Pat Howell
The
Colors of Autumn
August
2002
Late summer can be an awkward time in the garden. The foliage
of early summer has become ragged, many flowers are spent
yet still with us, and the plants are generally thinning out.
Perennial gardens often take a bit of a snooze during the
month of August. The night temperature often does not drop
much below the daytime temperature. Hot days and hot nights
can put plants into a summer sleepiness, or dormancy, but
the hot days and cool nights of September/October allow plants
to expand their root system, yet rest at night, thus storing
up energy that will be critical come spring.
Remember what Easy Gardener has taught you about your new
plants: "First year, sleep; second year, creep; third
year, leap!" Now you know where plants are getting that
energy to creep and leap. And the more water you can give
your plants during hot days, the more those plants will reward
you next spring.
Another of Mother Nature's gifts: the gradual changes in
the weather as we move toward late fall allow the shrubs and
peren-nials the opportunity to harden off before winter's
onset, when they really sleep.
You may find August the month for cut-ting back "tired"
plants that have finished blooming, and for dead-leafing any
scorched customers (there will be plenty of those this year).
Autumn more than compensates for the miseries of summer,
particularly weather-wise. And color-wise, the perennials
and shrubs of autumn go into high gear with a pyrotechnic
display...however brief. Shrubs that form a green backdrop
to the perennials and annuals of summer turn into a crayola-box
display of red, magenta, pink, burgundy, yellow and some brilliant
orange thrown in.
A great fall garden perennial is Anemone japonica. Henry
Mitchell, the late Washington Post garden writer, talked about
the fall-blooming anemone: "Once you have it, you have
it. There is no question of replacing it every few years.
It spreads moderately but is not invasive, and so far as I
have seen it is not bothered by mildew, viruses or bugs."
From a tuft of basal leaves, anemones send up flower stalks
three or four feet high with many buds that open over a period
of several weeks. The individual flowers are about the size
of silver dollars, either white (Honorine Jobert), rose pink
(September Charm), clear medium pink (Queen Char-lotte), deep
raspberry rose (Margarete), or silvery pink (J. Richard Arends
and Vitifolia robustissima), with conspicuous yellow stamens
at the center. There are also semi-double forms. All bloom
for about 6 weeks, and by planting different selections that
vary in bloom time, you can have a show from July to October.
Anemones can appear late in spring, so mark the spot well
to avoid digging them up each year. They resent being moved,
though you can divide it as soon as they appear by pulling
apart the fibrous root ball and keeping the soil well moistened
after replanting.
Plant anemones behind hostas and behind the great aster Raydon's
Favorite, which will tolerate a bit of shade. Raydon's is
medium-blue, blooms late in the season, survives hard freezes,
and has mint-scented foliage. It is vigorous and trouble-free.
Give yourself at least a foot between the anemones, hostas,
and astersÑeven two feet. Each are spreaders. Plan their association
as follows: in your shady border, plant anemones at the back,
with one or two pulled slightly forward for contrast in height;
plant asters next at a safe distance in front; and plant the
hostas in the near front. Arrange them so that the asters
can be pulled up, divided into fresh clumps, and replanted
without disturbing the anemones. Asters occur naturally in
open woods, thickets and clearings (partial shade). Give the
anemone the shadier position. Anemones do not like drought,
so give them a good blanket of leaf mulch and replenish as
needed.
Anemone "Honorine Jober' also marries well with hydrangea
"Nikko Blue", and hydrangea quercifolia, the oaklea
hydrangea. Hydrangeas are woodland plants and they look "right"
when grown in dappled shade in naturalistic gardens. They
play an architectural role: a pair can frame a gate-way or
path, define a vista, or a single specimen can be created
as a focal point. If you have the space, nothing beats a mass
of oakleaf hydrangea. Invaluable for their late-summer flowers,
they continue to look good all winter; the flower heads generally
deepening in color with maturity and remaining decorative
with exfoliating bark in winter, and bold maroon leaves throughout
the cold months until pruning time in spring. As an added
bonus, most hydrangea flowers are well suited to drying for
indoor arrangements.
Community Resource: Takoma's Gardening email group has over
100 members and is open to everyone. Giveaways, advice and
news of gardening events are posted. To join, write to harristakoma@erols.com.
Pat
Howell is a Takoma Park gardener and landscape designer/contractor,
and welcomes comments, advice, suggestions. She is available
for handholding and answering questions through Deephaven
Landscapers.
|