Gardens plans to open a temporary holiday store on Sunday in the former Tricho Salon Space near JC Penney, which has its own outdoor entrance. Renovations were underway on Friday morning as staff unpacked inventory and made finishing touches to the space. English Gardens operates 12 landscaping stores in the southeast Michigan region, including one store at 155 N. Maple Rd.

English Gardens plans to open a temporary holiday store at Briarwood Mall on Sunday. 

“English Gardens has worked with Briarwood Mall many, many years,” Murray said. “A lot of times they will come in the spring and do exterior plant sales. This is (English Gardens’) first time out here to have a holiday shop, but it really does make sense. It will be here for three months, maybe four months and they are exploring if it’s the right fit.”

Other tenant changes at Briarwood include:

  • Tatsu Sushi is preparing to open in the mall’s center court in late November
  • Destination Maternity plans to move to the former IT… gift store space after IT… relocated
  • Teen retailer Journeys plans to move to the existing Destination Maternity space
  • The existing Journeys space will become a Journeys Kidz store

Lizzy Alfs is a business reporter for The Ann Arbor News. Reach her at 734-623-2584, email her lizzyalfs@mlive.com or follow her on Twitter.

DOING BUSINESS: Burgess Landscape & The Compost Guys

Many Plymouth business professionals have found that partnering with another business is a great way to reap profits and support deserving ancillary services. Josh Burgess, of Burgess Landscape, decided to do just that when he recently partnered with Earl Fucillo of the lawn care company The Compost Guys.

With more than 30 years of experience fertilizing residential, commercial and public properties, Fucillo is an expert in the fields of organic mosquito and tick control. Josh Burgess has been landscaping on Cape Cod and the South Shore for nearly a decade, and is responsible for displays at Heritage Gardens in Sandwich and numerous prestigious private estates. He specializes in lawn restoration as well as general maintenance, tree work, lawn installations and all landscaping services.

The businesses compliment each other and are packing a punch with customers who want one-stop shopping when it comes to their lawns. We spoke with Josh and Earl about this business move and how it’s benefiting their clients.

 

TELL US ABOUT YOUR BUSINESS

Burgess: “I’m a small business focused on customer needs and finding new ways to solve old problems. I’ve been landscaping for eight years and in Plymouth since 2010. My business offers full-service landscaping, tree work and snow removal.”

Fucillo: “I do 100 percent organic fertilization, weed control and pest control. I develop techniques and products that are herbicide-free and pesticide-free, so they’re safe, effective and do not harm animals, people or the environment.”

 

HOW DID YOU GET INVOLVED IN THIS INDUSTRY?

Burgess: “My parents were always very concerned about their lawn and their landscaping and, as a child, I was confused as to why landscapers didn’t do a better job. I worked construction when I was younger and always knew a desk job wasn’t for me. I got some good advice from successful arborists and landscapers when I was younger and began working with a landscape designer on Cape Cod when I started out.”

Fucillo: “I’ve been in it for about 38 years now. My interest came about as a very young child, when I saw my grandfather treating his vegetable garden with manure tea. He explained to me how it nourished the soil and produced better tomatoes. This memory always stuck with me, and I found my way into organic lawn care and composting with food waste. Josh and I had seen each other’s trucks around and admired each other’s work throughout the past few seasons. So, this year we talked and discovered that we had very similar approaches to work and to life. We knew right away that a partnership between the two of us would work.”

 

WHAT SETS YOU APART?

Burgess: “I’m a perfectionist who takes great pride in his work, and I always deliver as promised. I have made a substantial investment in specialized equipment that allows me to work more efficiently, doing a better job in less time and saving the customer money in the process. I recently began using custom blades on my commercial mowers and the results are outstanding. Working with Earle allows me to concentrate on the parts of landscape work I enjoy and excel at while knowing my customers’ fertilizing, weed control and pest control are in the best possible hands.”

Fucillo: “Experience. There isn’t much I haven’t done in the world of lawn care and landscaping. I was heavily involved in landscaping the Ponds of Plymouth when the first 8,900 homes were built, and I’m the man behind some of the largest lawn and landscaping projects in the state. But I love establishing a personal relationship with a customer, answering their questions and using my expertise to make them happier with their surroundings. Josh and I share this commitment to providing the highest quality products and services and guaranteeing our customers’ satisfaction, so our business partnership is a win-win for us and for the people we work for.”

 

WHAT DO YOU LOVE ABOUT WHAT YOU DO?

Burgess: “I love seeing people’s surprise when I do something they think can’t be done. I’ve made some great friends through the work I do, and everyone all over town waves at me when they see my big purple dump truck and 16-foot trailer with the huge purple flowers on the sides. The best thing about what I do is making my family proud, and proving that anything is possible.”

Fucillo: “As corny as it sounds, I love knowing that I will leave this earth a better place than it was when I arrived. Helping people overcome their misconceptions about organic lawn treatments really makes a difference. I’m leaving my footprint for the future. Treating the soil with organics neutralizes all the harsh salts and chemicals left in it from years of traditional synthetic compounds, kind of like how a person who starts eating healthy, whole foods neutralizes all the effects of their previous diet of junk food.”

 

FOR MOR INFO

Burgess and Fucillo work as a team, but are available separately when clients’ require specific services. For more information on Burgess Landscape, visit www.burgesslandscape.com. You can contact the company at josh@burgesslandscape.com or 508-944-3572. For more information on The Compost Guys, visit compostguys.com or call 508-326-6173.

 

Follow Emily Clark on Twitter @emilyOCM.

Wayne Art Center’s New Children’s Garden: Having Fun with Nature and Art

SAC

The Save Ardmore Coalition

SAC is a grassroots organization dedicated to the revitalization of Ardmore, Pennsylvania’s business district based on community input, consensus building, sound and comprehensive planning, and the preservation of our architectural heritage.

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Garden Jewels: East Eureka and S Street – Times

Click photo to enlarge

EUREKA — The gardens viewed this month by the Eureka Sequoia Garden Club have been in existence for more than 30 years, so the mature plants provide a beautiful landscape design to complement the stately homes. The “Garden Jewels” pictures shown here were taken in August and September when the annuals were at their peak. Viewers are encouraged to return next summer to see these gardens with additional bright colors.

Garden Jewel certificates will be presented at the club meeting on Nov. 15 at the First Covenant Church, 2526 J St. in Eureka. The public is invited to attend the 11 a.m. program by Larissa Haney of Pastori Landscaping, who will give a talk about “Maintaining Your Landscape,” followed by the awards ceremony at noon.

Here are the descriptions of this month’s “jewels,” written by Mary Lou Goodwin except where noted:

2210 S St. — A grove of majestic redwood trees is the setting for the home of Edward and Joan Nilsen. This woodland garden also contains ferns and rhododendrons. The band of 100 pink shrub polyanthus rose bushes named Pinkey were given to them as a housewarming gift 57 years ago. They outline the curved driveway and provide wonderful color from spring to early fall. White alyssum is used as a ground cover with the roses. Other accents include calla lilies and a hedge of escalonia.

2230 S St. — This modern home is owned by Frances Lambert. The landscape design consists of New Zealand flax with dramatic spears of color. Summer rhododendrons, roses, heather, viburnums and rosemary provide pink and lavender accents. The Japanese maple, birch and pine trees complement the tall house and ornamental grasses soften the landscape.

2300 S St. (description written by Paula Trinoskey) — Verne and Paula Trinoskey have a passion for Asia, having traveled there numerous times. Their garden provides a reminder of the trips and gardens they have enjoyed. Since moving to Eureka in 2001, they were introduced to bamboo by Rich Simpson of Bamboo and Maples. They now have 14 varieties with ‘Candy Cane Bamboo’ (damarapa himalaycalamus falconeri) forming a natural enclosure with its very tight clumps of upright canes. Also in their front garden, a large clump of ‘Chocolate Bamboo’ (borinda fungosa) forms a leafy fountain with chocolate canes that acts as a natural screen for off-street parking.

The newest addition is a clump of ‘Weaver’s Bamboo’ (bambusa textilis) that will form an effective screen of the electrical pole across the street. A sea of gravel, fed by a dry, rocky stream and a waterfall formed of flat-smooth pebbles, contains a granite whale that makes a comfortable seat. It is a great place to view the driftwood pieces that mimic the limestone formations found in China. The dwarf and miniature conifers provide winter interest before the burst of color of tulips, narcissus and rhododendrons in the spring. Summer brings a focus on conifers and Japanese maples that provide the grand finale in the fall.

2439 S St. — Outdoor lighting accents the flowering cherry trees in Cindy Olsen’s landscape. Matching palms and bamboo provide design, while the Australian tree fern is big and bold. This year she planted seasonal color of white, pink and purple petunias, so visitors will need to come back next year to see what surprise she has for the community.

3236 S St. — At Gregory and Lalida Jones’ two-story home, landscape plants are grown in containers so that they can be changed with the seasons. Their color is a bright contrast to the lush green lawn. The arbor over the walkway covered with roses and wisteria brings a focus to the front door. Mature trees planted in the 1920s are enjoyed by the family.

1905 Huntoon St. — A hillside garden shows off the home of Gary Knudsen and Ann Clark. Pink magnolias, Australian tea tree, Australian tree fern and oak-leaf hydrangeas stand out over the ornamental grasses and rhododendrons. The driveway is lined with shrub, hybrid tea and grandiflora roses in many colors. The brick retaining walls add to the overall design.

1929 Huntoon St. — Peggy Van Doorn has created an unusual landscape design at her home. The lighted driveway, up an incline, uses concrete, slate, stone and a grass strip to bring the visitor to the front courtyard shaded by black bamboo. The hillside is full of rhododendrons, heathers, escallonia, viburnums, ginger, shrub roses, ceanothus, abelia, New Zealand flax, pieris japonica and hydrangeas. In the fall, the maple trees are majestic in shades of orange and yellow. This could be called a miniature botanical garden.

1808 Buhne St. — This home and garden have been cared for by La Roy and Alpha Hake for more than 40 years with the help of EarthScape Landscaping. Red iron handrails in an Oriental motif on the terraced front walkway set the stage. The junipers have been sheared to represent roses and balls. Flowering cherry trees announce spring, while the Australian tree fern guards the front door. Japanese maples and pines add height, while heathers add a splash of pink color. Nandina (heavenly bamboo) is always present and adds red to the color scheme when it has new growth.

1933 Buhne St. — This impressive, Spanish-style house is the hillside home of Robert Crivello Jr. The landscape was coordinated with the neighbor so many of the same plants appear at both locations. Yucca trees with long, pointed leaves make a statement. A border of purple-leaved shrubs combined with pieris japonica is planted along the curving retaining walls.

Lemons love the protected area with the agapanthus, and clematis vines climb up the trellis. Ornamental grass completes the scene.

2153 Buhne St. — Rob Seniff has lived in this home since 2004. Tall cypress trees frame the garden, which contains a stream, surrounded by alders, redwoods and woodland native plants. The driveway contains pieris japonica, euonymus, abelia, breath of heaven and junipers, which have been shaped into geometric forms. Outdoor lighting makes the garden a dramatic scene. The three-tiered water fountain in the lower garden is an unexpected treasure. The use of ornamental grass is the latest feature added to the garden.

2432 Manzanita St. — Singing Trees Nursery designed this garden for June Davis several years ago. She loves the tall cypress and the junipers shaped into cloud forms. The maroon Japanese maple changes with the seasons and heathers provide a riot of color. Rhododendrons represent Humboldt County and ornamental grasses soft the scene.

3230 Harrison St. (description written by Janna Snell) — Immanuel Lutheran Church is set in a redwood grove and a compact escallonia hedge lines the property to help anchor the church. A palm grove is framed by hedges and a colorful rhythmic planting of pelargoniums and roses.

Breaks in the hedges act as doorways that invite the visitor into the landscape. Rhododendron, fuchsia, bergenia and hebe line the driveway, and a small patio with a picnic table adds beauty and functionality to the property. A smaller flower bed is planted in an informal style to complete the setting.