seduced by goumi & buckthorn - but worried re ultimate height
margi1533
20 years ago
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larry_gene
20 years agonewyorkrita
20 years agoRelated Discussions
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Comments (54)As far as shop lights go, do you prefer the ones with reflectors or not? Because the ones with reflectors/chains with which to hang them are NOT $8 and I've been all over my area going to every sort of hardware store I can think of to compare prices. It is either inflation at work or stores no longer carry whatever shop lights everyone has talked about in the past lol The only "shop lights" for uber-cheap that I've seen are the ones that need to be drilled into the wall, i.e. "under cabinet" lighting. But, since I shall have nothing to do today I'm going to try to purchase a cheap set of wire shelving and one shop light and bulbs. I was thinking of waiting two weeks (basically, until my next check) but some of my plants are growing very well and will need to be transplanted and have more space than what I currently have set up....See MoreStory, Understory and Shrub Suggestions
Comments (23)I got my Desert Willow at the Moonlight Madness sale at TLC three years ago. Its not one of the fancy ones, it had no label and was marked down to $3.00 in the cruddy looking, damaged and less than perfect plants section, I call that the Hospital and its where I head first. The weird thing about it is the leaves are very fragrant perfuming the whole front yard at times and people who walk by comment on that along with the looks of it. Smells strong, like a woodsy type of potpourii. I posted this on the Texas site last year and no one had ever run into that so I figured my little native looking, not so fancy DW type has done quite well even if its not as fancy as the one up the street. Its still blooming, has been since early in the season. The seeds sprout easily so if you see one around there with pods you could try that, these trees grow fast. I thought of a few shrub/small tree understudy ideas. 'Forest Pansy' redbud is a pretty tree as an understudy because it gives good color in an otherwise green situation. It has huge deep red leaves and blooms heavy, even on the trunk. Cotinus coggygria aka Purple Smoke Tree, needs at least half day sun but its gorgeous especially when its 'smoking' and looks like its covered in purple haze. It has round red leaves that smell really good when crushed & is well behaved. Three Leaf Sumac aka Fragrant Sumac. I saw several mature ones at the History Museum here in OKC, they looked great and were covered in fuzzy berries. I now have 2 babies cuz I fell in love with it and its tough. Turns red in fall. I'd plant smooth sumac if I had a big space....... but wouldn't dare in a small one. Ribes aureum (Golden Currant) Shepherdia argentea (Silver Buffaloberry) Robinia neomexicana (New Mexico Locust--blooms pink but it suckers) Blackhaw viburnum--- I want one bad. I got a Ninebark but its not doing so good. Obviously I need to move it to a more moist spot. Mine is Physocarpa 'Coppertina' and I really would like to get that nice pumpkin color in my landscape however currently its nearly leafless from drought since its in spot where trees suck the ground dry. I believe as a rule they do quite well in Oklahoma and there's several different cultivars with very nice leaf colors to choose from. I just came in from setting out several starts of the regular type of Nandina I got to dig out from a big plant next door, even though its not native and some purists would scream bloody murder, they will grow in dry shade, have red berries and colorful foliage, they've been planted there previously and did just fine. Come fall or spring its full sun in that dry difficult corner and anything will look better than a nearly bald, half dead Ninebark. I'll dig him up & move him when he goes dormant, poor guy....See MoreCallery pear - why the antipathy?
Comments (76)why, with the enormous range of fabulous small trees available for our delight, would anyone choose to grow one species only? Lack of imagination or interest - most property owners are not hobbyist gardeners - and a belief that formal effects like shearing of trees and shrubs, planting rows of one kind are sophisticated. Also some are wary of plants they haven't already seen having been proven to be able to grow and persist in their area. I can see some basis for this as both warehouse store plant departments and independent garden centers in my area do stock a lot of marginally hardy or outright tender plants which are often displayed among more cold tolerant kinds, thereby seeming to imply that they are all suitable for year around outdoor use of indefinite duration. And speaking of warehouse store plant departments, with their tiny range of plant varieties - those operations now have a large percentage of the US nursery stock sales. I have seen post after post on the internet referring to these as "the nursery". Plus in the current market trees are moving so slowly I wonder why any of the large independent outlets here are bothering to stock any kind of a range or quantity of them. And in fact one of the bigger operations in the area did apparently cut way back on these, so that for at least a few years now their "tree line" has been this little area like is routinely seen at warehouse stores....See MoreGood Doug Trees?
Comments (37)There are N. American pine species naturalizing in the vicinity of South American pine plantations. If these runaway pines are really and truly crowding out some native plant community, then I agree with those throwing their hands up in the air about this tragedy. But if they're simply colonizing land that long ago was cleared for agriculture, probably holds few to no native plants, etc......what's the harm? I don't expect all to agree with me on this-I also don't think it a great tragedy that a few Scots pines or Norway spruce have naturalized somewhere-but in my hierarchy of things to worry about, it's the obvious bad actors-things like common buckthorn, which really can destroy a woods, that i believe we should be concentrating on. Sometimes you'll read some Wild Ones pamphlet or something where somebody's all up in arms because some tawny orange daylilies are growing in the ditch somewhere. I want to grab them by the collar and shake vigorously. Daylilies in the ditch will not be the end of nature as we know it! At the end of the day, it is novel ecosystems that are being created. They're surely not all good, but they're just as surely not all bad. And this is not a new thing. American Indians, for one example, have been moving plants around for millenia. Why that gets a pass, but not some more recent effort to get something growing where it was not previously I don't know....See Morelarry_gene
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