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Tropicals for Temperate Gardens
Today’s hottest horticultural trend is all about tropicals.
Avant gardens boast big-belled daturas
and brugmansias, shamanistic plants from South America whose
huge, flaring flowers look like something Ginger Rogers would
wear. Red and green banana trees and paddle-leaved cannas are
again admired as they were in Queen Victoria’s day. Although few
truly tropical plants are hardy here in the Northwest, many grow
exuberantly enough to grow as fabulous, showboat annuals, even
when our interesting climate provides less than tropical
temperatures. Thus, a jungle garden full of flagrant, flaunting
foliage and flowers is surprisingly easy to accomplish.
The tropicals trend has created an interrelated series of new
and still developing garden styles. All combine large-leaved
plants with potently architectural lines, yet they vary in
ambience and planting pattern. Like true jungle understory,
Hardy Tropical gardens spill over with dramatic foliage.
Groupings of boldly scaled plants create an exotic treeline with
strong lines and powerful mass. Mediterranean Basin gardens
combine palm trees and sun roses (Cistus) with silvery evergreen
herbs in gravel-based dry gardens that suggest the shimmering
heat of Southern Italy, Greece, and North Africa. Big, blatant
flowers that look gaudy in prim borders fit perfectly in
salsa-based Tropicalismo gardens, which glory in gigantism and
extravagance. They also celebrate Pan and the panic; that
neck-prickling recognition of the ultimate dominance of Nature.
Most tender tropicals can be coddled indoors over the winter,
where they should be treated as evergreen houseplants. Give them
plenty of light, along with regular but moderate water and food,
and many will grow as happily indoors as out. Indeed, a well-fed
angel’s trumpet may bloom all winter, though less generously
than it would in high summer.
If you can’t imagine growing tropical plants in the garden, an
angel’s trumpet or blue glory bower will make a splendid
introduction to the exuberant pleasures summer tropicals can
offer. These eager growers can put on six or eight feet in a
couple of months and begin producing flowers very quickly. To
give them a jump start, provide ample food and water on a
regular basis. Then stand back, because they grow FAST,
especially where summers are warm. In cooler gardens, place
tropicals in large, deep containers, where an extra degree of
warmth will encourage rapid root growth. Remember that
timed-release fertilizers don’t become activated until soil
temperatures reach the 70’s; thus, coastal gardeners may need to
supplement with fertilizer spikes or liquid feeds in early
summer.
ABUTILON Flowering maple is grown for the dangling, full-skirted
bell flowers which flower in a delicious array of colors. The
maple-like foliage is equally attractive, especially in the
variegated forms. These do best in partial or light shade, where
the muted colors develop fully without scorching. Flowering
maple makes an excellent pot plant, moving readily indoor and
out each season. Pinch back in spring to reduce legginess.
ALOCASIA amazonia ‘Compacta’ Luxuriant and sleek of leaf, taro
looks delicious in borders or containers. Protect these fabulous
foliage plants from wind and scorching sun, but offer plenty of
light, water, and warmth to get the greatest growth. Taro roots
are edible, but the bold foliage is even more delectable,
especially in combination with red bananas, bright-striped
cannas, purple Persian Shield, and silvery plectranthus.
Midnight dark, white-veined ‘Black Widow’ makes for instant
drama with lime green ‘Margarita’ sweet potatoes and variegated
orange Abutilon. Lusty Alocasia x calidora boasts five foot long
leaves when pleased. Compact, green-leaved ‘California Shield’
is perhaps half that size, but utterly reliable and can be hardy
to zone 8 in mild years, as is the narrow-leaved ‘New Guinea
Shield’. Compact Amazon taro produces boldly marked purple
leaves with white-veining, a natural companion for riots of
Purple Wave petunias and swags of Arabian jasmine. Slim ‘Portodora
Shield’ looks splendid with swirling Fountain Rush and hardy
hibiscus.
ALPINIA zerumbet ‘Variegata’ Majestic variegated shell ginger
belongs to the rich flora of subtropical China. Tall stems may
reach 8-10 feet, with long, lance-shaped leaves. In summer,
showy clusters of white, purple-tinted flowers produce an
enticing perfume. Shell ginger prefers filtered or partial shade
and blooms best when given plenty of water and light but regular
feeding. Both in containers and in the ground, open-textured,
humus-rich soils will encourage fast growth.
ALTERNANTHERA Calico plant or parrot leaf was a favorite of our
grannies, who grew these fancy-leaf foliage plants indoors and
out. Today, these playful plants are indispensable ingredients
for those who love filling the pockets of ornate knot gardens or
recreating intricate Victorian bedding-out patterns. Most make
small mounds or run in low, spreading ribbons. All grow well in
containers or in the ground, enjoying full sun or light, partial
shade, deep, rich soil, and lots of water.
BREYNIA Rose snowbush has enchanting, rounded leaves, dappled
with white, rose, and green and set like delicate coins on slim
stems. The pronounced zigzag pattern of the leaves makes a
handsome contrast to strappy, broad-bladed carexes and boldly
patterned coleus. A shrub in its South Pacific homeland, this
lovely foliage plant rarely achieves great size in the
Northwest. For best performance, give Breynia rich, well-drained
soil and light shade, with protection from drying winds.
CALATHEA warscewiczii Costa Rica is home to hundreds of
ornamental plants, among them this dazzling prayer plant. The
striking foliage of ‘Jungle Velvet’ is boldly striped in green
and purple with burgundy backsides. A natural understory plant,
Calathea thrives in moist shade but prefers well-drained soils.
It grows well in containers and can overwinter indoors with
ease.
CENTRATHERUM intermedium Brazilian button flower is a plump,
bushy shrublet that blooms at the stem tips all summer long.
Small but profuse, the fluffy, lavender-blue blossoms are set
off by deep green leaves with neatly pinked edges. In less than
full sun, pinch any leggy stems to keep plants compact. In
hanging baskets, let the lax stems tumble over the sides.
BRUGMANSIA & DATURA The angel’s trumpet clan is gaining
popularity in a hurry. The family has two main divisions;
tree-like Brugmansias, whose great bell flowers dangle downward,
and shrubby or herbaceous Daturas, whose flared trumpets face
up. Both are splendid growers that only want the best of
everything—full sun, plenty of water and lots of food—to give of
their own astonishing best. In both groups, the flowers may be
single or double, ruffled or flaring. The color range is wide,
but largely limited to soft tints, running from white and cream
to yellow and peach, salmon and pink, rose and mauve, lilac and
muted purple. A few flower in exotic combinations like dim
purple lined with café-au-lait. The large leaves are generally
unremarkable except for size, but some Daturas have handsomely
lobed leaves and certain Brugmansias are marbled with butter and
cream.
DURANTA Skyflower adapts readily to a wide range of garden
conditions, taking dry or damp soil, sun or light shade in
stride. A small tree in South America, it rarely exceeds 3-5' in
the Northwest, where it makes a compact, open-textured shrub
that blooms on arching, feathery wands, exchanging flowers for
fat little fruits as summer matures. Skyflower prefers water to
food and grows quickly in any decent soil.
ENSETE Red Abyssinian banana has enormous and lovely leaves of
bottle green stained with ruby and port. Try this fast grower
alone or pair it with tree ferns and masses of swirling
‘Sparkler’ carex. Grown in borders, this is considered a
relatively hardy banana. To help it along, give it a tall hoop
of hog wire filled with straw and dried leaves in late fall (add
a handful of smelly moth flakes to keep hungry rodents at bay).
Uncover in spring and watch those huge new leaves unfurl. Baby
bananas are not unknown, but don’t expect ripe, mature ones!
EUPHORBIA millii Crown of Thorns is a succulent, shrubby Asian
spurge with showy red and chartreuse bracts. This is a terrific
performer in dry, warm places, where it produces many
bloom-tipped arms over a very long season. It takes wind, full
sun and lean soils in stride, and performs well in sunny seaside
gardens. It can overpower less architectural companions, but
looks wonderful with coppery carexes, swirls of ponytail grass (Stipa
tenuissima), and tall sedums such as ‘Autumn Joy’.
GRAPTOPHYLLUM Caricature Plant is an evergreen shrub Down Under,
where it may reach six feet. Northwestern summers rarely coax
such great growth from this handsome foliage plant, but its
glossy, hand-sized green and yellow leaves look great anyway. In
warm years, look for plump purple and red flowers (hummingbirds
love them).
HAMELIA Mexican fire bush offers brilliantly flame colored
flowers set off by bronzed and ruddy foliage. It blooms well
when young and may reach 3' by midsummer, particularly in pots.
Well drained soil is a must, and it prefers to dry out a bit
between waterings. Try it with maroon ‘Jack Spratt’ New Zealand
flax, sky blue salvias & trails of ‘Purple Bells’ Rhodochiton.
HIBISCUS Rose mallow makes a boldly shrubby shape in the garden,
where it may reach 5' in a summer. The dusky red leaves set off
its glowing mahogany flowers to perfection, and the plant makes
a striking accent against ‘Lime Mound’ or ‘Goldflame’ spiraeas.
Rose mallow gets leggy in shade, but takes full sun with aplomb
if given rich and well-drained soil.
IPOMOEA Sweet potatoes have come a long way from the
kindergarten window sill. These stunning foliage plants fill
baskets or weave wondrous carpets of long-fingered foliage in
glowing chartreuse, sage with cream and rose, or near black.
Full sun, tilthy soil, and excellent drainage make them
gloriously happy, in the ground or a pot. Mix these stunners
with upright fuchsias, let them drip over a low wall, or mingle
them memorably with small New Zealand flax.
IRESINE Bloodleaf is prized for its fancy foliage, which may be
pleasingly puckered or painted in dashing streaks and stripes of
red and purple, gold and cream. Most forms achieve a foot or two
of height, making them splendid candidates for mixing into
marvelous container combinations with ruffled coleus, shimmering
copper carexes or black mondo grass, and gilded streamers of
golden creeping jenny or buttery yellow immortelle.
JASMINUM Most powerfully scented of all the jasmines, Arabian
jasmine has lacy, glossy foliage and waxen, creamy flowers that
smell like pure romance. The blossoms turn rosy purple as they
mature, giving them a pretty two-tone effect. Use Arabian
jasmine for a quick summery screen for a trellis or wrap it
through climbing roses and clematis trained over a bower seat.
It isn’t as hardy as some jasmines, but even a single summer’s
bloom is an unforgettable treat. Dry the flowers for pot pourri
or add them to green or black tea blends. You can also mix them
with lemon balm and spearmint for a delicate, refreshing herbal
tea.
KALANCHOE behariensis Velvet elephant ear has the vast, felted
foliage the name suggests, while K. thyrsiflora is an exotic
looking South African succulent that looks as if brushed with
silver frost. The soft green, red_edged foliage is crisp edged
and neat, forming lapping wedges that suggest shelf fungi set
sideways in the soil. The odd shape combines well with firmly
shaped tufting grasses, low sedums, and dwarf iris. The cool
yellow bell flowers are most fragrant on still, warm days, when
the scent can carry surprisingly across the garden. Give both
types plenty of warmth, good drainage, and lean soil, and avoid
excess water in summer. Easy to overwinter indoors or in a
moderately warm greenhouse.
LEONOTIS Lion’s tail is a semi-evergreen South African that is a
fitful perennial but an utterly reliable annual. Its slim stalks
carry stacked bobbles of tawny red flowers above slender
foliage. These attract hummingbirds in season and remain
structural and attractive well into winter. It does best in full
sun and dry, lean soils, and does not tolerate crowding in
jampacked borders.
MUSA Dwarf bananas make splendid pot plants and can also be
grown in the ground. Fast growing and shapely, the bananas throw
offshoots called "pups" in warm summers. These can be detached
and grown on as houseplants all winter, then taken outside as
warmer weather arrives. Both ‘Dwarf Cavendish’ and ‘Zebrina’
have large, red-streaked foliage and may produce their yellow,
red-tinged flowers in warm summers. To encourage quick growth
and protect leaves from shredding, give bananas shelter from
wind and harsh sun, provide plenty of water on a regular basis,
and feed them lightly every few weeks.
PANDOREA Beauty bower grows with ardent good will, lacing
trellis or tree with a leafy embrace. Full sun and a deep run in
humus-enriched, promptly draining soil will encourage rapid
flowering, which is good, because the scent of those soft pink
or white flowers can make a summer evening memorable. Give this
determined scrambler a favored spot against a sunny wall and you
won’t be sorry.
PASSIONFLOWER Fast growing, free flowering passion flowers will
live happily in a tub for a season or two, but where hardy, they
prefer to grow in tilth-rich, well-drained garden soil. A sunny,
wind-sheltered spot works best in cooler climates, where these
robust vines will smother a fence or leap up a trellis in a
summer. Such an ideal position may coax a plump, juicy fruit or
two from the fabulous flowers during a warm year (but don’t
count on it unless you have a greenhouse or sunny enclosed porch
to offer).
RUELLIA Mexican Wild Petunias come in several forms. Uprights
are shrubby, slim-leaved plants, while compact types make showy
little mounds for border edging or containers. All are heavy
bloomers that produce serial flushes of open, flaring bell
flowers in white or a range of pinks and purples. Ruellias
thrive in light, airy positions where they receive direct sun
only in the morning, if at all. They require excellent drainage,
but flower hardest when constantly supplied with water and mild
fertilizer.
SENECIO confusus An attractively casual scrambling twiner from
Mexico, this evergreen dusty miller cousin offers sequential
bursts of fragrant, reddish orange daisies all summer long. In
the wild, it may reach 20 feet. In the Northwest, it won’t, but
let it have a go anyway. Give it a trellis in full sun and see
how far it gets before frost arrives. It’s South African cousin,
S. macroglossus ‘Variegatus’, is called Cape Ivy for its
climbing ways. Also evergreen, this one has wedge-shaped leaves
edged and veined in butter and cream and ivory, unscented
flowers. Give this one shade from afternoon sun to protect the
lovely variegation.
SETCREASEA Purple heart or Moses_in_a_Boat is a familiar
houseplant that can be grown in beds and borders, where it is
occasionally hardy. This trailing perennial has saturated purple
foliage, folded and cupped, with vivid violet stems and hot pink
flowers. They color best in bright light, though they grown well
in partial or filtered shade. Mix these with red and coppery
coleus, pink forms of Sedum spathulifolium, and masses of rosy
super petunias, which make suitably exotic, luxuriant
companions.
STROBILANTHES Persian shield is a sumptuous foliage plant whose
large, deeply embossed leaves are glazed with a lustrous sheen
of pewtery purple. Wine_red undersides make them especially
showy when perched in a tall pot or set on a deck where the
plants are often seen from beneath (set their skirts with purple
Million bells petunias for a knockout display). To reach its
usual 3-4', Persian shield needs rich soil and plenty of food
and water. It grows most luxuriantly in a warm, sheltered spot
where it gets ample indirect light.
THUNBERGIA Sky flowers are vigorous, thrusting scramblers that
can wind their way up a tree or trellis in a single season.
Glossy, heart-shaped leaves set off large, lightly scented
tubular flowers of summer sky blue. In the Northwest, these
lusty creatures need full sun, rich and well-drained soil, ample
water and frequent food to offer their best performance.
TIBOUCHINA In it’s native Brazil, glory bower makes a large
shrub or small tree. In the Northwest, this rapid grower reaches
3-4' in a summer, smothering itself beneath an extravagance of
vivid, purple-blue flowers. The velvety leaves are napped with
red-gold or bronze silk when young, and take on rich color as
fall draws near. Glory bower likes acid, sandy soils, but
prefers a pot of decent soil to native clay. It revels in a warm
garden nook, but needs protection from harsh winds near the sea.
Hide its leggy looks by threading a morning glory through its
lower limbs.
© 2000 Ann Lovejoy for Log House Plants
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