Eye
Catching Center Pieces Capture the Eye

Containers filled with colorful plants will bring
a fresh touch to any garden, regardless of the garden’s
size or style. Pots full of flowers and brightly colored foliage
can be an inexpensive way to garden, and for some folks they
are easier to tend than plants in the ground. Caring for plants
in containers on tables and plant stands can enable older and
even disabled gardeners to continue gardening if moving about
in the yard is a challenge. Fully mobile and ambitious gardeners
like the flexibility of containers, which can be changed out
with the seasons. Using containers to fill gaps in my garden
is helpful when I need more time to figure out permanent plantings.
I really have fun creating garden vignettes with flower-filled
containers. Last year I filled a container with the leftovers
from my garden plantings; the effect was striking and cost-effective.
I especially enjoy working a surprise factor into container
gardens. For instance, just outside our front door I’ve
put a container with a tomato plant surrounded by solar yellow
marigolds. It's not common to find tomatoes in an entryway planter,
but incorporating the marigolds makes for a stunning centerpiece.
Another eye-catching idea is to spray tomato cages in colors
that make them stand out and be noticed. Believe me, a tomato
plant surrounded by a cage that’s been spray-painted chartreuse
instantly becomes the exclamation point of any container!
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One to thrill, one to fill, and one to spill are the three easy
steps to creating container gardens worth your time and money.
“Thrill, fill and spill” is a simple phrase to remember
this process for designing exciting pot gardens. It’s
the same phrase used by professional garden designers.
1. You will know you’ve encountered the “thrill”
factor for your container when a plant stops you in your tracks
at your favorite garden center. Whether unusual or merely a
bright new color, it makes a statement. If it’s a bit
taller than most plants, you also have found the centerpiece
for your new container garden. A plant to thrill can be found
in any department of a garden center. An ornamental grass, agave
or yucca, even a tropical houseplant can make a statement. Go
on, live on the edge; try something that really makes a statement!
2. Filler plants are easy. Pick any showy annuals that bring
the container some eye-popping color. Geraniums, zinnias, petunias,
and dahlias are all good examples of filler plants for containers.
3. Spillers soften container edges. Vincas, ivies, wave petunias,
and alyssums are all examples of spillers that will bring an
additional dimension to your arrangement.
With containers you can throw planting rules to the wind. For
example, ignore that tag in the plant’s nursery pot that
recommends a space of 12 inches between plants. The ideal container
design will have little to no surface soil showing when complete.
I think and envision in terms of foliage to foliage when planting
containers. With upright plants root to root is more in keeping
to really make a pot look full.
Plants do not like waterlogged soil, so be sure to use a container
that allows water to seep from the bottom. Besides using a pot
with good drainage, the potting soil used can mean the difference
between success and failure with container gardens. Unfortunately,
potting soil blends are where the most shortcuts are taken in
our industry. I probably will get in trouble with my editor
and the box store for writing this, but I don't like the national
brand that starts with 'M' and ends with ‘gro’.
I have found that as they endure our harsh prevailing southwesterly
winds mountain plants struggle to become established in such
soil.
Instead, be sure to use a potting soil mix that is rich in peat
moss and has a generous amount of perlite. Perlite is the white
sponge-like particles mixed into a better soil. Perlite also
happens to be the most expensive ingredient in any potting soil.
Ask for recommendations from your favorite nursery staff, but
if in doubt buy the soil that has a generous amount of both
peat-moss and perlite, even it costs a couple of dollars more.
Here are some of my favorite plant combinations for containers:
In sun-splashed locations I like mandevilla vine, harlequin
dahlias, and barnyard blue verbena, with white alyssum filling
every vacant nook and cranny. For shady spots I really enjoy
a mixture of King Kong coleus, Icicle helichrysum, begonias,
and ivy geraniums spilling over the sides. Large containers
are a great place to keep corralled those “prone-to-go-wild”
plants like bamboo and purple fountain grass. Using rambling
petunias and million bells to spill over the edges of these
bigger containers makes for a really impressive display.
Don’t forget that Mother’s Day is next weekend.
Also keep in mind that containers filled with blooming plants
last the entire growing season, while their equivalently priced
bouquet of cut flowers, are pretty only for a few days. Give
your mother a garden center gift card and take her shopping
to spend it. She'll be talking for months about the time spent
with her child(ren) and how much fun it was to pick out just
the right plants. The time spent together will be the memory,
the season-long flowers the reminders of that memory.
Until next week, I'll see you at the garden center.
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