Compost Your Leaves This Fall
Atlanta Fall Seasonal Color Isn’t Just Pansies Any More
While Pansies are a great choice for fall seasonal color here in Atlanta GA, Unique Environmental Landscapes expands the options and chooses from a larger plant pallet when it comes to creating those big, beautiful flower beds we all enjoy throughout the otherwise dormant months.
One of our first choices is the Red Bore Kale. This plant is not only ornamental but it is also edible. We like to use it as an accent plant with other flowers such as pansies, etc. As it grows, it turns a beautiful dark, deep purple and the leaves are very curly almost resembling clouds. If you want to eat it, pull the leaves from the bottom of the plant where other flowers will cover this area. Kale likes the sun and well drained, moist soil.
Ornamental cabbage is another great choice. It comes in many varieties and colors so choose one that works best with your other plants. Or create a beautiful collage of color by using a variety of cabbage colors. This too, is edible, but probably not as tasty as the cabbage you purchase from your local farmer’s market. Cabbage prefers full sun to partial shade.
Snapdragons offer a splash of bright color and it’s blooms are especially profuse in cooler weather. Winters in the Atlanta area are quite often mild enough that Snapdragons will excel. They are bushy plants with tall spikes of flower buds and offer a good focal point in the garden.
Choose these varieties as good focal points
- Kale Coral Prince
- Cabbage Osaka Pink
- Kale Redbor
- Kale Red Russian
Choose these as good accents:
- Mustard Red
- Giant Swiss Chard “Bright Lights”
- Cardoon (hardy with Atlanta mild winters)
- Euphorbia “Glacier Blue”
- Yucca
- Rosemary
- Dwarf Conifers
Be sure to use appropriate plants for the size of your bed
So, what are you waiting for. Go out and create a fall color bed for a colorful winter!
Atlanta Habitat for Humanity & Unique Environmental Landscapes
Unique Environmental Landscapes and MALTA are coordinating efforts with Habitat for Humanity for their third year in a row next Saturday March 13th.
Unique Environmental Landscapes will have staff volunteers helping to assign tasks for the event and working with the materials available to create new living spaces for families on Pryor Road and Bagwell Drive.
If you are interested in volunteering please contact Habitat for Humanity. You can also show up at 2488 Lakewood Avenue, Atlanta, Ga. at 7am. The event lasts until 1pm, so come out and help when you can!
Unique Environmental Landscapes and MALTA enjoy giving back to the community! We hope you can help!
Unique Environmental Displays Excellence At 2010 Flower Show
Rich’s Winter Recommendations
What will this toe numbing, water pipe-busting, shiver-inducing weather do to our vulnerable southern plants? The weather is anything but predictable as we all know, but the last few years have really been doozies when it comes to extremes! Drought followed by ridiculously heavy rainfall and now freezing weather hanging around for over a week. What is a landscape to do?
Let’s deal with the latest extreme, the arctic express of January 2010. It’s not that the temps have been disastrously low; they’ve certainly been lower and more disastrous in past years. That they are staying below freezing for an extended period of time, however, is cause for some concern.
So what can you do? The harsh reality is that in many cases the answer is nothing. People tend to use plants that are borderline hardy, (and some that just shouldn’t be considered at all) and harsh conditions such as these remind us that perhaps we should choose plants more discriminately while planning a landscape, or when we replace them, as will be the case with many this year I’m afraid. In most instances it just isn’t practical to try to cover all those tender plants for extended periods. Tent cities of plastic and multi-colored blankets over those poor plants look ridiculous on so many levels, and frankly, they’re still going to be damaged.
What then can you do? You can plan ahead and contract with qualified, experienced landscape professionals like those at Unique Environmental who will design landscape areas using plants that will survive these extremes. You can make sure your plants are well mulched before the cold weather arrives. Once the weather warms, make sure that your plants are hydrated, especially in planters or raised beds, as these cold, windy dry days will desiccate a plant in no time flat. Deadhead your pansies and give them a drink (straight up, NOT on the rocks!) and perhaps remulch those perennials, hostas and other more shallow rooted plants that are exposed to these decidedly northern conditions. Should you notice damaged leaves on your evergreens, refrain from cutting them back until it is apparent they have died back, later this spring.
Beyond that, know that this is but a passing event and we’ll soon be warming again. Join us at the Southeastern Flower Show at the Cobb Galleria Centre, February 4th through the 6th, enjoy our garden and those of others, and dream of sunny days and sultry nights.
–
Rich