Hello blogger friends and anonymous desert gardeners,
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Pictures taken from last summer at El Presidio. Note that my older cameras were used. |
For my blogger friends, this post is an informational one and you may just glance or skim, but I promised myself that I would do some writing about the garden. For you(anonymous desert gardener) who googled my website and found this place, welcome! You'll absorb it all in and then leave in the night:) That's okay. I've done the same thing. I hope your garden endevours for this spring are exciting. March has arrived and there is so much to get ready for!!! While it may be a little early yet to put things into the ground, garden centers all over town are gearing up for the big days ahead. This month you'll find several interesting writes about xeriscape gardening and how to do it. I'll be featuring several "top" places that had some fun with their landscaping and demonstrate to you that Tucson can be a wonderful place to landscape and garden.
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Solar lights hang from the top of the trellis and are mixed in with the Cats Claw |
Today it's all about using vines in our designs. Sometimes we want to drape a wall or building. Sometimes we want to frame an entry. Or other times we'd like vines to just ramble around the ground and go wherever they please. I used the Creeping Fig in such a manner and it's doing a good job on "creeping" up my palm tree and around the ground. Vines add vertical dimension to the garden and pull the eye upwards and around your green space. They also have the affect of softening the rough edges and make things like fences or brick walls fade into the background.
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Here is our ramada at El Presidio. We still need to add color to this structure, but there are solar lights above and A LOT of cats claw around the this area. We placed Confederate Jasmine to climb up the sides and it is slowly doing so.
Brighten an entry. Train woody vines like Bougainvillea, Wisteria, Trumpet Vine, or Lady Rosebanks to frame entryways or balconies. The beautiful flowers will dress up an ordinary house. I personally love the color of the bougainvillea bracts next to our stucco. Gorgeous. You will need to fasten them and keep them in place with wires, eye screws, plastic ties etc to hold up the main branches.
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I use a free standing trellis to frame our small patio space. In hot burning temps, this bougainvillea thrives and flowers.
Screens and boundaries. For fast and quick ways to hide a fence or divide a space, use Cats Claw(considered a weed here). The leaves stay on this vine all year round making it a popular vine to grow here in Tucson. BUT be careful as this vine can pull off paint or stucco from the building. Other vines with fast growth are the popular Morning Glory and Passion Vine. They'll create an attractive windbreak or privacy screen in NO TIME! It's just that in winter these guys go dormant. I personally like something all year round.
Morning Glory at El Presidio. A great vine that spreads FAST!! Careful where you place it.
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There are generally 3 ways homeowners like to use vines. The first is by using a lightweight wooden or metal trellis(clematis, bougainvillea, etc) for plants to crawl up. The second is by using a freestanding trellis, ramada, gazebo or arbor. No matter what your use, vines inspire and let the eyes wander upwards. During this spring, think about ways you could use a vine or two around your place. Last year during my garden journal series, I reported on several vines that many Tucsonans, including myself, use around our gardens. Click
here to begin your fun from that series. More tomorrow....
Looks very good to me who is an occasional gardener, love gardening but don't have enough tie for it!
ReplyDeleteThank you for this great lesson. Just so happens I have some vines on order...hoping to move up this spring. :)
ReplyDeletei got some morning glory seeds from a blogger pal last year. hoping they sprout and come up over our metal gazebo this year. :)
ReplyDeleteIf it's one thing I DO NOT DOUBT....they will sprout:) They grow like a weed in our area! Beautiful vine with beautiful flowers.
DeleteRohrebot, your garden is such a delight to visit. I love the the purple morning glory.
ReplyDeletecheers :)
ps, in answer to your question, the Fisherman is my dear husband of 49 years :)
:) I knew there was a special connection there:) Have a good weekend! Chris
DeleteNice and blooming is your garden, Chris.
ReplyDeleteHello! Your last two posts are wonderful! Thank You very much sharing! I love gardening...I love grafting...I wait several new my rose graftings for this spring and summer...
ReplyDeleteVines are great for covering ugly stuff and giving some height in a garden. I love ground vines to add lushness to the garden. I only have annual climbing vines to keep things from being over run.
ReplyDeleteMorning glories always died on us unexpectedly after a few years and I never discovered why.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful shots!
ReplyDeleteLove to see your garden.
Have a great weekend.
Mette
We used to have Cat's Claw at our other home. I loved the yellow blooms, but man that thing was a voracious grower.
ReplyDeleteDid you mean Lady Banks Rose -a yellow one time bloomer from China , rosa banksiae ? I know they grow very large in your area. Confederate jasmine (Trachelospermum jasminoides) and Carolina Jasmine (Gelsemium sempervirens) are also good plants for southern gardens. I would try hyacinth bean (lablab) instead of morning glories for an annual vine.
ReplyDelete