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The Perks of Perennials
In a new crop, some are sturdy, some
flashy, and all satisfying
by Val Easton for
The Seattle Times, April 2006
OF ALL THE NEW plants that debut each spring, perennials and
vines stir up the most excitement because they aren't too big a
commitment. It doesn't take much garden space or cash to try out
a satisfying number of new ones.
Log House Plants comes up with remarkable plants every year.
Their new columbine, Aquilegia 'Black Currant Ice,' has yellow
and purple flowers as showy as an overblown fuchsia. If you're a
Husky fan, this plant's color scheme is for you. The Oregon
wholesale nursery also introduces hardy hibiscus called the
Fleming series, with huge tissue paper-like blooms ranging from
creamy white and pale yellow to the dark red 'Fireball.' These
flashy flowers grow 3 to 4 feet tall, with leaves varying from
dark green to purple or tinged with copper.
Patio clematis are sized to grow in pots and small spaces, even
though their flowers are as large and lovely as the more
vigorous varieties. New this year is 'Bourbon,' with velvety
purple flowers generously outlined in deep red, and Clematis
'Angelique' with large, finely cut lilac flowers. For more lilac
a bit later in the season, look to the new Farmington aster (A.
novi-belgii 'Baldco'). It's compact (to 18 inches tall) so it
won't flop, resists mildew, and has masses of pale lilac flowers
set off against especially dark green foliage.
Several new perennials are good news for drought-tolerant
gardens. Sedum 'Black Jack' is statuesque, with deep purple
leaves and butterfly-attracting pink flowers. And there's a new
coneflower rumored to be as sweet-smelling as a rose. Echinacea
'Twilight,' the most fragrant coneflower yet, is rose-red with a
darker red cone. Echinacea 'Harvest Moon' is yellow with an
orange cone. These are great cut flowers, long-lasting in the
vase as well as in the ground.
Agapanthus must be this year's "it flower" because there are
several new types of this showy perennial we used to think
wasn't hardy in our climate. Heronswood Nursery (360-297-4172;
www.heronswood.com) is introducing A. praecox 'Two Times Blue'
with double pale-blue flowers held high above mounds of strappy
evergreen foliage. High Country Gardens offers a snowy
agapanthus called 'Cold Hardy White' for those of you gardening
in colder zones. This Santa Fe nursery specializes in
drought-tolerant plants; another new one is Agastache x
rupestris 'Orange Flare,' with fireball-colored flowers, and
highly fragrant, finely textured gray foliage. (High Country
Gardens; 800-925-9387; www.highcountrygardens.com). Also look to
Heronswood for a promising new crocosmia called C. x
crocosmiiflora 'Eastern Promise' with iris-like foliage growing
more than 3 feet tall topped with tangerine flowers.
And, of course, there are fabulous new heucheras. Will we never
tire of these foliage plants produced in so many enticing colors
and shapes? Among the new coral bells for '06 are Heuchera 'Snow
Fire' with rose-red flowers and leaves heavily spotted in creamy
white; H. 'Fantasia' has silver-lobed leaves with pink reverse
and pink flowers. And speaking of pale leaves, how can the
near-white foliage of Brunnera 'Looking Glass' have enough
chlorophyll to persist? But it's a beauty. Green veining bisects
the glowing silver-white, heart-shaped leaves of this shade
lover that sprouts little blue flowers in spring.
Various growers offer a slew of coreopsis in new colors, all
long-blooming and easy-care. Instead of the typical daisy-like
flower, C. 'Zamphir' has bright gold petals curled into
trumpet-shaped little tubes. It looks like a sunny version of a
seashell cosmos. I've already put in an order at White Flower
Farm for the new 'Autumn Blush' coreopsis, which is buttery
yellow with a mahogany blotch in the center. I plan to plant a
bunch of them to foam up around a coral bark maple, as backdrop
to an edging of yellow-striped Japanese forest grass. I'll let
you know if the combination looks anything like how I've
pictured it.
For plants that need to be ordered from specific nurseries, I've
given the information you need to track them down; the rest of
the plants should be widely available from retail nurseries
within the next few months.
Valerie Easton is a Seattle freelance writer and contributing
editor for Horticulture magazine. Her e-mail address is
valeaston@comcast.net.
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