Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
Hi all,
I am looking for a couple new foundation shrubs, and a few to go next to my patio, and am hoping some of you can comment on the ones I am considering. I'm not sure whether I've just been drawn in by the pretty catalog photos, or whether these will actually be good plants for me. I'm in south-central Wisconsin, zone 4, but the foundation area is full sun and supports zone 5 plants very successfully. For the foundation (full sun), I am looking at Calycanthus Floridus and Viburnun dentatum Blue Muffin. I am drawn to the scent of the Calycanthus, and the berries of the Blue Muffin. I am a little concerned about the Calycanthus, as I have read that it suckers easily (would it make a good foundation shrub?) and needs moist soil. The foundation area itself is rather dry most of the year, but a drainage depression runs about 2 1/2 feet away from where it will be, and stays fairly moist. Will that be enough? For the patio area, which is partially sunny, I am looking at Clethra Hummingbird, Clethra Alnifolia Paniculata, and Spirea Japonica Shibori. I prefer the Hummingbird to the Paniculata, but am not sure whether it is hardy here? The patio area is on the north side of my house, and I am not sure a zone 5 plant would be hardy enough there. The Spirea Japonica Shibori is pretty in the photos, but I am afraid it would be a little, well, boring. Thoughts? I'm open to other suggestions, too! Thanks in advance! -Shelly |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
Jung's in central wisconsin has plants only hardy to zone 4 in their catalog. Ingrid
"Shelly" wrote: I am looking for a couple new foundation shrubs, . I'm in south-central Wisconsin, zone 4, but the foundation area is full sun and supports zone 5 plants very successfully. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
wrote in message ... Jung's in central wisconsin has plants only hardy to zone 4 in their catalog. Ingrid Thanks for the reply. I know Jung's very well...have one right down the road, and have been very happy with the shrubs I have purchased there in the past. I didn't see anything in the catalog this year that I wanted and didn't already have ;). Any ideas on the shrubs I listed? As for the zone, In my experience, where we live is a zone warmer than the rest of central Wisconsin...in fact, my yard is about 2 weeks ahead of my parent's garden in Milwaukee. |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
no sorry .. I only know generally about shrubs. for this you need my mother who
knows one clethra from another. I live 6 blocks from the lake and snuck in a kousa dogwood which I absolutely adore .. a Kmart dogwood no less. . am getting a couple more named varieties and bonsai them in the back yard... heh, heh. Ingrid "Michelle Hartner" wrote: wrote in message ... Jung's in central wisconsin has plants only hardy to zone 4 in their catalog. Ingrid Thanks for the reply. I know Jung's very well...have one right down the road, and have been very happy with the shrubs I have purchased there in the past. I didn't see anything in the catalog this year that I wanted and didn't already have ;). Any ideas on the shrubs I listed? As for the zone, In my experience, where we live is a zone warmer than the rest of central Wisconsin...in fact, my yard is about 2 weeks ahead of my parent's garden in Milwaukee. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
Thanks anyway, and enjoy the kousa. I know I've got one of those somewhere
in the back, if only I could find it under all this snow! ;) wrote in message ... no sorry .. I only know generally about shrubs. for this you need my mother who knows one clethra from another. I live 6 blocks from the lake and snuck in a kousa dogwood which I absolutely adore .. a Kmart dogwood no less. . am getting a couple more named varieties and bonsai them in the back yard... heh, heh. Ingrid "Michelle Hartner" wrote: wrote in message ... Jung's in central wisconsin has plants only hardy to zone 4 in their catalog. Ingrid Thanks for the reply. I know Jung's very well...have one right down the road, and have been very happy with the shrubs I have purchased there in the past. I didn't see anything in the catalog this year that I wanted and didn't already have ;). Any ideas on the shrubs I listed? As for the zone, In my experience, where we live is a zone warmer than the rest of central Wisconsin...in fact, my yard is about 2 weeks ahead of my parent's garden in Milwaukee. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
Shelly wrote: Hi all, I am looking for a couple new foundation shrubs, and a few to go next to my patio, and am hoping some of you can comment on the ones I am considering. I'm not sure whether I've just been drawn in by the pretty catalog photos, or whether these will actually be good plants for me. I'm in south-central Wisconsin, zone 4, but the foundation area is full sun and supports zone 5 plants very successfully. For the foundation (full sun), I am looking at Calycanthus Floridus and Viburnun dentatum Blue Muffin. I am drawn to the scent of the Calycanthus, and the berries of the Blue Muffin. I am a little concerned about the Calycanthus, as I have read that it suckers easily (would it make a good foundation shrub?) and needs moist soil. The foundation area itself is rather dry most of the year, but a drainage depression runs about 2 1/2 feet away from where it will be, and stays fairly moist. Will that be enough? For the patio area, which is partially sunny, I am looking at Clethra Hummingbird, Clethra Alnifolia Paniculata, and Spirea Japonica Shibori. I prefer the Hummingbird to the Paniculata, but am not sure whether it is hardy here? The patio area is on the north side of my house, and I am not sure a zone 5 plant would be hardy enough there. The Spirea Japonica Shibori is pretty in the photos, but I am afraid it would be a little, well, boring. Thoughts? I'm open to other suggestions, too! Thanks in advance! Rather than selecting plants based on catalog descriptions, you will probably get better results from visiting local nurseries and seeing what plants they offer for the conditions you describe. You should be assured of their winter hardiness for your area as well as their appropriateness for the site and soil conditions and you can see up close and personal what the shrubs will look like. I am unfamiliar with your climate, but IME, neither calycanthus nor clethra will be happy in the situations you describe and neither is particularly attractive off season.. For year round appearance, at least a few (if not most) of your foundation shrubs should be evergreen. pam - gardengal |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
"Pam" wrote in message ... I am unfamiliar with your climate, but IME, neither calycanthus nor clethra will be happy in the situations you describe and neither is particularly attractive off season.. For year round appearance, at least a few (if not most) of your foundation shrubs should be evergreen. pam - gardengal Oh, that was what I was afraid of wind deflating from sails. The other foundation shrubs are mostly evergreens, and I love the look of deciduous shrubs interspersed with evergreens in this application, so I do know I do not want more evergreens... but it sounds like I should keep looking. I do love my local garden center, but when I have asked for recommendations, I find they recommend the same few shrubs that all of my neighbors have, and I want something a bit different. I guess I'll have to make it more clear to them that I am looking for something unique. ;) Thanks, Pam! |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
you dont like bridal wreath? I got some dwarf ones from Jungs. they also got multi
color, sorta pink and white. my mother got cardinal flower and something looks like dwarf willow sorta bluish but is actually in another group it doesnt look like. there are also all kinds of forsythia. Ingrid "Shelly" wrote: Oh, that was what I was afraid of wind deflating from sails. The other foundation shrubs are mostly evergreens, and I love the look of deciduous shrubs interspersed with evergreens in this application, so I do know I do not want more evergreens... but it sounds like I should keep looking. I do love my local garden center, but when I have asked for recommendations, I find they recommend the same few shrubs that all of my neighbors have, and I want something a bit different. I guess I'll have to make it more clear to them that I am looking for something unique. ;) Thanks, Pam! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
In article , Pam wrote:
For year round appearance, at least a few (if not most) of your foundation shrubs should be evergreen. pam - gardengal I've not found this to be the essential approach. And while all my gardens' examples don't necessarily apply to the querier's zone, here are some deciduous examples that have proven to be eye-catchers in winter so there's no sense of loss in any season: The contorted hazel stands at the sunny opening of a shade corridor, about seven feet tall. It's pretty year round, but it's STRONGEST time is winter, both for revealing the contorted limbs & for the catkins. Across from it on the opposite side of the path entering the corridor is an unchanging alpine fir, pretty much a defacto dwarf at sea level at about eight feet but looking as though it's a hundred years old. So one evergreen, one deciduous, separated by a path, & they're the biggest things until one reaches the other end of the path. The alpine fir is the more tasteful thing, but the contorted hazel is the most exciting & active. This area is also not far from a three-trunked Japanese maple on a humpy hill, with dwarf evergreen azaleas around it -- the deciduous tree being the primary foundation, supported by very short evergreens. It's autumn color & its winter trunks-&-limbs make it a dynamic shrub-sized foundation tree. In a sunnier garden, the biggest items are a weeping green beech & a short-&-wide weeping white birch, with mid-sized evergreen rhodies & deciduous native shrubs & a half-wild old rose filling in. The two trees are amazing in all seasons, the birch catkinned & dangly-twigged with contorted white trunk very impactful in winter though hardly any taller than the fence, & the beech revealing all its twists & bends & mottled bark in winter -- as powerful foundation plants, winter leaflessness does not weaken them in the least. The opposite side of that yard is a major shade garden including Pulpit Hill, & the shade is mainly from two old evergreens (western hemlock & a greatly underlimbed large old holly) -- so one side of the yard's deciduous-dominated & the other side's evergreen-dominated, & for physical beauty autumn & winter the deciduous side has the greater impact, but the evergreen side blocks sight of the street so that the whole of that yard always feels enclosed (plus the evergreen side preserves shade for late-winter/early spring shade plants -- the deciduous side by contrast is still opened up late winter/early spring for sunniness to support early flowering bulbs). Even on this evergreen-dominated side of the yard, however, it's actually a paperbark maple that becomes the focal point not for size but because it is more central to the yard & it's so interesting in all seasons. The vastly bigger old holly tree, even when loaded with berries, just can't compete for attention. Then there are deciduous azaleas -- big ones are the best foundation shrubs with spectacular seasonal interest (& for colder zones the northern lights series should really be considered if sizeable specimen-worthy sizes are available). Our White-throat azalea is huge, maybe six feet by six feet, & it stands across the path from the Black Swan Beech (another weeper). These are all-season focal points -- the color of the leaves for both beech & azalea are awesome in autumn. In winter the twistings of the beech & the azalea's stark upright budded limbs keep them impactful for winter foundations; then for spring the releafing beech goes through such interesting color-changes as the leaves slowly darken to nearly black, & the azalea goes into full flower before leafing out. Watching these changes is a daily wonder. Around the beech & azalea are numerous smaller shrubs & vines that are for the most part evergreens, so in this case it's the evergreens that are the support features rather than the anchors, & there is plenty of greenness there even when the largeset things are leafless. One spot where I really thought the central shrubs should indeed be evergreen strikes me as one of my few failures. Two dwarf cypresses & an evergreen eunonymous stand in a corner framed in by two street sidewalks. Fortunately an old Japanese maple keeps them from being TOO important, but they do dominate that little corner, & they've never looked exactly right. I've expended energy trying to "correct" the error by shifting attention to newer additions, but those three evergreen shrubs have a changeless appearance, hence a little dull. Instead of those three shrubs I should've had one thing bigger, & probably it should've been deciduous or at least flowering so there'd be at least one dramatic seasonal occurance. One evergreen foundation shrub that worked out joyously is the Loder's white rhody obtained a couple years ago at the R.S.F. sale, & for its mounding elegance nothing could look better, as much luck as skill I put it in the perfect spot for the greatest sense of presence & beauty. No way a deciduous shrub could've been any better there. But this week I installed nearby a deciduous Western Azalea, quite tall with old trunks that burst into twigginess overhead. I haven't yet seen the impact it will make in full leaf (let alone in full flower) but as well-aged & lichened trunks & limbs & twigs it's already a maximum impact shrub; & in the past it has always worked out well assuming that if a deciduous shrub is that dramatic in winter, it certainly isn't going to be crummy the rest of the year. So now the Western Azalea together with the Loder's white form a foundation pair, for a length of the garden filled in with hardy fuchsias & crane's-bills & sundry perennials & three much smaller shrubs (one of those deciduous). I've actually come to regard a mix of deciduous & evergreen to be the ideal, but lean toward the deciduous as most dramatic, though they have to be selected with the winter appearance well in mind if they're to be effective focuses at all times. Too much focus on evergreens can make the garden static & passive (though evergreens that change color in winter help alleviate that, or flowering broadleaf evergreens aren't so changeless -- I often wish I had room for more winter-blooming evergreen camelleas, but just don't have room for just everything). For autumn color, & for unusual limbs & barks revealed in winter, an area almost entirely of deciduous weepers is much more dramatic than an area mostly of evergreens. So for drama of changing physical impacts season by season, I'd put well-chosen deciduous shrubs & small trees way ahead of evergreens on average, but if one needs a year-round shade area, or to block a view of a neighbor's yard or shut out the street, then additional factors require the choices be evergreen. With the evergreen it is not necessary to give such careful thought to what it'll be like in winter, but WITH thought the deciduous choices are apt to be the most significant foundation shrubs & little trees no matter the season. -paghat the ratgirl -- "Of what are you afraid, my child?" inquired the kindly teacher. "Oh, sir! The flowers, they are wild," replied the timid creature. -from Peter Newell's "Wild Flowers" See the Garden of Paghat the Ratgirl: http://www.paghat.com/ |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
"Shelly" wrote:
Oh, that was what I was afraid of wind deflating from sails. The other foundation shrubs are mostly evergreens, and I love the look of deciduous shrubs interspersed with evergreens in this application, so I do know I do not want more evergreens... but it sounds like I should keep looking. I do love my local garden center, but when I have asked for recommendations, I find they recommend the same few shrubs that all of my neighbors have, and I want something a bit different. I guess I'll have to make it more clear to them that I am looking for something unique. ;) Thanks, Pam! Have you sought out a native shrubs specialist in your area? I have quite a big collection of flowering evergreen shrubs, but the impact has been greatly improved by interspersing native deciduous shrubs. A few that I have ought to do just as well in your zone (if memory serves me well for a change, the following will work down to zone 4, not that I've ever personally gardened where it gets that cold): Snowberry: http://www.paghat.com/snowberry.html Mount Airy Fothergilla: http://www.paghat.com/mountairy.html Rosy Spirea (or a similar one I don't have but hope to eventually, Douglas's Spirea): http://www.paghat.com/spiraeadensiflora.html Summersweet (Clethra): http://www.paghat.com/summersweet.html Flowering Currant: http://www.paghat.com/ribeskingedward.html Choke Berry Bush http://www.paghat.com/chokeberry.html If you can make a connection with a native plants nursery or specialist in your own region, you'll be able to find out about availability of spectacular native vacciniums & viburnums, which no fancy imports or cultivars ever really exceed in beauty. Also, check out any number of different varieties of elderberry shrubs or trees, species & cultivars. Plus, the Elf's-Home Spirea seems to be a rare offering in my area but is so intensely cold-hardy I bet it's better distributed in your garden centers: http://www.paghat.com/spiraea.html -paghat the ratgirl -- "Of what are you afraid, my child?" inquired the kindly teacher. "Oh, sir! The flowers, they are wild," replied the timid creature. -from Peter Newell's "Wild Flowers" See the Garden of Paghat the Ratgirl: http://www.paghat.com/ |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
Shelly wrote: "Pam" wrote in message ... I am unfamiliar with your climate, but IME, neither calycanthus nor clethra will be happy in the situations you describe and neither is particularly attractive off season.. For year round appearance, at least a few (if not most) of your foundation shrubs should be evergreen. pam - gardengal Oh, that was what I was afraid of wind deflating from sails. The other foundation shrubs are mostly evergreens, and I love the look of deciduous shrubs interspersed with evergreens in this application, so I do know I do not want more evergreens... but it sounds like I should keep looking. I do love my local garden center, but when I have asked for recommendations, I find they recommend the same few shrubs that all of my neighbors have, and I want something a bit different. I guess I'll have to make it more clear to them that I am looking for something unique. ;) Thanks, Pam! Shelly, here is a short list of some full sun deciduous shrubs to consider: Cotinus coggygria 'Royal Rurple' - purple leaved smokebush Exochorda x macrantha 'The Bride' - pearl bush Vaccinium corymbosum - blueberries (many are very ornamental, have great fall color and are great eating, too!) Any of the deciduous viburnums hardy to your zone - doublefile, sargentii, x burkwoodii, opulus 'Compactum' Any of the shrub dogwoods - Cornus sericea, alba or sanguinea. Many cultivars have variegated foliage in addition to very colorful winter stems; also will generate berries. Hydrangea arborescens, grandiflora or quercifolia (these are hardy to at least zone 5, perhaps 4 and will withstand considerable sun) Aronia - chokeberry Berberis thunbergii - Japanese barberry Spiraea x bumalda cultivars, "'Limemound', 'Goldmound', 'Magic Carpet' or S. prunifolia Fothergilla gardenii - dwarf fothergilla and if you have room (although you can find some dwarf varieties), lilac, forsythia, mock orange (Philadelphus coronarius), wiegela. Some of these shrubs are listed hardy to only zone 5, so some care in placement and proper mulching in winter may be necessary. Check too for invasiveness - in some climates, a few of these self-sow easily and can invade natural areas. HTH! pam - gardengal |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
wrote in message ... you dont like bridal wreath? I got some dwarf ones from Jungs. they also got multi color, sorta pink and white. my mother got cardinal flower and something looks like dwarf willow sorta bluish but is actually in another group it doesnt look like. there are also all kinds of forsythia. Ingrid Maybe I do need to look at their catalog again. ;) And I know they have more varieties at their garden center... I don't know if you still have snow there by the lake, but we got about 6 inches in the storm the other day, and it has me obsessively pouring over catalogs for anything fun for the garden. ;) |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
"paghat" wrote in message ... "Shelly" wrote: Have you sought out a native shrubs specialist in your area? I have quite a big collection of flowering evergreen shrubs, but the impact has been greatly improved by interspersing native deciduous shrubs. / You know I haven't, which is made that much worse by the fact that my sister and her boyfriend are native plant specialists in the area, and would be more than happy to help me. In fact, they will be helping me turn a devil-of-a-hill in my back yard into a native oak opening this spring. Very exciting, not just because it means I won't have to mow that gosh-darned hill every weekend any more! I guess I was just jumping the gun and trying to sneak in a few more non-natives before they take over! ;) You are right, though. A lot of natives are lovely, and I shouldn't have discounted them so readily. Thanks for the suggestions! |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
Thanks so much for the ideas, Pam!
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Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
yeah.. we had 6 inches here. it is melting fast, altho we are now in the inversion.
warmer at night but cooler during the day than 15 miles west. it snowed right on all my snow drops and crocuses and the daffodils are in bud. the lilacs are swelling. I think we are in for some warmer weather this next week. about TIME. Ingrid "Shelly" wrote: wrote in message ... you dont like bridal wreath? I got some dwarf ones from Jungs. they also got multi color, sorta pink and white. my mother got cardinal flower and something looks like dwarf willow sorta bluish but is actually in another group it doesnt look like. there are also all kinds of forsythia. Ingrid Maybe I do need to look at their catalog again. ;) And I know they have more varieties at their garden center... I don't know if you still have snow there by the lake, but we got about 6 inches in the storm the other day, and it has me obsessively pouring over catalogs for anything fun for the garden. ;) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
paghat wrote: In article , Pam wrote: For year round appearance, at least a few (if not most) of your foundation shrubs should be evergreen. pam - gardengal I've not found this to be the essential approach. While it all comes down ultimately to a matter of personal taste, landscape design principles generally approach the planting of the entry to one's residence (front garden) to have a more uniformly year round appearance, thus the emphasis on evergreen plant material. I agree that, particularly in colder climates than the maritime Northwest, deciduous shrubs offer more seasonal color and interest than do the evergreen, few of which are both hardy AND flower in colder zones. However, few of us that live in very temperate climates realize how long and cold and snowy northern winters can be and how much more satisfying it is to look out on a winter garden that has some interest other than a collection of bare sticks and naked branches. pam - gardengal |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
Pam wrote:
While it all comes down ultimately to a matter of personal taste, landscape design principles generally approach the planting of the entry to one's residence (front garden) to have a more uniformly year round appearance, thus the emphasis on evergreen plant material. I agree that, particularly in colder climates than the maritime Northwest, deciduous shrubs offer more seasonal color and interest than do the evergreen, few of which are both hardy AND flower in colder zones. However, few of us that live in very temperate climates realize how long and cold and snowy northern winters can be and how much more satisfying it is to look out on a winter garden that has some interest other than a collection of bare sticks and naked branches. I'd agree. My sister moved from the Puget Sound, WA area to the Baltimore, MD area. She was disappointed when she realized that the landscaping for their new home was nearly devoid of evergreens, and all she had in the winter were sticks. We had grown-up in Wisconsin, and while our memories get more and more selective as the years go on, our memories from growing up was that everyone had some evergreens in front of their houses. Pictures we have seem to confirm this was the de facto rule in Wisconsin. I remember a story about somebody who lived on the Wisconsin-Illinois state line. For years and years, everyone thought his property was in Wisconsin. Then one year, when doing a survey, they found his property was actually in Illinois. When he was asked what he thought about suddenly becoming a resident of Illinois he said, "At least I won't have to live through another one of those damn Wisconsin winters!" (Okay, okay. I didn't say it actually happened. I just said I remember a story.) -- Warren H. ========== Disclaimer: My views reflect those of myself, and not my employer, my friends, nor (as she often tells me) my wife. Any resemblance to the views of anybody living or dead is coincidental. No animals were hurt in the writing of this response -- unless you count my dog who desperately wants to go outside now. |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
wrote in message ... yeah.. we had 6 inches here. it is melting fast, altho we are now in the inversion. warmer at night but cooler during the day than 15 miles west. it snowed right on all my snow drops and crocuses and the daffodils are in bud. the lilacs are swelling. I think we are in for some warmer weather this next week. about TIME. Ingrid Oh, inversion. I remember that so well from my days living in Shorewood! Enjoy your spring bulbs! I was really glad to see my daffies and crocuses were all fine this morning now that the snow has melted. Now I'm just trying not to get my hopes up that that was the last of the winter weather... |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
"Warren" wrote in message .net... We had grown-up in Wisconsin, and while our memories get more and more selective as the years go on, our memories from growing up was that everyone had some evergreens in front of their houses. Pictures we have seem to confirm this was the de facto rule in Wisconsin. I would say your memory is right on there. I would say the norm here is to use only evergreens for foundation plantings. And, I would say, a majority or significant minority of those with only evergreens have one type of evergreen sheared into a hedge along the foundation. A few people use a mix of evergreens and deciduous shrubs, and in the neighborhood I live in, there seem to be a lot of houses that have just a big patch of native prairie perennials around the foundation. I have to admit, I am not a huge fan of this last look, precisely because of the way it looks in winter. The joke about the Illinois/Wisconsin border was cute by the way! |
Shrub ideas - south central Wisconsin
"Pam" wrote in message ... However, few of us that live in very temperate climates realize how long and cold and snowy northern winters can be and how much more satisfying it is to look out on a winter garden that has some interest other than a collection of bare sticks and naked branches. pam - gardengal Boy, do you ever have that right! Lately, though, they haven't been very snowy in the Midwest...just long and cold and ugly brown. :( |
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