A couple of years ago when my front lawn was a collection of weeds, I tried to hire a landscaper who advertises that she specializes in using natives. Even though we set a couple of appointments she never showed up. Or, maybe she did and didn't want to be bothered with the job. I ended up hiring the local "big name" landscaper to install St. Aug. sod just to get something decent looking out there. His crew did a terrible job (1-2" gaps between pieces) and I had to re-lay it all the next day. I live in a small town in the middle of nowhere and there aren't a lot of landscapers to chose from...so this time I'm going to do it myself.
I'm determined to get rid of a lot of the lawn area and want use drought tolerant plants. My back yard is a chaotic collection of whatever appeals to me and I can find a spot for...cottage style is the polite term for it. It's fun to work in, but I want something more restrained--but still informal--in the front. I thought I'd restrict it a little more by sticking to purple- and blue- with a few orange- and red-blooming plants.
I've been working on a plan:
{{gwi:22706}}
I like meandering beds. Most of the other homes on my block have traditional front yards, so I want to keep some lawn. I left the corner near the stop sign in lawn because of visibility and all the beer bottles that the college students throw there.
Here's my (ever-growing) list of potential plants:
Evergreens:
--prostrate rosemary
--lavenders
Deciduous:
--blue plumbago
--salvia leucantha
--Henry Duelberg salvia
--Autumn Joy sedum
--Queeny Purple hollyhocks
--Fall asters
--Homestead Purple verbena
--daylilies
--irises
--California poppy
--bluebonnets
Grasses:
--gulf muhly
--mexican feather grass
Small trees:
--Texas lilac vitex
--Muskogee crepe myrtle
--Mexican plum
--possumhaw
Will the beds be boring in the winter with so few evergreens? What could I plant that will add winter interest (and/or attract birds, butterflies, etc)? Would it look too weird to include a century plant and some agave?
This is the current situation:
{{gwi:22707}}
Note the lovely telephone pole smack-dab in the middle.
{{gwi:22708}}
There's a mix of sunny, part sunny and shady areas. Eventually, it will be mostly shade when the trees are mature. Soil is sandy loam and drainage is good except near the curbs where it's gumbo starting about 4" down. I'll be making lasagna beds this summer and will start planting in the fall.
Existing plants (left to right):
--bridal veil spirea
--a big globe shaped thing at the left corner of the porch that may be replaced with something that doesn't need to be sheared
--variegated pittosporum in front of the porch that do a good job of keeping the road dirt off the porch
--mystery plants under the windows that also have to be sheared and are too close to the house
--crepe myrtle & an oak leaf hydrangea near the brown fence
--a very old cenizo
--Texas ash
--a live oak underplanted with mondo grass, dwarf ruellia & trailing purple lantana that really needs more light. I'm thinking that I should limb up the oak and replace what's under it with grass, moving what's there into the new beds.
Now I'm stuck. How do I decide what plant to put where? There are so many variables: light requirements, height, foliage color & texture, bloom times & colors, growth habits...what am I forgetting? I'm overwhelmed and don't know where to start. Is there a logical way to start thinking about all this? Do I need to get some landscaping software and plot the thing out by season?
I'll be mulching the beds with composted, shredded wood bits and don't need to fill every bed immediately. If this turns into a multi-year project, that's fine. However, I am hoping to get most things in the right place the first time--wishful thinking, probably.
Tia,
Carol
miss_rumphius_rules
treeloverOriginal Author
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treeloverOriginal Author
ymaddox
Saypoint zone 6 CT
treeloverOriginal Author