Springtime
Landscape Trait is Freshness

Our spring yards should appear touched by
the freshness associated with the season. They should boast
fresh new foliage gracing the garden, fresh new bulbs emerging
from the earth, and/or fresh new flowers accenting the vitality
of spring.
Each year every landscape should have strategic new plants
added to it. This will bring a fresh look to the yard and spruce
up our neighborhoods. Each of us has neighbors that haven’t
added a new plant to their yards since moving in . . . maybe
10 years ago. Now their junipers are barky and splayed open,
their roses haven’t bloomed in five years, and their lawns
were rocked over after the kids moved away. I actually can drive
through many neighborhoods and date the homes simply by the
old and tired landscapes in the front yards. I won’t even
go into the unfinished back yards.
A landscape should be remodeled for the same reasons a bathroom
or a kitchen occasionally is remodeled, to bring a pick-me-up
to its surroundings. Without the occasional “facelift”,
a yard or garden quickly becomes overgrown and woody without
that invigorating show of vibrant new plants.
This is especially true for business and commercial properties;
most owners don’t have a clue how run down their businesses
look from a customer’s perspective. McDonald's restaurants
made famous the routinely spiffed-up commercial landscape. McD’s
thinking is: “If our landscapes are fresh and clean as
customers approach our drive-through windows, then they are
more likely to consider our food as fresher then our competitors”.
This holds true not only for businesses but also for all of
us who entertain family and friends on our back porches and
patios.
Even in my garden center landscape I plant with a running time
in mind of no more than 4 years. For instance, at the parking
lot entrance I plant with the expectation that in 3 or 4 years
I will cut down a tree or two, dig out shrubs and over-grown
grasses and replace them with fresh new plants. This presents
a consistently “fresh face” to our customers.
Whether you are new to a home or old to a home, consider adding
fresh new plants to spruce up the landscape. It will make you
feel better, show off your home, update your part of the neighborhood,
and show you care about how the yard looks.
Many examples of tremendously damaged plants have been brought
to the garden center; they are evidence of the burning and killing
power of a harsh winter. Whether you replace or add one or more
new plants, at the very least feed everything in the yard. In
spring evergreens should be robust, rich colors. If those in
your landscape have lost their vitality and color, and just
look sick, they need a good feeding. My mountain specific “All
Purpose Plant Food” is just what evergreens need. Although
yellow evergreens are hungry to flush vivid new spring growth,
everything in our yards is hungry right now and will benefit
from a spring feeding.
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This week’s featured plant is the Purple Twist Plum. It
is in bloom around town, with profuse pink flowers preceding
its deep purple foliage. A really showy landscape plant, this
small purple-colored tree is ideal to plant between evergreens.
It is large enough to use as a front yard tree in city lots
or as a well-behaved street tree. Other effective design uses
for these blooming beauties are as matched pairs to flank gateways
and driveways or in orchard-like rows to screen out unsightly
views. They are available in three different sizes, all good
for planting now.
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Mothers, daughters, and gardens seem to go together. So, with
those components as the theme, Watters Garden Center and The
Daily Courier are sponsoring a photo contest. Submit your favorite
mother-daughter garden photo and if your picture is chosen you
will win one of many prizes, the top award being a $150 Watters
gift card to use for anything you like at the garden center.
Earlier in the week I let my 630 Facebook fans know about the
contest, and while I must confess that I love these first entries,
I can hardly wait to see what the notice in today’s article
brings! It really would be nice if one of the readers of this
column were to be the winner. Enter electronically by looking
for Watters the next time you are in Facebook. I also posted
the entry form on the front page of my web site at www.wattersonline.com
.
Until next week, I'll see you at the garden center.
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