| Cover Story | Plant Life | Northwest Living | Taste | Now & Then |
WRITTEN BY VALERIE EASTON |
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| the Frenzy Begins In the rush to discover the season's new hotties, don't miss these
Until we Puget Sound gardeners catch up with our neighbors to the south and schedule an annual Nerd Night of our own, here are a few temptations to get your plant lust going for spring.
New sunflowers appear every year, and debuting this season is 'Double Dandy,' a dwarf with wine-red flowers. To continue the dark theme, a new salvia called 'Jeweled Tower' comes in a mix of red, purple and burgundy long-blooming flowers. I'm going to search out the new annual flowering tobacco, Nicotiana mutabilis, which blooms from June through Thanksgiving in sun or shade. It grows to 5 feet, with dangling flowers that morph from white through pale to deep pink, and is an introduction from Log House Plants in Eugene. Also intriguing are a dwarf datura with yellow double flowers named 'Goldilocks' and familiar cottage-garden nasturtiums with a new color scheme. 'Golden Leaf' nasturtiums have mahogany-colored flowers shown off by chartreuse foliage.
Might you need a flowering evergreen tree to fit a narrow space? The new, skinny Magnolia grandiflora Alta fits the bill. It is odd to see the large, shiny leaves of magnolia growing in a conical shape, but it is a handsome tree for small gardens. The U.S. National Arboretum recently released a new Chinese redbud (Cercis chinensis 'Don Egolf'). This small, multi-stemmed tree (to 10 feet) is disease-resistant and has golden fall foliage. Phygelius 'New Sensation' is a cape fuchsia that grows only about a foot tall, with burgundy stems and vivid red, tubular flowers. The cover stars of Jackson and Perkins' spring catalog are 'New Generation' lupines, which are aphid-resistant, don't need staking and range in color from cream through peach to blood red, as well as shades of blue and white. Delphinium elata 'New Heights' are the world's first dwarf delphiniums. They're hardy, vigorous, grow only 3 to 4 feet high, and come in those beautiful delphinium shades of iridescent purple, turquoise, sky blue, rose, pink, white and cream. Another improvement to an old favorite is the 4 o'clock, Mirabilis jalapa 'Limelight,' which has bright rose flowers set off by yellow-green variegated foliage. All these perennials are introductions from Log House Plants. Remember the first pink coreopsis? It was disappointingly pale and muddy-colored. Now there's Coreopsis rosea 'Limerock Ruby,' which has a larger flower in true ruby pink, and blooms most of the summer. And be sure to look for Dierama 'Blackbird,' which has deep burgundy flowers, and Heuchera 'Amber Waves,' which since last year has created a buzz among gardeners for its ruffled foliage in shades of brown, apricot and gold. Where to begin the search-and-collect mission? Many local and specialty nurseries will stock these plants as the season unfolds. Plant Answer Line ( 206-UW-PLANT, or hortlib@u.washington.edu) can help find sources. And you can be sure that many of the plants mentioned above, and a great many more, will be available at the Arboretum Foundation Annual Plant Sale next weekend (see above).
Arboretum Plant Sale Valerie Easton is manager at The Miller Horticultural Library. Her e-mail address is vjeaston@aol.com.
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| Cover Story | Plant Life | Northwest Living | Taste | Now & Then |