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What Not to Plant
Members offer tips from their regions
BY: NHGC Members
Southwest
I once heard a local plantswoman moan, “I am so over Russian sage. It’s a weed here.” It’s not exactly a weed, but Russian sage (Perovskia atriplicifolia, Zones 4 to 9) spreads like crazy and is difficult to eradicate once planted. The more compact version, ‘Filigran’ (Zones 5 to 9), doesn’t sprawl and looks better in garden borders. Hollyhocks (Alcea, Zones 3 to 9) can also be bullies in the high desert, seeding themselves in places where you don’t really want 6-foot-tall plants. Instead, try hollyhock mallow (Malva alcea, Zones 4 to 9), a 4-foot-tall beauty that knows how to behave. Last year, when sunflowers (Helianthus spp.) took over one of my gardens, I vowed to get my yellow fix from Coreopsis grandiflora (Zones 3 to 9) and Gaillardia x grandiflora ‘Arizona Sun’ (Zones 3 to 9). They’re just as brilliant in late summer, but won’t turn your backyard into a sticky-stemmed jungle. —Stephanie Hainsfurther, Albuquerque, NM
Tips
• All of these plants like full sun and well-drained soil.
• The blooms of hollyhock mallow tend to be brighter with a little protection from the desert sun.
• If you’re tired of yellow-and-orange flowers, try Gaillardia ‘Burgunder’ (also sold as ‘Burgundy’), which has wine-red blooms.
What to do this season
• Step up watering and feeding to keep late-summer bloomers happy until they can put on a show.
• Soak containers to flush out salts.
Northeast
Years ago, when many of my friends were getting married, I did a lot of flower arranging. For large arrangements I’d often start with some sort of shrubby material, and false spirea (Sorbaria sorbifolia, Zones 2 to 8) worked perfectly. It has plentiful, disease-free foliage; its fragrant, frothy, white flowers are similar to those of astilbe; and it blooms in late June, just in time for wedding season. It took me about two years to realize why this shrub isn’t more popular, and about four more years to eradicate its fleshy roots, which roamed 6 feet in every direction. Goat’s beard (Aruncus dioicus, Zones 4 to 7) is a well-mannered alternative. It’s a perennial, rather than a shrub, and has deep green foliage and wands of delicate white flowers in mid-June.
—Katherine LaLiberte, Richmond, VT
Tips
• Goat’s beard is a North American native that’s well suited to woodland plantings or the back of a shade garden. It tolerates full sun, but looks best in part shade. It grows 4 feet tall and wide. Needs moist to wet soil.
• Good companions for goat’s beard include hosta, astilbe, bleeding heart, lungwort, and coral bells.
What to do this season
• Some early-summer perennials will bloom a second time if they’re trimmed after they flower. Good candidates for this treatment include cranesbill geraniums, threadleaf coreopsis, and catmint. Shear plants as soon as they’ve passed peak bloom and before they set seed.
Pacific northwest
We think of English Holly (Ilex aquifolium, Zones 7 to 9) as the ultimate Christmas decoration. As a garden plant, however, this dense 30-foot-tall evergreen tree causes problems. Bird-deposited seeds have helped English holly naturalize in the Pacific Northwest. Because it can grow in sun or shade, it displaces native plants in several habitats. Holly-leaved osmanthus or false holly (Osmanthus heterophyllus, Zones 6 to 9) is an evergreen shrub that grows 10 feet tall and offers many of English holly’s good qualities without being a pest. Its branches are just as lovely in holiday arrangements and it grows well in a pot or in the garden. Several cultivars are available: ‘Purpureus’ has dark stems, ‘Variegatus’ has a white leaf border, and ‘Goshiki’ has cream and bronze splashes on the foliage.
—Marty Wingate, Seattle, WA
Tips
• Grow Osmanthus heterophyllus in sun or part shade.
• Once false holly is established, it won’t need supplemental water.
• To prune false holly, take out one tall branch at a time. After cutting back each branch to where it attaches to a bigger stem, step back to see if it needs more pruning.
What to do this season
• Set out transplants for the winter vegetable garden—purple-sprouted broccoli, cauliflower, and cabbage.
• Deadhead late-summer perennials.
• Sit with a glass of lemonade in a comfy chair under the shade of a tree and enjoy the garden!
Midwest/mountain
Japanese honeysuckle (Lonicera japonica) is a terribly invasive vine with fragrant, white to pink tubular flowers that turn yellow with age. This vine spreads rampantly, and its dense growth usually kills the plants it climbs on. A much better-behaved cousin is our native scarlet honeysuckle (Lonicera sempervirens, Zones 4 to 8), which grows 10 to 12 feet tall. The blue-green foliage complements prolific clusters of tubular red flowers with yellow throats in May and June. The flowers are followed by red berries in summer and fall. Hummingbirds visit the flowers for nectar and birds eat the berries in the fall. ‘John Clayton’ is a nice cultivar with pale yellow flowers from June through November. —Natalia Hamill, Lawrence, KS
Tips
• Scarlet honeysuckle will grow in shade, but it needs sun to flower well.
• Plant in well-drained sandy or
loamy soil.
• Grow on a trellis, arbor, or fence so the twining stems have something to wrap around.
• The vine generally blooms on the previous year’s stems, so prune to shape after flowering.
What to do this season
• Divide and replant crowded iris.
• Keep mulch on your beds to reduce weeds and conserve soil moisture.
• Plant a fall vegetable garden.
Southeast
Evergreen foliage, spring flowers, and bunches of black berries helped Chinese privet (Ligustrum sinense) win places in 19th-century Southern gardens. But as birds spread the seeds, privet displaced woodland plants and became a landscape nuisance. Help stop this thug by removing it and filling its niche with something better. My top choice is wax myrtle (Morella cerifera, often listed as Myrica cerifera, Zones 7 to 10), a native shrub that serves as a host plant for butterflies and is a great food plant for birds. Wispy wax myrtle leaves release a bayberry fragrance when crushed, and the waxy coating on the berries is scented, too. Sometimes called Southern bayberry, this nitrogen-fixing shrub will grow in sun or part shade, and thrives with little care. —Barbara Pleasant, Pisgah Forest, NC
Tips
• The species grows 15 feet tall, but compact cultivars such as 6-foot-tall ‘Don’s Dwarf’ are easier to fit into small spaces.
• You can prune wax myrtle into
a hedge or sculpt plants into an elegant upright shape.
• Remove the lowest branches from
a mature wax myrtle to improve your view of its multiple trunks.
What to do this season
• Deadhead long-blooming annuals such as salvias and zinnias, and trim back basil and other herbs.
• Reduce the risk of black blemishes on the blossom ends of your tomatoes by thinning fruits to three
per cluster and keeping the soil lightly moist at all times.
Comments
By
tessie43
Friday, September 03, 2010 2:36 PM
Great article, could you list anymore what no to plant plants? I learned the hard way about Trumpet Vine and Mint. I had a trumpet vine for four years trying to get it to bloom, it never bloomed but sent runners out everywhere, I think I will never get it ll killed. And I am sure you know that mint spreads quickly and everywhere. Thanks
By
tessie43
Friday, September 03, 2010 2:37 PM
Great article, could you list anymore what no to plant plants? I learned the hard way about Trumpet Vine and Mint. I had a trumpet vine for four years trying to get it to bloom, it never bloomed but sent runners out everywhere, I think I will never get it ll killed. And I am sure you know that mint spreads quickly and everywhere. Thanks
By
mweiss1
Monday, September 13, 2010 1:27 PM
Fabulous article, in the area I live, Upstate New York, Wisteria has taken over and is running wild. Do you have any ideas how I can get rid of it? Thanks
By
rmorris16
Tuesday, September 14, 2010 8:17 PM
A "not to plant" in my yard has been vinca. I was given this as a ground cover and it covered...and covered...and covered! Way too much of a good thing! I live in northeastern NC.
By
tessie43
Wednesday, September 15, 2010 2:01 AM
Wisteria is very hard to get rid of, as it is a woody plant you need to use something that is specific to wood plants. I had a wisteria about 12 years ago and as you said it went viral. I did use a wood plant weed killer, and yest today I still get sprouts here and there. It is difficult to find all the little feeders from it, you just have to keep after it. It really is a pain in the neck. I cut the original and any feeders I could find, cut them down almost to the ground and didn't dillute the poison poured it full strength into the woody base. It got most of it, but as I said I still get new shoots every year here and there. It's too bad that the sellers don't advise you on how invasive it is. Good luck.
By
mrsspade667
Wednesday, September 15, 2010 9:08 AM
I have a Arizona Sun in my front yard....well actually I have four of them! They are beautiful! They bloom like crazy! So bright and colorful! I live in Florida zone 9-10
By
angelmm6
Wednesday, October 20, 2010 6:23 PM
have just moved to southern most Georgia on the east coast. I have lived in New England and Virginia, but never this far south. Any suggestions for my new gardens?
By
abejab
Tuesday, October 26, 2010 2:44 PM
In Southern Arizona do not plant morning glory. It is very invasive and aggressive in yards and fields
By
scwoz
Tuesday, February 22, 2011 11:57 AM
Plant everything and then step back and just have fun....Weed out and control those that need it and keep those that work in your color scheme. Amazing what weeds are to some people and how expensive cultivars are just not worth the effort....
By
FRMeyers
Tuesday, February 22, 2011 5:43 PM
I am having trouble controlling a thorny vine, with arrowhead shaped waxy leaves. The botanical name is SMILEX.
Roundup and other chemicals seem to have no impact. I have been digging each up by the roots. But I still have hundreds of these damn things. (They have a white root, so it is somewhat easy to recognize. However, I followed one root for over 25 feet below ground; the above ground vine was another 30 feet! I never did get to the rootball for that particular one. So, I know it will be back! I have done some rootballs the size of softballs! (I have heard from others, that they have found some the size of basketballs!) Apparently unless these rootballs are totally dug out the smilex will regrow.
Any suggestions?
Frank Zone 8B
By
ekosinski
Thursday, February 24, 2011 5:03 PM
I did have hops take over my garden at one point. I put it in a pot, with a bean pole setup for it to climb (diamond shapes at either end with a support in the middle that I hung twine climbing strings from, but it not only grew and grew, but when we stopped homebrewing, and we decided to take it out, I discovered the huge taproot had gone through the bottom of the barrel, and roots had gone out sideways in either direction. Getting the roots out was like pulling up a garden hose from 6" under. Their closest living relative must be tyvek because they were really difficult to cut. Once I got all the roots I finally got rid of it, but it was a lot of work.
By
ekosinski
Thursday, February 24, 2011 5:03 PM
Sorry, forgot to mention I'm in the front range area just barely east of the mountains, in Colorado, not quite out on the plains yet.
By
deniseburdine
Tuesday, April 19, 2011 6:14 PM
What is Scarlet Sage?
By
sbattiste
Saturday, April 30, 2011 8:29 AM
tessie 43 did you eer find a way to kill the trumpet vine ? its invading the foundation of my house !aaaaaaaah
By
tessie43
Saturday, April 30, 2011 12:06 PM
Trumpet Vine is very similar to Wisteria, I think it is in the same family. It is very invasive and very hard to exterminate because of how it spreads. You have to use an exterminater that works on wooden plants, even Round Up doesn't work. Use one specific for wood plants and dig and spray. It takes a lot of work and seems you will never get rid of it. I still find shoots every spring and summer, but less and less every year.
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