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Hot Gardens Newsletter - Summer 2006
Previous newsletters by month Gardening
advice by topic
Gas or Grass.
We suspect that many of you are now faced with the monthly
choice of watering your desert garden lawn or putting gasoline in your car. We
offer you
a solution - in fact, a couple of solutions. They both begin with
downsizing
your lawn. Of course, you want to maintain that lovely emerald green
grass
in areas where children play or around your patio or terrace behind your
home. But that expensive expanse of green lawn in front - minimize
it or eliminate it.
Going Native. We do not,
however, recommend that you simply rip your front lawn out and "go
native", so to speak, by letting the native shrubs, weeds
and cactus take over. It always seems as if the scraggly
natives show
up first and stick around.
Rock Mulch Inferno. Nor do we
recommend that you pour a truck load of red gravel/mulch in the area
where you currently have a front lawn and call that "desert
landscaping". That rock mulch will reach temperatures of
close to
150 degrees F in hot summer sunlight, turning your front yard into a
furnace! That fake plastic grass, which these days looks almost
real, is also hotter than hot in the sunshine. What you save on
water you will spend on air conditioning if you spread lots of rock
mulch in any area around your home.
Goodbye
Lawn, Hello Something Else. We do recommend you
consider these solutions for the space formerly occupied by lawn.
Your local nursery may have other options for low-growing shrubs and
ground covers for you -- be sure to ask them.
1. Plant Lantana (Lantana montevidensis),
Trailing Indigo Bush (Dalea greggii) or Acacia redolens. And plant them densely
enough so they will
completely fill in the area within a year. The idea is to create a
visual substitute for the water-gulping lawn.
- Lantana will give
you brilliant color - yellows, golds, pinks, or purples - for
months on end, so pick a color that goes nicely with your home.
- Acacia redolens
'Desert Carpet' is a low-growing, gray-green leafed shrub with
yellow, puffy round blooms in Spring.
- Trailing Indigo Bush, a
Western U. S. native is more subtle, low-mounding shrub with pearly gray
leaves and small lavender flowers in Spring.
All three require little watering, endure poor soil and keep their
leaves
year 'round. And they never need mowing. (You may even be
able to say
goodbye to your lawn service guys, as well as to high water bills.)
2. Plant "lawn pavers".
This solution can be quite striking if your front
garden is small and faces north or east. What you do, after you
remove the
lawn, is install large concrete pavers widely spaced in a geometric
pattern.
The idea is to lessen the amount of plants requiring watering in your
front
garden - not to create a front yard patio, so be sure to allow wide
spaces
between the pavers. We suggest that you stain the pavers in a color to
complement your home before you install them. Don't leave them
concrete-gray.
Between the pavers, plant low growing herbs, Yet another plant to go
between the pavers is simply the lawn grass you already have growing.
We are reluctant to suggest creeping Rosemary as a lawn
substitute. It is one of the sturdiest, most drought-tolerant low
growing shrubs, but attracts bees, which may have been Africanized and
are potentially dangerous.
We also suggest that you plant a wide
border of drought-tolerant plants at the sides of your front yard.
It looks a bit weird if the pavers extend from wall to wall across the
front of your home. For suggestions of plants suitable for the
border, visit our Beautiful Borders
page. You may also wish to consider planting taller Ornamental
Grasses, such as Pampas grass or Deer Grass, in your
border. In the border you should consider positioning some
small "boulders" to give the border a natural, native look.
One More Thought About Lawns.
In Albert Camus' novel 'L'Etranger' one
character muses that the green landscape of France hurts his eyes and he
longs for the soft browns of his native Algeria. We would all do
well to
learn to love the subtle, soft colors of our dry climates - wherever on
our
planet they are.
Very Tall Tall Grass. Bamboo
is the giant of the grass family and Oldham
bamboo (Bambusa oldhamii) can be grown in low water usage
conditions. This
timber bamboo has a clumping growth habit - that means it more or less
stays
where you plant it. ("Running" bamboos spread
underground and will take over your entire yard--and your neighbors
yard, too--if they like the
conditions.) This giant grows fast -
more than a foot a day during its growing season - and rapidly forms a
tall
screen. Under best conditions it can reach 50 feet tall, but more
commonly
grows to about 15 to 25 feet in height. Just the thing to
counteract noisy neighbors!. Planting it in partial shade is best.
What Gardening Should
You Be Doing in Summer? As little as possible!
After the temperature reaches 90F plants shut down and simply try to
survive. Do not fertilize in summer to try to force them to bloom,
but be sure to provide plants and trees with sufficient water.
Go to Newsletter,
June 2003 or Newsletter July 2003
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