IN THE GARDEN GAZANIA VARIETIES HAVE IT COVERED WITH COLOR.Byline: JOSHUA SISKIN Q: What multicolored ground cover would you recommend for a small 10-by-12-foot area in a front yard? There is a short wall for the ground cover to cascade over, plenty of sun and an adjacent grassy area. - Andre P. Baptiste Santa Clarita Santa Clarita, city (1990 pop. 110,642), Los Angeles co., S Calif., suburb 30 mi (48 km) NW of downtown Los Angeles, on the Santa Clara River; inc. 1987. Situated in the Santa Clara valley and nearby canyons, Santa Clarita includes the former towns of Canyon Country, A: The many varieties of gazania n. 1. any plant of the genus Gazania valued for their showy daisy flowers. Noun 1. gazania - any plant of the genus Gazania valued for their showy daisy flowers flower - a plant cultivated for its blooms or blossoms will provide the ground cover you seek. There are yellow, orange, reddish bronze, pale magenta, and white gazanias. There are gazanias with green leaves and gazanias with gray leaves. Designing with these colors should give you the variation you seek, and one variety or another should be in bloom at any given moment of the year, even if the most brilliant color display will take place from fall until spring. You should know that there are two kinds of gazanias: clumping and trailing. For a relatively small space such as you describe you should probably plant the clumping types since the trailing gazanias, which are hard to find in any color except yellow, would quickly overrun the area. Be aware that gazanias are South African plants that appreciate wet winters and dry summers. What this means is that you should be careful to resist the temptation of watering too much when the weather gets hot. You mention that your ground-cover area is adjacent to grass. If you are installing sprinklers, you must be sure to have the ground-cover area and the lawn grass area on separate sprinkler circuits, controlled by separate valves. In Santa Clarita, you will have to water your grass every day during the summer, while the gazanias require much less frequent watering. If you have lawn and gazanias on the same circuit, you will either water the gazania too much or the lawn too little. To protect the health of gazania or any other Mediterranean climate A Mediterranean climate is a climate that resembles the climate of the lands in the Mediterranean Basin. Outside the Mediterranean, this climate covers relatively small areas of the Earth, and generally occurs on the western coasts of continental landmasses, roughly between plant, you should not water more than twice a month during the summer. The water applied should soak deeply into the ground and never be sprayed haphazardly over the top where coverage is uneven. To soak an area before runoff occurs, utilize slow-moving rotary sprinklers (more appropriate for large areas) or drip irrigation
The phytophthora fungus that decimates dry-climate plants is activated in wet soil during warm weather. Gazanias will persist in Verb 1. persist in - do something repeatedly and showing no intention to stop; "We continued our research into the cause of the illness"; "The landlord persists in asking us to move" continue the garden for many years when summer water is sparse. All too often, however, gazanias are watered several times a week in warm weather, leading to their premature demise from fungus infestation infestation /in·fes·ta·tion/ (-fes-ta´shun) parasitic attack or subsistence on the skin and/or its appendages, as by insects, mites, or ticks; sometimes used to denote parasitic invasion of the organs and tissues, as by helminths. . This fungus does not appear as mushrooms growing above ground. Phytophthora works invisibly as overwatered gazania simply starts dying out patch by patch. There is an alternative for creating a colorful ground cover area without worrying about year-round flowers. This alternative choice emphasizes foliage as opposed to flower color. Consider ``Sunset Gold'' Coleonema and ``Crimson Pygmy'' Berberis Berberis genus in the plant family Berberidaceae; contains berberine, a pyridine alkaloid; causes cardiomyopathy and congestive heart failure. Called also barberries. . The yellow foliage of the Coleonema, otherwise known as diosma or breath of heaven, contrasts nicely with the burgundy leaves of the Berberis, commonly known as Japanese barberry barberry (bär`bĕr'ē), common name for the family Berberidaceae, and specifically for the spiny barberries (Berberis species). The family includes perennial herbs and shrubs found in the Northern Hemisphere. . Although these plants are compact shrubs, they will be as low maintenance and as water thrifty as most ground covers. For a contrast in shiny green, plant the succulent, noninvasive Sedum sedum: see stonecrop. sedum Any of about 600 species of succulent plants that make up the genus Sedum, in the stonecrop, or orpine, family (Crassulaceae), native to temperate zones and to mountains in the tropics. confusum in between the diosma and the barberry. TIP OF THE WEEK: Regarding winter bloomers, both birds of paradise and kaffir lilies are best known for their orange flowers. However, yellow 'Kirstenbosch Gold' birds of paradise and golden 'Solomne' kaffir lily (Clivia miniata aurea) hybrids are available in the trade and may be special-ordered from nurseries. There is also a dwarf bird of paradise bird of paradise, common name for any of 43 species of medium- to crow-sized passerine birds of New Guinea and the adjacent islands, known for the bright plumage, elongated tail feathers called wires, and brilliant ruffs of the males. that is slow growing but, according to many reports, worth the wait. Plant the low-growing bloomers such as purple Limonium perezii and pink Bergenia Noun 1. bergenia - any plant of the genus Bergenia; valued as an evergreen ground cover and for the spring blossoms herb, herbaceous plant - a plant lacking a permanent woody stem; many are flowering garden plants or potherbs; some having medicinal properties; some crassifolia, both of which are flowering now, under standard birds of paradise for effective color contrast in your garden. |
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