Gardening with Gary
Gardening Advice from an Expert
Drought-Tolerant Plants
Cathy writes~
I live in the Sierra foothills not far from Yosemite National Park in California.
Do you have any suggestions for drought tolerant plants that also bloom. We have
our own well have to be careful with water.
A. Choosing the appropriate drought-tolerant plants for your landscape is important.
There are many sources of information about drought tolerant plants, including the
Western Garden Guide by Sunset Books, Inc. and Xeriscape Gardening written by
Ellefson, Stephens and Welsh. Another excellent resource is to ask someone at your
local gardening center to show you plants that are native to Southern California
or that are well adapted to our climate. Always group plants according to soil,
water and sunlight needs, making sure that they are compatible with your overall
landscape design as well. The more time you spend thinking about your landscape
before you start, the less time you'll need to spend changing things after you plant.
A well-designed area not only is more enjoyable to look at, but it's better for
your plants and can reduce your overall cost of maintenance.
Consider these plants, but I have a great searcher at the bottom:
Eriogonum umbellatum ........................... Sulfur Buckwheat
Mimulus aurantiacus ................................ Bush Monkeyflower
Muhlenbergia rigens ................................ Deer Grass
Salvia 'Allen Chickering' ......................... Allen Chickering Sage
Scutellaria antirrhinoides ......................... Blue Skullcap
Scutellaria californica ............................... White Skullcap
Sphaeralcea munroana ........................... Creeping Globemallow
Rosmarinus 'Tuscan Blue' Tall Rosemary, beautiful, with pale lavender-blue flowers.
http://www.plantstogo.com/calnatives.htm
A great book to buy is:
The Complete Guide to Northern California Gardening by Maureen Gilmer at Taylor
Publishing.
This is the definitive guide for Northern California gardeners. This book gives
you everything you need to know to garden successfully, from understanding Northern
Californian climate and soil conditions and setting up a personalized garden design
to specialty gardening such as growing exotics or creating a drought-tolerant (Xeriscape-style)
landscape. Discover how to make your own kitchen and herb gardens and how to control
pests without resorting to hasty, toxic solutions. Included are more than 250 gorgeous
color photographs; diagrams, tables, and plans; a map of the seven basic climatic
areas; information on erosion control, invasive plants, and oak-root-fungus-resistant
plants; and at-a-glance boxed tips-such as using rice hulls from area farmers as
an economical mulch, or figuring your soil composition.
Maureen Gilmer comments:
Living in northern California has provided me an intimate sense of our lifestyle
and gardens. This book was written for the novice or intermediate gardener who wants
a concise all purpose book that offers the most useful information without wading
through a lot of text that doesn't apply to our immediate environment. In addition,
I feel that a solid palette of reliable plants and the details needed to use them
properly is essential to making gardening fun and successful for everyone.
Publication date: March 1994
I highly suggest you subscribe for free to:
High Country Gardens: drought-tolerant plants for Western gardens
http://www.highcountrygardens.com/subscribe.html
I have done a search here and it lists hundreds of choices for xeric and all
other gardening conditions, with choices of:
Plant Type
Flower Color
Bloom Time
Sunlight Preference
Moisture Preference
Mature Plant Height
Soil Type
Extreme Climate Condition
Attracts Butterflies
Attracts Hummingbirds
Fragrant Flowers/Foliage
Deer Resistant
Rabbit Resistant
http://www.highcountrygardens.com/shop/finder.html?id=e56cf73b144d2f0c89ac8b94060d682d
The above site lists from Acantholimon hohenackeri [Prickly Dianthus] to Zizophora
clinopodioides [Blue Mint Bush] Unbelievable!
I have bookmarked it since the information is incredible.
Roslyn writes~
We have a condition where we really need to watch our water supply. What can we
do? Are there a list of plans I can grow which are called 'drought-tolerant'?
A. There are an entire range of plants you can choose. I found a fine website
which discusses trees, lawns, perennials, annuals, shrubs, vines, bulbs, etc.
'Be sure to know and follow your water districts rules on outdoor watering. If
you follow the 7 steps of Xeriscape™, you can have a beautiful garden and landscape
in spite of the drought. Remember all plants need moisture to get established and
most plants are considered established after one growing season, trees and shrubs
need two seasons.'
1. Planning & Design.
2. Improve the Soil.
3. Create practical turf areas.
4. Water efficiently with appropriate methods.
5. Select plants appropriate for climate and group according to water needs.
6. Mulch to reduce evaporation.
7. Maintain your Xeriscape garden.
There are many products available at a garden center to help your plants thrive
through tough seasons. Here are just a few recommendations to consider:
Mulch
Compost
Water timers
Rain gauges
Water sensors
Polymers
Multiple hose connectors
Drip irrigation supplies
Soaker hoses
Landscape fabric
Deep root waterers
http://www.xratedgardening.com/
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