RE: Road Salt Tolerance
- To: "'perennials@mallorn.com'"
- Subject: RE: Road Salt Tolerance
- From: S* S*
- Date: Tue, 23 Nov 1999 08:54:31 -0800
Chris, I just bought some books from Amazon. If we go through this list
with that address will it always help support the list for any type of book
(not just gardening)?
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Christopher P. Lindsey [lindsey@mallorn.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, November 23, 1999 12:28 AM
> To: perennials@mallorn.com
> Subject: Re: Road Salt Tolerance
>
>
> > I'm looking for a list of perennials that are tolerant of roadside
> > conditions, including automobile pollution and road salt.
> It is easy to find
> > lists of salt-tolerant woody plants, but my web search
> didn't turn up
> > anything on perennials. I realize they are not above ground
> in the winter,
> > but still some of them are going to be sensitive to the
> build up of salts
> > from snow removal. If you have experience or references to
> share, I will
> > appreciate it. :Janis
>
> Hi Janis,
>
> I'd strongly recommend checking out David MacKenzie's book,
> Perennial Ground Covers (or it's non-Timber Press predecessor,
> "Complete Manual of Perennial Ground Covers" published by
> Prentice-Hall but no longer in publication).
>
> The book is excellent and doesn't cover groundcovers the way that
> we think of them -- his idea of a groundcover is anything that
> fills in a space.
>
> Anyhow, in the very back is an excellent 14-page table that
> lists all kinds of information like tolerance towards foot
> traffic or salt, suitability for erosion control, sensitivity
> to fire, soil preference, moisture preferences, etc...
>
> If anyone wants to buy it (and help support the list financially :)
> this link will take you to it at Amazon.com:
>
http://www.mallorn.com/bookstore/lists/review.cgi?ISBN=0881923680
Scanning quickly through the list, these genera are listed as
salt tolerant:
Acacia
Ammophila
Aptenia
Arctostaphylos
Arenaria
Armeria
Artemisia
Atriplex
Aubrieta
Calamovilfa
Cistus
Clethra
Comptonia
Conradina
Cytisus
Erica
Euryops
Forsythia
Juniperus (only J. communis, conferta, horizontalis, virginiana and
cultivars)
Muehlenbeckia
Parthenocissus
Rosa wichuraiana
I would think that Lathyrus japonica, Lupinus littoralis, Angelica
lucida, Mertensia maritima, Tanacetum bipinnatum, Aster subspicatus,
Abronia latifolia (or umbellata), Convolvulus soldanella, Rosa rugosa
or any of the other plants commonly found on beach areas on the East
and West coasts would do just fine...
Hope that helps,
Chris
Ye Olde Listowner
P.S. There Marge, I put the listowner thing in... :)
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