RE: Low plants for under deciduous trees


Nan Sterman is writing a book on sustainable gardening and it will be THE book that we will all give -- as gifts -- to all community agencies, from homeowners associations, to realty associations, to city, county and state governments and to our neighbors.
 
Joe

Joe Seals
Landscape Designer, Horticultural Consultant
Pismo Beach, California
Home/Office: 805-295-6039


--- On Wed, 2/25/09, NMMueller <nmmueller@roadrunner.com> wrote:

From: NMMueller <nmmueller@roadrunner.com>
Subject: RE: Low plants for under deciduous trees
To: "'Mediterranean plants listserv'" <medit-plants@ucdavis.edu>
Date: Wednesday, February 25, 2009, 1:29 AM

Thanks to David, Gill, Joe, and Nan for your responses.  I've forwarded them to my friend.

 

Regarding Joe's suggestion to get rid of all the grass, oh, how I agree!  How can we persuade others to that point of view? Here is the mentality we are dealing with:

 

Last year's community beautification award winner was a new public school. As is typical here, it is surrounded by a chain-link fence. The 3-4 meter strip between the fence and the sidewalk is planted with grass. And a few shrubs. On this grass the children will never play due to the fence. The grass exists only for visual purposes.  Here we are in an area where our farmers had to cut water use by 30% last year and barring a March Miracle in the Sierra Nevada, even greater cutbacks are to come. (Many of our farmers raise avocados, which are so intolerant of irrigation interruption that the best strategy is to remove 30% from production by stumping rather than water all of them 30% less.) In spite of the resulting financial hardship, we as a community thumb our noses at a significant proportion of our population by not just tolerating but actually rewarding wasting water on grass no one uses.

 

Nancy

 

From: owner-medit-plants@ucdavis.edu [mailto:owner-medit-plants@ucdavis.edu] On Behalf Of Joseph Seals
Sent: Monday, February 23, 2009 3:34 PM
To: 'Mediterranean plants listserv'; nmmueller@roadrunner.com
Subject: Re: Low plants for under deciduous trees

 

Here's a starter list:

 

Acanthus mollis                                              BEARʼS BREECH

Aeonium haworthii                             HAWORTH AEONIUM                  

Amaryllis belladonna  NAKED LADY

Aristea ecklonii  BLUE STAR GRASS

Protoasparagus densiflorus ʽSprengeriʼ  ASPARAGUS FERN

Bergenia  BERGENIA

Carex glauca (C. flacca)  BLUE SEDGE

Carex solandri  NEW ZEALAND BUSH SEDGE

Carex spissa  SAN DIEGO SEDGE

Carex subfusca  RUSTY SEDGE

Carex tumulicola  BERKELEY SEDGE

Crassula multicava  FAIRY CRASSULA

Dianella  NEW ZEALAND BLUE-BERRY

Dudleya  LIVE-FOREVER

Hemerocallis  DAYLILY

Heuchera maxima  ALUM ROOT

Iris Pacific Coast Hybrids  PCH IRIS

Melica imperfecta  COAST RANGE MELIC

Muhlenbergia rigens  DEER GRASS

Narcissus  DAFFODILS

Nerine bowdenii  GUERNSEY LILY

Pelargonium tomentosum  PEPPERMINT GERANIUM

Ribes viburnifolium  CATALINA PERFUME

Sedum dendroideum  TREE SEDUM

Sisyrinchium bellum  BLUE-EYED GRASS

Sollya heterophylla  AUSTRALIAN BLUEBELL CREEPER

Vinca minor  DWARF TRAILING PERIWINKLE

Zauschneria (Epilobium) species  CALIFORNIA FUCHSIA


Now, convince her to remove ALL the grass.

 

Joe


Joe Seals
Landscape Designer, Horticultural Consultant
Pismo Beach, California
Home/Office: 805-295-6039


 

 




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