Monday, April 27, 2009

Five ways to keep it simple in your garden

“Simplify, simplify!” said Henry David Thoreau. But you don’t have to live in an isolated cabin at Walden Pond to enjoy the benefits of simplification, particularly when it relates to your garden and landscape.

Life today makes so many demands on our time, particularly with work and family-related issues, that the garden gets pushed further and further down the priority list. As a result, we put off doing anything because we have more important matters to deal with, or we start a major landscape project and realize we’ve bitten off more than we can comfortably chew.

It doesn’t have to be that way. Just let Thoreau’s famous quote be your guideline and simplify. Here are some ways that you can K.I.S.S.: Keep It Simple… Sweetie!

Take smaller bites.
You’re not building the Hoover Dam in your backyard (I hope) so you don’t need to regard your landscape improvements as a single huge project. Certainly, have an overall plan for the way you want the finished result to be, but don’t set yourself the task of completing it all in one season.

Pick one of two smaller areas that will be part of the whole. Select the trees and shrubs for those areas, prepare the soil and plant them. Throughout their first season, you can concentrate on tending to their needs. This “smaller bite” will consume less of your time and energy than attempting a full-court makeover, and as the year progresses, what you see emerging may modify your original master plan, allowing your creativity to grow along with the plants. Spread your project into manageable “bite sized” segments and simply work on one at a time.

Go low-maintenance
As you plan your landscape, make a point to look for low-maintenance plants. Ideally, a low-maintenance plant will be have a fairly slow to moderate growth habit, is resistant to pests and diseases, and doesn’t shed a lot of bits and pieces requiring constant clean-up. There’s no such thing as a perfect plant, but seek out those with the fewest potential maintenance problems.

For example, if you have Dogwoods in your plan, look for varieties such as the gorgeous Dogwood Appalachian Spring that is highly resistant to dogwood anthracnose, the fungal disease that has killed off millions of trees.

If you need a maintenance-free ornamental grass that can even do well in spots that stay damp, look for a variety named Grass Acorus gramineus Ogon.

Go for quality
Buying the cheapest plants is not usually a good investment, particularly if your time is worth anything to you. If plants look limp, tired and spindly at the garden center, you could be buying trouble, including the introduction of plant disease to your garden. Weak, unhealthy plants require a lot of care and are more likely to fail, which means buying more plants later to replace them.

Invest in healthy plants and you’ll spend less time caring for them and less money replacing them. For example, if you’re planning on evergreens such as the deer-resistant Juniper Blue Point, choose those that are larger and further along in their growth cycle by the time you buy them, probably shipped in gallon containers.

Do it right the first time
Follow the planting instructions precisely. If the instructions tell you to dig a hole of a particular dimension and add some organic matter, then that’s what you need to do if you want the plant to do well without a whole lot of attention from you.

Cut (out) the grass
If you hate spending a lot of your valuable time mowing your lawn, or it local conditions make it difficult to grow and maintain good sod, reduce the size of your lawn and replace with low-maintenance ground cover.

Here are some easy-care ground covers that could replace a lot of lawn:

If you need some specific answers to garden problems, drop me an e-mail at steve@landsteward.org Meanwhile, keep it simple so your garden is a joy not a chore.

The Plant Man is here to help. Send your questions about trees, shrubs and landscaping to steve@landsteward.org and for resources and additional information, including archived columns, visit www.landsteward.org