My
first planting bed facelift involved the bed formerly occupied by an unused wood-fired spa. Last week, I tackled my second facelift, the
bed once occupied by a 60 foot Eucalyptus tree. I replanted the area in March 2013 after the tree was removed at the request of a neighbor. It looked fine for a short while but the combination of dry soil (made worse, not better by the addition of the woody remains of the Eucalyptus tree), high winds, drought, nightly digging operations by the neighborhood raccoons, and poor plant selections left it looking sad. The wood chips and shavings left after grinding down the tree stump had formed clumps with the consistency of dry cardboard and didn't hold water well. I cleared as much of the remnants of that debris as I could and added lots of soil amendment before replanting. My fingers are crossed that the new plants will fare better than the bed's previous occupants did.
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View of replanted bed looking west |
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View of the same bed from the side yard patio |
Two of the 3 original
Coprosma 'Plum Hussey' remain in place along the bed's outer edge. The third, which was struggling to survive, was removed and replaced with a smaller plant of the same variety, moved from the side yard border.
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The 2 original Coprosma 'Plum Hussey' bordered by Pelargonium tomentosum (peppermint geranium) |
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The smaller Coprosma, moved from a shadier bed, hasn't developed 'Plum Hussey's' striking red color yet |
Grevillea 'Bonfire' replaced the sad
Acer palmatum 'Purple Ghost,' which couldn't hold up to the winds that whip through this area most afternoons. The Japanese maple was moved to the vegetable garden, where I hope it has a chance to survive.
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Newly planted Grevillea 'Bonfire' |
Four
Agave 'Blue Glow' and one
Hesperaloe parviflora were installed both for their looks and the possibility that their prickly leaves will deter the raccoons from digging in the area in their relentless search for grubs.
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Agave 'Blue Glow,' still relatively small |
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Hesperaloe parviflora (aka red yucca) |
To complement the gray-foliage of the
Hesperaloe, I added
Festuca 'Elijah Blue,' tiny cuttings of succulent
Senecio mandraliscae, and pink-flowering
Cistus x scanbergii.
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Cistus x skanbergii |
We raised the height of the wall that borders one length of the bed to reduce its slope and support the additional soil amendments I added. I replaced the mass of gray
Helichrysum petiolare that previously occupied that space with 5
Pennisetum setaceum 'Fireworks' and 2 varieties of
Rhipsalis. The
Helichrysum did well in the location but it wasn't particularly interesting.
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Pennisetum setaceum 'Fireworks' is reputed to be smaller than the standard variety |
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Five plants line the top of the wall |
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This was labeled 'mistletoe cactus' - my best guess is that it's Rhipsalis baccifera aka spaghetti cactus |
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This one was labeled Rhipsalis salicornioides, aka dancing bones cactus |
I moved 3
Hemerocallis 'Spanish Harlem' here from the front yard borders to pick up the red tones of the
Coprosma and the
Pennisetum. There's less late afternoon sun in this bed but I hope it will be sufficient to keep
'Spanish Harlem' blooming as I love this daylily's flowers.
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These evergreen daylilies are a little sad at the moment as I cut them back prior to transplanting |
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Here's a reminder of what 'Spanish Harlem' looked like in full bloom |
Unfortunately, the
Agaves are still small and aren't yet up to the challenge of keeping the raccoons at bay. The little monsters dug up a few of the smaller plants and pawed around the base of the
Grevillea. I've put down more animal repellent and temporarily caged the
Grevillea for its own protection until it's well-rooted in its new location.
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Grevillea wearing a tomato cage |
Work continues on the denuded front lawn area, as well as a small bed dug out of the lawn in the backyard. My lawn removers left a lot of grass roots behind, as well as much of that nasty plastic netting embedded in the sod laid by the former owners. My husband and I are in the process of clearing out what we can before hauling in supplemental topsoil and soil amendments. It may be quite some time before I'm ready to plant the front area but, impatient as I am, those grass roots need to go and the soil, pure clay in one area and nothing more than decomposing rock in another, needs work.
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© 2012-2014 by Kris Peterson for Late to the Garden Party