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Hot Gardens Newsletter - March 2006 

Previous newsletters by month    Gardening advice by topic

Hot Nights Coming.   If you want to add white, fragrant night-blooming plants to enjoy during hot evenings, visit our June 2005 newsletter for suggestions about what to plant this Spring to enjoy on summer nights.

They Make Scents.  Fragrant gardens are simply the best!  Here are three plants that do well in hot, dry climates and fill the desert air with fragrance, too.  

Butterfly Bush or Summer Lilac.  (Buddleja davidii).  This rangy shrub grows fast and produces fragrant, lilac-like blooms in mid-summer.  In cold winter areas it may freeze to the ground, but will regrow and bloom the same year.  In fact, if you plant one right now, you may have a sizeable shrub with blooms this summer in your desert garden.  One interesting variety is the 'Harlequin" with dark purple flowers and white-edged leaves.

Crabapple_Malus_in_Fall.JPG (226368 bytes) In Spring the crabapple produces gorgeous pink blooms and in Fall it has rich orange leaves.  This specimen is, we believe, the Malus ionsis, the Bechtel Crabapple.

Flowering Crabapple. (Malus ionsis 'Klehms')  Cars will come to a screeching halt on the street outside your home if you plant a flowering crabapple in your front yard.  When this tree blooms, it is covered with glorious, fragrant double-pink flowers.  The fruit is large and can be pickled.  Most crabapple trees are rounded and low-growing to about 15 or 20 feet.  Because many varieties are susceptible to disease, ask your local nursery which one is best for your area.  But try to find a fragrant, double-flowering one!
 Pittosporum tobira in bloom.JPG (101548 bytes) The dwarf varieties of Pittosporum make good foundation plants, but the larger non-dwarf varieties are suitable for hedges and are unbelievably fragrant when they bloom in Spring.

Pittosporum.  (Pittosporum tobira)  Many of us know this plant as either the 'Wheeler's Dwarf" or "Turner's Variegated Dwarf' varieties.  But neither produce the incredible fragrant flower clusters that the non-dwarf Pittosporum tobira does.  It can be used as a hedge shrub or small tree and grows from 6 to 15 feet tall with very dense shade beneath.  Another member of this family is the Cape Pittosporum (P. viridiflorum) which grows to 25 feet high, has small, very fragrant flowers, but--alas--may not be suitable for all hot climates.  Again, ask your local nursery.

Applause!  Applause!  Within the last month we have heard from two gardeners who intend to install plants that supposedly will not grow in their locales.  One is a Malaysian gardener who longs for wisteria; the other, a Nevada gardener who has planted a Laotian palm outdoors.  With some careful soil preparation, proper shelter and loving care, these plants may survive.  If not, at least they gave it a good try.  We have seen some unexpected success from time to time and cheer these gardening experiments.

What should you do in your garden this month?  
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for  month-by-month practical, hands-on advice.

 

 

 

 

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 Got Weeds?
Pour a pan of boiling hot water on a weed to kill it.  Be very careful that the water does not splash on nearby plants or on you. The boiling water should do the job within 24 hours.


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