It’s always a dilemma this time of year. It’s time to do our fall planting and get ready for fall and winter, but the flowerpots and beds are still looking great. In an effort to get our money’s worth out of our summer plantings, we nurse our geraniums and petunias along well into October.
By waiting so long to replant, though, we miss the opportunity to compose new plantings that will look interesting this fall and winter and into the spring.
Planting fall and winter containers requires a paradigm shift. Instead of thinking of flowers as our source of color, we need to shift our focus to colors and textures of foliage. We can create visually interesting arrangements simply by combining different textures of leaves. For example, grasses provide fine foliage that contrasts well with coarser textured plants.
Many of our hardy groundcovers such as Vinca, Ajuga and Lamium are evergreen in our Northwest fall and winters and will trail quite nicely over the edge of a pot. Evergreens such as Blue Star Junipers, Rheingold Arborvitaes and Sekkan Suji Cedars provide colors from steel blue, bright yellow and rusty orange. Heucheras have been bred for their colorful bronze-purple leaves and there is even a grass that boasts black foliage.
Many plants have interesting branching patterns that become pronounced in the fall and winter after their leaves have fallen off. Contorted Filberts are a classic example. Plop one in the center of a large container, decorate it with clear mini-lights and you have an instant focal point for the holiday season.
Another cute crinkly plant that is smaller in scale than the Filbert is a Corokia. It sort of looks like a loosely woven brillo-pad with tiny leaves. Plant it singularly or with a low dense matt of scotch moss and create a great focal point for the fall and winter. In the spring, transplant these shrubs into the garden and replant your containers with new stuff for the summer.
Bulbs can be planted later into the fall but will do best if planted before the end of November. I like to plant bulbs underneath my winter pansies and let them come up through them in the spring. Since the pansies need planting early in the fall and the bulbs go underneath them, it’s not practical to wait until November.
Fill your pots half full of soil, lay in the bulbs, with some bone meal, of course, finish filling with soil, plant the pansies and create a combination planter for fall, winter and spring interest. You can also layer bulbs in a planter by putting daffodils near the bottom covered with an inch of soil. Then put tulips above them covered with an inch of soil and finally smaller bulbs such as crocus near the surface. A planter like this with nothing but bulbs in it will bloom from February until April with very little care.
We all need to work on the concept of throwing out the old and making room for the new. Change is good. A planted container is really just a flower arrangement with roots attached. Try to move beyond the habit of making plants last forever. Dump the geraniums, stir up the soil and let it breathe for a week while you decide what you are going to create for the winter.
Steve Smith is owner of Sunnyside Nursery in Marysville and can be reached online at info@sunnysidenursery.net.
Upcoming class
For more info on fall containers come to a class at 10 a.m. Sept. 5 at Sunnyside Nursery.
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