Masterpiece Landscaping Blog

May 3, 2011

A Report on Spring 2011

Filed under: Bulbs, Plant health, battling the Minnesota climate — glenn @ 10:54 pm

May first is the normal time for Leonard Messel or Dr. Merrill Magnolias to begin blooming in my landscape garden.   Normal meaning over the past thirty years.   Normal meaning this year….despite the relatively miserable Spring….more accurate ……the absent Spring  thus far.

Dutch bulbs have done well.   At last my Siberian Squill have weeded enough to cover masses of space with the most beautiful blue matching any in the world.   For you beginning your landscape garden world, keep note that it does take about ten years for these masses tobecome  large enough to make a powerful floral statement….for about a week to ten days.   Those with only half day sun bloom a few days behind those in the open.  

There will be a down side when the foliage sinesces…in about two or three weeks.  Don’t fret and do not cut the foliage back after bloom.   Any of these minor….or major …..Dutch bulbs need their greenery after bloom to restore the bulb with energy to produce another display next season.  It’s a good time to fertilize with a fertilizer a bit higher ratio  in phosporous.

The yellowing Siberian Squill (also called Scilla) foliage will last about a week, often less, but will disappear without your interference.   Squill will spread throughout any area in which the soil is exposed and not under water.  

Snowdrops are earliest bulb bloomers in my grounds.   Winter aconite would show second, but not this year.   They were a no show.   I have trouble keeping them for any length of time.  Perhaps artificial watering is a problem.

Remember all Narcissus are  immune from rodent munchings.  Unfortunately the  color selection isn’t very broad.  Hyacinths with their exceptional fragrance aren’t particularly bothered by rabbits in my grounds.   Crocus and tulips are another matter.

Some years ago I was planting some crocus at a client’s garden.   I had several dozen crocus in an open box on the bed of my pick up truck, which was in sight from where I was planting crocus.  

I happened to look up just in time to see two squirrels  leaving the truck bed looking very pleased with themselve…..and I immediately guessed why.   They had ripped into the webbed bags containing the crocus.   About ten of the  fifty were gone and some remains were apparent what had happened.

Some seasons I had the viscious purple crocus bloom at the same time as the swaths of scilla…..and exceptional sight, but a few years later the crocus had disappeared.

Puschkinias bloom at the same time as Siberian Squill and Chionodoxa….and they all have been in great display during this past verycold week and are still blooming.

The evergreen groundcover, Pachysandra terminalis, is also in bloom now.   In masses one can pick up their sweet fragrance on the warmer spring days……   The dwarf Frittilarias are also blooming.

Most cookie cutter landscapes don’t use many if any of the countless new evergreen varieties on the market these day.   As their new foliar buds swell the colors, usually a lighter and sometimes a brighter shade than the more mature foliage, make them appear to be in bloom as well.

So many of this year’s more mature conifers look crappy even if they did survive without severe damage from last winter’s onslaughts.   I have lost two Hetz Junipers, one Tendergreen Juniper and one deGroot’s Arborvitae all of which were leveled by the November 13, 2010 wet and heavy 24-30 inch snowfall.   Two Woodward Arborvitaes were crushed and one mature Techny broke in half.   The storm damaged twenty or more other major plantings…..destroying an Indian Summer crapapple, ripped a major branch off an unknown named  pure white blooming cultivar…..and ravaged my White Pine.

Well, there is always tomorrow, if the sun will decide to appear…..and  my white rockcress opened up today.  What a white.   I have four or five beds of this unfailing white flowering groundcover, Arabis caucasica.   Last Spring all beds were in bloom for a day short of a month.

October 19, 2010

Autumn Duties for the Landscape Gardener

What are the regular routines for the Landscape Gardener to maintain the home grounds in the best condition going into winter?

Watering:   There is much debate over what the autumn to late autumn watering schedule should be for the Twin City area landscaped grounds.  Some ‘professors’ profess continued regular watering until the hard frosts; others suggest withholding water gradually to assist the plants hardening off for the cold misery of winter.  Plants here usually mean woody plants.

Not all plants are equal.  Herbaceous perennials are much more ephemeral in the grounds than cold tolerant trees and shrubs.  Not all autumns are equal either.  This passing October was wet at first and then decided to move into a beautiful season of cool, sunny, colorful, gorgeous and DRY Minnesota autumn…..going waterless  on almost three weeks now….and I think it is great even though I have had to use the sprinkler since I had my irrigation system winterized early this year.

In this case I believe watering the shrubs and trees about every fourth day at twenty minutes or so a spot, during such a period would be enough.  Soil type can be a factor if you are unlucky enough to garden over soil of heavy clay.   Sandy soils are much easier to manage with watering……less intensity but more frequency than normal.   Clay soils which have not dried out during the heat of summer to brick, don’t need to be watered much in the autumn regardless of the temperatures.  Hot, dry October winds might cause some reconsiderations.

October temperatures are cool.  Heavy watering can be damaging to some conifers which become shaded with the sun ”falling’ toward the horizon here in our Northland.  Foliar disease are especially ravaging on Colorado Blue Spruce.  Others damage tree yews.   Symptoms most observed are the withering of the interior older foliage.   Yews begin to lose their yellowing needles in late Spring.  Blue spruce will show a gray to brown sickly dried up crop of old needles and be dropping them about now.    One of my white pines has a foliar disease similar to these.

Shade, moisture, and lack of air movement to dry off the foliage reliably, are the collective causes of the unsightly disfuguration to many of our conifers.

Should hostas and other perennials be pruned back in fall or spring?   I grow hostas because they offer an artistic plus to my grounds, not because I am a hosta guru.  My entire grounds is a landscape garden.   Not all hostas are equal.  Some hold attractive foliage into very late autumn and others don’t.   Some are less hardy than others.   I cut back foliage on those whose foliage no longer please me IF I have time to do this clean up. 

However, there is one note which must stand firm and deeply in the Minnesota landscape gardener’s understanding of the onslaught of winter upon cherished garden plants, woody or not…..

The greatest threat to Minnesota landscape garden plants is the autumn disaster of temperatures dropping below ten below zero or more, Fahrenheit,  before Thanksgiving, and anything around twenty below zero before Christmas WITHOUT  snow. 

Snow is nature’s best insulator for outdoor plants.  The second best is certain kinds of leaf cover…..namely the kind called oak leaves.   Others may work or may cause additional troubles to garden plants.  I let oak leaves go where they may in my autumn garden.

Oak leaves are crinkly and don’t break down rapidly even despite wet weather.  They create air pockets over whatever ground the manage to cover.   If the gardener waits till Spring to cut back dead perennial foliage, the plant will be somewhat better protected through  a snowless frigid spell when  leaves of any kind are captured by any plant  ”stalks”. 

I am the only  groundskeeper of my landscape grounds.  Time available usually dictates my scheduling for manicuring the fall garden. 

Two years ago I lost four spreading yews and one twenty foot upright yew to winter kill.   The plants were in the garden for over fifteen years.   There was plenty of snow cover.  However, sometime in January over a weekend when the temperature had dropped to minus 10 degrees Fahrenheit, there was a steady thirty mile an hour wind from the North for two days.   A good friend in Waseca, Marian Fischer,  was certain her similar losses were due to that January windstorm.  

There is always the unexpected.

Major pruning of woody plants should wait until Spring, the earlier, usually the better.  The more one knows about pruning, the more one can safely disobey this recommendation, however.

Ideally, pruning  of apple, crabapple and pear trees should be done in late February or early March, to avoid the spread of  the bacterial disease called “Fireblight”.

So many special plants now growing in our more up-to-date landscaped grounds may require exceptional treatment for winter care for which we have no reliable information except for our own observations.

Those of you who live in the center Twin Cities and the immediate suburbs are now living in horticultural zone FIVE……. My ideal garden zone.  Where I live, west of Minneapolis, I can grow many zone five plants but I have be call my area, zone four and a half. 

Zone Five Japanese Beetles visited my grounds for the first time in known history this past summer.  One has to take the bad with the good if one is a devoted Landscape Gardener……And Japanese beetles are not good…..but if that is what it takes to get a little Global Warming to reach Zone five, I’ll accept it.

Many who live in the city have a serious rabbit and mouse problem…..especially in grounds surrounded by entrapping fencing.   Trap and kill, most serious landscape gardeners recommend.  Chicken wire fencing around the most susceptible plants such as Winged Euonumous or some of the Viburnums.     Some tender gardeners trap and relocate…..but that can go on for weeks and months.

I will recommend nothing here.  It is your call, dear fellow landscape gardener.

September 25, 2010

Autumn Yellowing of Conifer Foliage

It’s almost October.  In our Northland this is the time dramatic changes take place in the outdoors.  Actually, the changes begin  in late  June when the days begin to shorten…..The changes go  unnoticed until “autumn”.

….Until  this past week.  Visually, “the  fall” is here.

Every fall we get calls from friends regarding changes they notice on the foliage of  their pines or arborvitaes…..or on any of our conifers, for that matter, the trees and shrubs commonly called evergreens. 

The inner needles, that is, the inner foliage, begins to turn yellow or brownish and then drops off to the ground.  This is a normal process, the manner in which these trees shed their older needles. It occurs only in fall.

There are some foliar diseases which do attack older leaf growth  on conifers.  The more widespread the disease on its victim, the much thinner the foliage,  often reaching  the point where the only living needles left on the tree are those remaining from the year’s new growth in Spring. 

We can notice these scantilly leafed conifers especially on spruce, yews, chamaecyparis and arborvitae grown in deep shade especially where there is little air movement.

Needle drop caused by diseases usually does not occur in the fall.

Larch, which is often called tamarack, is a conifer which drops its foliage every autumn….after it displays a lovely yellow for a few days.  I believe the Japanese Larch have the brightest yellow for fall color.  The folliage of all larch is very pleasing to the touch.

Most larch are easy to grow and with the exception of the dwarfs, can get quite large.

Spring came quite early in 2010.  An early Spring usually means an early Autumn…and often, an early Winter. 

The foliage on the conifers is changing early this Autumn.

July 1, 2010

The Importance of Being Artificially Watered

Filed under: Plant health, The Art of Landscaping, garden maintenance — glenn @ 9:21 pm

We at Masterpiece Landscaping install grounds irrigation for the landscape garden.   

Nearly all of the folks trained to install irrigation systems know nothing about installing  such systems in the classical landscape garden.

What is the difference?

Imagine a half acre of lawn.  Only lawn….nothing but lawn; no maple trees here, arborvitaes and pine there, viburnum and magnolia, anemone and heuchera, sedum and “Hot Lips” turtlehead in sight.  Only lawn, with or without dandelions. 

Here installantion is simple and quite cheap.    Installation of irrigation into a landscape garden is often much more complex, primarily depending on the placements of the tree and shrub material.

If your dream is to create landscape beauty for your home or business grounds, plant your masterpiece first.  Let the irrigation follow the art, never the reverse, art following the irrigation system……unless, of course, you have no choice.

My family and I moved to my “landscape” canvas in Minnetonka where I still live, on January 1, 1974.   Immediately with the coming spring,   The grounds  “yard”  was almost entirely lawn.   I began at certain edges around the property to develop the privacy required for a landscape garden.   At that time I was heavy into pyramidal arborvitaes.  They were cheap, grew rapidly, and didn’t cause any shade.   Besides the foliage is very fragrant.  Moreover, I was sculpting my winter garden as well.  (None of the originals have survived to this day…..a result of a disastrous winter storm.)

Once established, arborvitaes (there are dozens and dozens of varieties) can tolerate the Twin City swings of water to drought quite well.   Holding on to money while raising a family was not as easy, so I never dreamed I could ever reach the patrician heights of owning a first class irrigation system for my landscape garden.  

I had it installed in 1990, but did not start to use it until  four or five years later….let’s estimate 1995. 

At that time my grounds already had sufficient structure and design to qualify as a “landscape garden”……but, barely, compared to its today’s form.   Yet, the grounds were generally attractive, but not melodious, not harmonizing, not grand.

“Gardens like people gain character with age” I have always reminded my landscape garden students.   My garden at age  twenty or so had not yet reached maturity.  Nor had its artist in so many respects. 

By 1998, by then three years into its water irrigation life, nearly everything within the grounds where the regular, reliable water reached appeared lush.

Today, no one, including me, is more astounded at the lushness of greenery  at every corner of these grounds.  And to taunt those of you who have not yet made this wise investment into  irrigating your own garden plants I do admit I face a new problem ever since regular watering became a way of my garden plants……

Astilbes have become a major weed  here. ( if you think with the traditional meaning of  weed…some plant showing up in your grounds which you didn’t plant and you feel you have to pull it.)  I have thousands, I do believe, from the fifty or so I have planted here in my life time.  Some are growing on logs.

 

But I am a staunch believer that “a weed is a plant out of place”.   By now the majority of plants on my landscape garden grounds are volunteers which I have artistically accepted into my family of plants which I enjoy being among.

Nothing has made my trees and shrubs  more healthy appearing, more rich and lush….and, yes, more beautiful than the introduction of artificial watering to my landscape garden.

P.S.  I no longer kill my favorite perennials while dragging a hose around for advantageous placements for watering.  I had learned to hate the garden hose.  Now we are more tolerant of each other.

Give us a call at Masterpiece Landscaping, 952-933-5777 to schedule your irrigation installation quote.

February 18, 2010

Conifers in Your Landscape: Overgrown? Priceless?

Filed under: Plant health — glenn @ 7:26 pm

Nearly every year a list of new plants appear on the market  for home landscpape use.  Most disappear after only a few years on the planting schedules.    Most of these plants are perennials.  Hostas, aquilegias,  heucheras come and go like revolving doors.  Some are better than others either in hardiness, fussiness, life expectancy, disease resistance, or assets such as flower or foliage color  or strength of stems or general form.

Among shrubs, Endless Summer Hydrangea has been a big disappointment among many  landscapers for their unreliability of blueness of bloom but also frequency of bloom.   I have noticed they do not perform well in shade, even in light shade, if color and frequency of bloom are demanded.  One can follow several regimens of acidifying and fertilizing, but the blue color isn’t always reliable even when you do.  

I find the plant still useful in the shade.  The foliage is always attractive even if bloom might be scarce.

Over the past twenty years the group of plants that have made the best showings in the Minnesota northern landscape gardens are the countless new dwarf and semi dwarf coniferous evergreens.   A few of these plants were available a half a century ago, but simply not available to the general market here in the Twin City area. 

Today,  nearly every hue from blue to green to chartreuse is available in various textures, growth patterns, shapes  and sizes.   As winter comes to its end, stop by the evergreen landscape gardens at the South entrance of Courage Center in Golden Valley.   As sunlight increases, the  colors sharpen to make a beautiful display both of individual conifers as well as those in combinations. 

When you see a specimen which especially interests you, be sure you find out the accurate and complete name….the most accurate being the official Latin name of the plant….but Rhinegold Arborvitae, Gentsch Hemlock, or Motherlode Juniper would be good enough.  Most nurserymen would recognize the plant accurately. 

Do remember not every evergreen is a pine.  Most are not.   So often homeowners will ask a question similar to …”I saw a pine yesterday at the nursery and it had the most beautiful yellow foliage.  It was a creeper with real tight foliage….and… would you know the name of it?”    Knowing the color and the texture and nature of the plant is very helpful…enough in this case to know that this conifer is not going to be a pine.

August 11, 2009

Acid in the Landscape Garden

Filed under: Plant health — glenn @ 9:09 am

By August landscape gardeners may begin to notice certain woody plants….both evergreen and deciduous… have developed a yellow look.  Yes, the foliage is decidedly not the green true to the plant’s healthier past.  What’s going on?

Unless the plant is in death mood, by which one might already notice leaf drop, what is going on ….is,  the plant is going chlorotic, meaning turning yellow due to chlorosis, the inability of the plant to take in certain nutrients.  The soil has become less acid.  The plant, one might say…or blog…is starving.

Plants typically affected are magnolias, azaleas, larch, Scot’s pine, white pine,  oak…and many, many more acid soil loving plants.  This disorder is more common on grounds with irrigation systems.  Treated city water is  alkaline.  Over a long period of time artificial watering of ones garden can exacerbate the problem.

In addition some local soils are less acid than others.  One does not have to run off to get a soil sample, only to know how to correct a local problem in the garden.

There are three soil acidifiers on the market, aluminum sulphate, ammonium sulphate, and garden sulphur.  All are somewhat different remedies to the same problem.

Ammonium sulphate is a fertilizer as well as a soil acidifier.  Ammonium tells us it provides nitrogen.   It should not be used, therefore, if one does not want to add nitrogen to a plant’s soil environment, such as in August or September when, especially young plants, might be stimulated to delay hardening off, that is, acclimating for the coming harsh season.  Landscape gardeners and others call that season, “winter”, and like our plant relatives sense it as our bleak season.

Aluminum sulphate is a granulated acidifier, usually added to a certain amount of water, and is made almost available “medicine” for the suffering plant to ingest.  If you are growing sweet corn in your landscape garden…an interesting artistic maneuver, to be sure, chlorotic plants might show color improvement in a few days.

Garden sulphur, like aluminum sulphate, is not a fertilizer.  Its effect to the soil environment is the same as aluminum sulphate, except it takes alot longer to be used by plants.  Garden sulpher is to be sprinkled onto the soil around the suffering plants and worked into the soil.  Water the area after application and then be patient.

August is a good time to cure chlorosis problems in your landscape garden.  Mature plants  may need many, many treatments.

August 7, 2009

The Winter Burn on Conifers Mystery

Filed under: Plant health — glenn @ 1:47 pm

One of the great mysteries of landscaping in Minnesota is knowing all of the elements involved which cause so-called “winter burn” on our garden coniferous evergreens.  We do know exposure to the winter sun especially in mid to late winter, the location and genus of the “victim” are all contributing factors.

We also noted that the winter of 2008-2009 was one of the worst winters for winter burn.  We noted that some yews in full sun facing south or southwest in full exposure, in front of a stucco structure showed not a millimeter of any winterburn.  We also observed many Taunton spreader yews allegedly resistant to winter burn in full shade covered with brownout  byApril first.

We concluded that there are a variety of factors which cause winter injury to  susceptible evergreen conifers, not least of which is late summer watering and plant exposure to winter wind.

With autumn soon upon us, we will be confronted with “to water? or not to water? from mid October into November until snowfall.

I never had winterburn on any evergreen for 35 years on my grounds until the winter of 2007-2008.  I owned about 25 yews displayed one place or another in my landscape. My irrigation system is usually turned off around October 24th.  I was alarmed for yews when well grown and groomed are elegant shrubs or trees.  Most are located under some canopy of deciduous tree, just shady enough, I felt, to warrant confidence my plants were safe from winterburn…as they appeared to be for 33 years.

Last autumn as an experiment, I decided to stop irrigating the garden three weeks earlier, thinking I had allowed these yews to go into winter without sufficiently acclimating to the harsher temperatures and the winter environment in general.  I lost nearly 200 years of yew plant growth on my property, including a tree 25 feet tall.  Many lost were located in deep shade.

There have been some professional studies regarding winter burn on conifers in general, but information from them has been contradictory.  Some encourage watering regularly until snowfall.  Others recommend easing off on watering gradually in order “to toughen” the plants up.

On one point studies recommend…do not, as a rule, fertilize coniferous evergreens after  August 1.  Encouraging new growth on the plants delays “hardening” them off for the cold season.

Many “Fish” in the Minnesota Evergreen Pond

Filed under: Plant health — glenn @ 11:07 am

The garden season this year, 2009, in the Twin Cities metropolitan area has been one of the driest and coolest in recorded history.  As a generalization we can predict that signs of autumn will arrive earlier and the coming winter will be earlier,  longer, and probably snowier.

The observing home owner will notice that foliage toward the  interior of  pines, arborvitae, junipers, especially and in general, of all evergreen conifers in our climate will begin to turn yellow.  Folks become alarmed thinking some disease has infested their evergreens.

In fact, however, there is nothing to worry about, for nature is doing nature’s thing.  These evergreen conifers are simply shedding the oldest needles of their crop as they do every autumn.  It is as predictable as a sugar maple or any other deciduous shade tree shedding all of its leaves at the end of each growing season.  We usually expect this ritual of nature in October, after all, that’s why we own leaf rakes.

Most Minnesota home owners call all coniferous evergreens “pines”.  My pine this and my pine is doing that…..even though the evergreen tree might not be a pine at all, but an arborvitae, or a spruce, a chamaecyparis, or yew, here a juniper or there a fir or hemlock.   Not all Minnesota evergreens are equal!

There are many “fish” in the Minnesota evergreen pond.  Most are easily distinguished one from another.

We at Masterpiece Landscaping  would like to invite interested home owners to learn more about these “pines” and their care, by offering a two hour session at our gardened grounds in Minnetonka tentatively scheduled for Saturday, August 29, at 9:30 AM.  Attendance limited to 20.  Call us at 952 933 5777 for further information.  There will be no admission charge.

July 1, 2009

Recent Rains and Diseased Plants

Filed under: Plant health — josh @ 12:34 am

Notice- the new growth is disease free.

Over the past four or five days I have noticed in my own garden dozens of perennials from a wide group of genera showing the same foliar disease symptoms; countless dark spots on leaves slightly to severely curled and in some cases the plants appear to have blackened leaves severely curled and falling from the plants almost denuding it.  Similar symptoms are also showing on my Black lace elderberry…

I don’t own a microscope or anyother instrument to guarantee accuracy of diagnosis, but I offer the following as a general rule:  If the same symptoms ravage a wide variety of plants of different genera, the disease agent is probably  bacterial, rather than fungal or viral.

A minority of my diseased plants are recently showing recovery, that is, the new foliage appears healthy, free of infection.  So from that I suspect the frequent rains we had for most days of  more than two weeks in succession, caused the bacteria to develop and spread, and it did so quickly.  With the drier conditions returning,  the suspected bacteria no longer can thrive without a reliable continuing presence of moisture.  I shall have to wait to know if some of the plants more severely diseased ( Angelica, Ligularia, Sambucus, Geranium) will recover.

Fungi generally infect plants within a genus or family and are unable to cause such havoc to such a wide variety of  unrelated deciduous broadleaf plants.

June 26, 2009

Winter Burn and the 2008-09 Winter

Filed under: Plant health — josh @ 10:23 pm

I have lived at my present property for 35 years.  Until the winter of 2007-08 none of the evergreens on my property suffered from the dreaded winter burn on evergreens.

Evergreens most susceptible to this malady are yews, certain junipers, and arborvitae.  Symptoms show damaged foliage on the south and/or southwest side of the plant above the snow line.  In some cases nearly the entire plant is browned out.

The cause is usually blamed on the sun and snow, ie,  as the sunlight in February and March becomes more direct, the foliage on the south-southwest exposure warms up on a very sunny, very still day,  activating exposed tissue even though the outdoor temperature might be zero degrees.  When the sun sets or disappears behind some structure, the activated cells are destroyed as the temperature drops below freezing.

There is a debate whether watering these susceptible evergreens well into November in our Minnesota climate adds to the problem due to the fact the plant does not “harden off” ( sufficiently adapted) to the tortures of Minesota winters.  Others believe the lack of continued autumn watering makes yews and arborvitaes more likely to winter burn.

This past winter was exceptionally damaging to many, many evergreens.  I lost five mature yews, one a 20 foor tree and the rest 30 year olds of significant girth and my grounds are quite shaded by mature deciduous trees.  All but one might have recovered, but it would have taken years before the extensive damage  would have been  masked.  Many large Mint Julep junipers were also severely damaged.   This spring  newly planted hemlocks looked pathetic whereever they were planted.

I also had invested heavily in purchasing my first hindu-pan stylized pruned Scots Pine.  Josh Perlich of the company installed a beautiful slate arrangement to feature the hindu-pan sculpture in a very private “closet”  setting along a main garden path.

To remind all who love garden settings, Nature has its own designs regarding the life span of living things.  To add more injury to this once lovely hindu pan Scot’s pine setting, a 30 year old yew commanding the privacy, died from winter injury ruining the entire picture.

Although this past winter would measure high for normal winter burn, there must have been another factor in action.  I, as well as several of our clients, believe the winter was a windy one, especially when in January or February there were below zero temperatures over a weekend with winds over 20 mph.

For those of you new to landscape gardening, you may come to enjoy your grounds more by recording certain seasonal peculiarities of weather, or times of blooming or leaf fall to help you take steps to keep your plantings happier and more beautiful in the future.   glenn h ray

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