| Contest Winners | Plant Life | On Fitness | Taste | Now & Then | Sunday Punch |
WRITTEN BY VALERIE EASTON |
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| Great Plant Picks The experts are growing a great list of what's best for our gardens
All plants nominated have to be hardy in USDA Zones 7 and 8 (that's us), long-lived, reasonably disease- and pest-resistant, have a long season (and preferably multiple seasons) of interest, be available in nurseries, and refrain from spreading too aggressively. My favorite criterion is the one that says plants must be "vigorous and easy to grow by a gardener of average means and experience." This means we can trust GPP to avoid the most fussy, delicate and expensive of plants that require coddling or specialized knowledge to grow well. Committee members rely not only on their own considerable knowledge, but travel to nurseries, private collections and public gardens to evaluate plant collections. The committee recently visited collections of witch hazel, pieris and clematis; more trials and evaluations are planned.
Selections include the very best species and cultivars of familiar plants such as pines, crocus, maples and hostas, as well as plants new and unusual. Fact sheets on all these winning plants are available on the Web at www.greatplantpicks.org, or by calling the program office at 206-363-4803.
Acer palmatum 'Osakazuki' is one of the smaller Japanese maples, with deeply lobed leaves that turn brilliant red in autumn. Sciadopitys verticillata, Japanese umbrella pine, is a sturdy, textural evergreen tree that adds year-round interest to the garden. Large and columnar, it has olive-green needles, rounded cones and peeling red-brown bark. Camellia x williamsii 'Donation' was nominated by designer Charles Price, who describes it as a tough and handsome evergreen shrub, covered in so much pink bloom you may find it a relief to see the last blossom fall. Clematis 'Etoile Violette' is a small-flowered climber of the viticella type, with an abundance of violet-purple flowers in late summer through autumn. Crocus tommasinianus is the first bulb chosen for GPP, and is ideal for naturalizing. It blooms in late winter in shades of silvery lilac to dark reddish purple. Stipa gigantea, giant feather grass, forms a low, fat clump of foliage, throwing up tall golden blooms that create a haze of color from June through frost. Geranium 'Salome' is a hardy workhorse of a perennial, with pale green leaves and pink flowers, veined and centered in deep violet. Pulmonaria 'Benediction,' a lungwort named for local gardener Loie Benedict, brightens the early spring garden with masses of dark blue flowers held above silver spotted leaves.
Valerie Easton is a horticultural librarian who writes about plants and gardens for Pacific Northwest magazine. She is co-author of "Artists in Their Gardens" (Sasquatch Books). Her e-mail address is vjeaston@aol.com. Unless otherwise marked, photos from Great Plant Picks.
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| Contest Winners | Plant Life | On Fitness | Taste | Now & Then | Sunday Punch |