Plant Preview


Welcome to Plant Preview, a blog dedicated to helping gardeners learn about gardening techniques and preview new plant cultivars. Read about new plants here first and hear how your "comrades in compost" are making use of new plant introductions in their gardens and landscapes. Blog author Geri Laufer is a life-long dirt gardener, degreed horticulturist, author and former County Extension Agent. Plant Preview is copyrighted by Geri Laufer.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Seed Collecting and Saving

Seeds I collected in the garden - so far. 
While the squirrels are collecting (and planting) pecans from our big tree in the backyard, I am also squirreling away seeds to plant next January. Of course I'll scatter some now, too.

I like to dry them thoroughly before packaging them in paper envelopes. Be sure to label them! I often forget if they are not labeled. My Dad used to like to quote Confucius: "the weakest ink is stronger than the strongest mind," or in other words, write it down b/c you might not remember what you have there.

I plan to take the Rudbeckia triloba off of that mass of clippings while watching NCIS this evening. Do you save seeds? I have parsley, white hibiscus, thorn apple, purple cone flower, annual Rudbeckia, my Grandmother's Balsam, Rudbeckia triloba (big bowl) --> and one composite I forgot to label (!) but I think it is feverfew.

Happy Collecting!

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Urban™ Apple Caramel Upside-Down Cake


Edible landscaping is the number one consumer trend today acccording to Independent Garden Centers, as the locally-grown movement gains ground, and more and more gardeners find success harvesting their own crops. Enter Urban™ Columnar Apples by Garden Debut®, slender new apple trees that yield great tasting apples in a tiny space.

What could be more ideal than a “containerized orchard” on a sunny deck, or planted in the backyard? This is possible with Urban™ Columnar Apples by Garden Debut? Use your harvest in a simple upside-down cake recipe that combines the great autumn flavors of apples and caramel.     

Blushing Delight(TM) Apple PP21511 

Ingredients: 
4 Blushing Delight™ Urban™ Columnar Apples, cored and sliced
1 Tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
1 bag vanilla caramels
1-2  Tablespoons water
Yellow or Spice Cake batter (for one layer only)

Directions: 
Coat cake pan with oil
Place Urban™ Apple slices in an attractive pattern in the cake pan









Slowly melt caramels and water in a small saucepan over low heat
Pour melted caramel over apple slices without disturbing









Mix cake batter according to directions
Pour batter over caramel and apples









Bake at 350 degrees F. for 25 minutes, or until cake is lightly brown and separates from pan
Flip cake onto serving dish and enjoy!

Serves 8

For more information about the Urban(TM) Columnar Apple Trees, visit the Garden Debut® website


We would like to see how you are using your Urban™ Apples this fall! Post on our Facebook Page 

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

2012 Gold Medal Plant Award Winner is The Rising Sun® Redbud PP21451



The Rising Sun® Redbud PP21451

Awards by horticultural societies help gardeners and landscapers make informed choices about plants. The societies run tests and then acknowledge the best of the best performers. Extensive trials take place before these awards are bestowed on old favorites or new plant introductions. 

A familiar example is the annual All-American Rose Selection Winners must embody all of the characteristics today’s homeowners desire in a garden plant. Each winner excelled in a 2-year trial program where it was judged on disease resistance to flower production, color and fragrance.

Another plant award is the American Hemerocallis Society’s Stout Silver Medal of Honor. This is the highest award a daylily cultivar can receive and is given in memory of Dr. Arlos Burdette Stout, the father of modern daylily breeding in North America. Winners are great performers.

The Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit (AGM), an honor that is well-known and transcends national boundaries. Judging committees from the RHS bestow the award to only the best performers.

Daffodils have their own award; the John and Gertrude Wister Award from the AmericanDaffodil Society emphasize garden performance with long lasting blooms, clean color, sunfast, vigorous foliage, disease resistant, and more. 

Gold Medal Plant Award, PHS
Gold Medal Plant Award Program, Pennsylvania Horticultural Society
Since 1978 the prestigious Gold Medal Plant Award Program of the Pennsylvania Horticulture Society has recognized trees, shrubs and woody vines of outstanding merit. Noted nurseryman Dr. J. Franklin Styler inaugurated this award to showcase superior woody plants for homeowners and landscapers. These woodies are evaluated for their superb eye-appeal, performance and hardiness. People know they can rely on winners for ease of growing, resistance to disease,   beauty in many seasons and hardiness in USDA Hardiness Zones 6 - 7 (encompassing Pennsylvania). Garden Debut(R) is pleased to announce The Rising Sun® Redbud PP21451 has been awarded the 2012 Gold Medal from the PHS! This honor recognizes beautiful, reliable and exceptional plants. 

Tangerine to apricot new foliage
The PHS website states: "Cercis canadensis The Rising Sun(R) Redbud PP21451 is a novel addition to the native eastern redbud roundup. Small but showy rosy orchid flowers climb the naked branches in early spring attracting bees and butterflies. The distinctive bark is smooth tan with a yellowish cast. Emerging heart-shaped foliage is brilliant tangerine to apricot and reputed to hold its color well into fall, surpassing other gold leaved redbuds. Heat tolerance, drought tolerance and cold hardiness are other desirable attributes." 

Gardeners and landscapers can purchase The Rising Sun(R) Redbud PP21451 with complete confidence in its performance every time. Another of the Great New Plants(TM) from Garden Debut(R).  .

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Candelabra Flower Scapes on Enjoy 24/7™ Daylily Collection



Bahama Pink Sky(TM) Daylily, PPAF
Daylilies (Hemerocallis species and cultivars) are reliable, easy-care perennials useful for adding color to perennial beds, shrub borders or for erosion control on slopes. Dayliles are ideal perennials, tolerant of most soils, of wet weather and drought, of sun and shade, handle heat stress well, are pretty free of pests and make a carefree addition to the landscape.

Their colorful, trumpet-shaped blooms each last only a single day, but since each clump produces many buds, the colorful effect is long-lasting. In addition, the Enjoy 24/7™ Daylily Collection  from Garden Debut®  has multiple flowering periods throughout the season, beginning in April and continuing though Thanksgiving(!).

Candelabra Flower Scape
Candelabra or Branched Flower Scapes
Since the total number of flowers and resulting bloom season of a well-established plant depends on the number of buds, a flower stalk that is loaded with buds has a long bloom period. The scape is the entire flower stalk arising from the center of the clump known as the crown; a tall, sturdy flower stalk without leaves but having a few green bracts as well as multiple flower buds. Some scapes are branched and display flowers to advantage and these are called branched scapes or ‘candelabra scapes’.

Pictured at right is a candelabra scape of Bahama Pink Sky™ Daylily  blooming once again in early September with multiple flower stalks or scapes (6) distributed among two clumps. Each scape carries multiple buds so the perennials are able to bloom for a long period. In particular, Enjoy 24/7™ Daylilies http://www.gardendebut.com/enjoy-247-daylilies.php are exceptional bloomers, beginning in April and continuing through Thanksgiving.

Multiple Branched Scapes
Pictured at left is a photo of 2 clumps of Bahama Pink Sky™ Daylily taken the first week of September in my Atlanta garden, with many scapes loaded with buds. 

To purchase the Enjoy 24/7™ Daylily Collection from Garden Debut, ask your retailer http://www.gardendebut.com/retailers.php to offer them this fall. Remember the horticultural slogan, “Fall is for Planting” and plant some this month.




Friday, August 31, 2012

Foliage Fun: Advantage of Using Colorful Foliage in the Landscape


Snow-'N-Summer Asiatic Jasmine

Color is one of the most compelling of plant attributes and attracts attention in any landscape. Traditionally, color in gardens is supplied by flowers. With bedding plants this color is reasonably reliable, but when perennial flowers are used, they have distinct and limited bloom-periods.  The best way to prolong landscape color indefinitely is through the use of plants with colorful foliage.

·         Colored foliage ranges from white to near-black burgundy, with all the hues in between.
·         Colored leaves often thrive in more shade that plants that rely on flowers, extending the range and bringing color options into darker landscape areas.
·         Variegated foliage is another version of landscape color and incredible patterns and combinations attract garden interest.   


Two of the most commonly used colored-leaf foliage plants spring to mind:  
Coleus, botanically known as Solenostemon, is a tender member of the mint family with square stems, 2-lipped flowers and an incredible assortment of leaf colors. Varieties are available both for sun (Solar and Sunlover Series) or shade (Ducksfoot Series or Independent). Color combinations vary radically and small lavender flower spikes attract pollinators.

Caladium or Caladium bicolor grow from a tuber or enlarged underground stem and produce medium-sized (6 to 24 inches),  heart-shaped leaves of white, pink or red with myriad variegation. Tropical caladiums are useful in shade and are grown by many gardeners for this distinct foliage. Selections are predominantly red, pink or white. Native to South America, caladiums will not survive cold winters that experience heavy frost.



Perennials with colored foliage are also indispensible
Handsome Hosta leaves range in color from blue as in glaucous ‘Blue Angel’ to yellow ‘Sum and Substance’ with lots of variegated patterns such as ‘Patriot’ and sizes from miniature to the extra-huge ‘Big Mama.’ Hostas thrive from Montreal to Miami and liven up shady gardens.

Varieties of Heuchera or Coral Bells have been bred to produce a rainbow of colors from nearly black ‘Obsidian’ to bright pink ‘Georgia Peach.’ Heuchera are wonderful grouped in beds or added to container plantings.

Snow-N-Summer fills pot
My favorite Snow-N-Summer(R) Asiatic Jasmine is the newest of the colored foliage plants and has incredible pink-n-white new growth. A bed of this small groundcover looks like a pink and white flower bed (without any flowers!). It has a moderate growth rate and a compact spreading- to- mounding growth habit that can be pruned or sheared to control height and spread. Shearing also promotes new growth emphasizing the beautiful pink and white coloration. Pictured, right, in branded Garden Debut(R) pot. 

For more ideas on using colorful foliage to light up the landscape, visit Garden Debut(R).

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Variegated Foliage Essential for Long-Term Landscape Color


Color in the Landscape
LS Color draws attention
Human response to color in flower, fruit or leaf is deep and emotional. Color is therefore one of the most compelling plant characteristics used to create interest in the landscape. While landscapers use many design tools such as texture, form, repetition and symmetry as well as hardscaping to create dynamic landscapes, a colorful container, a brilliant annual bed or an appealing bright rosebush loaded with flowers automatically draws attention to that particular spot. This means of creating interest is useful in landscape design to direct visitors to the leasing office or to indicate the way to the pool or recreational area. Heads turn as people are drawn to color.
Colorful plants distinguish themselves from the background mass of greenery in most landscapes, emerging to take front stage. However, vibrant flower color in plants is often short-lived or fleeting, for example, as shrubs bloom during a brief period of the year and then revert to green the rest of the time. In addition, fewer colorful flowers bloom in the shade (about 80% in sun but only 20% in shade) and designers must turn to other sources of plant color.
Variegated Foliage
Twist of Lime(TM) Abelia 
When looking to enliven the myriad shades of garden green, colorful variegated foliage is the method of choice.  One of the finest variegated shrubs for sun or shade, Twist of Lime ™ Abelia is flowering shrub with interest 12 months a year and attractive white flowers/sepals about 6 months! 
Twist of Lime™ Abelia by Garden Debut(R) has many landscape uses, as a specimen or grouped in shrub borders or foundations. It is also effective when massed as a shrubby groundcover, particularly on banks where plants can also provide erosion control, This moderate grower may be used as a low, informal hedge in southern areas where winter die-back is not a concern, although plants lose their attractive graceful shape if pruned or sheared. Twist of Lime™ Abelia is also a creative choice for permanent containers on terraces or balconies. 
What is your favorite variegated landscape mainstay? 

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

DYK? Dead-heading Shrubs Makes Them Rebloom!


by Geri Laufer

Basil flowers
Botany
The main “goal” of any plant is to flower, set seed in order to reproduce and then die. Dead-heading is the process of picking off dead flower heads so that the plant in question will keep blooming by developing more flower buds in its continued attempts to set seed.

Annuals and Horticultural Practice
Annual flowers go through this process in one year. In order to prevent the early demise of an annual color bed and keep plantings blooming at full strength throughout the season, gardeners and landscapers routinely dead-head the plantings. This causes the flowers to continue flowering  and the herbs producing more leaves for harvest. Bedded-out marigolds or pansies in a flower bed, or an herb bed planted with annual basil come to mind.

Perennials
Although perennials grow and increase in the garden for several years, they too can be profitably dead-headed. For example, purple coneflower and black-eyed Susans regularly bloom twice a season if the old flower heads are removed immediately after their first flowering.

Dead Headed Seed Pods
Woody Ornamental Shrubs
Typically, dead-heading is applied to herbaceous plants and not to woody ornamentals. In the case of woodies, most people never think of applying this horticultural practice to the flowering shrubs in their gardens or landscapes.

Seed Pods Blue Angel Althea
Blue Angel Althea
One reliable shrub that will continue to flower if the old seed capsules are removed is Blue Angel Althea from Garden Debut®. This shrub flowers prolifically in late summer through early fall, and is covered with blue trumpets. But if the seed capsules (that resemble tiny green acorn-squash) removed before they begin to ripen, Blue Angel will continue to flower much later than normal, adding its color and joy to the landscape.  

Enjoy the delightful color of Blue Angel Altheas twice as long by dead-heading old flowers and young seed pods.