Containers Brighten the Landscape

Creative Uses of Containers in the Landscape

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Containers Brighten the Landscape
containersBrighten your landscape, create an inviting entryway, or add vertical interest to one of your garden beds with a container.

Now don’t stop with petunias or geraniums. Mix it up a bit. Use vines, tropicals or trees and shrubs for vertical accents. Try color echoing, it’s the repetition of one color in one plant to that same color repeated in the flowers or foliage of others, it unifies the arrangement.

And look for new or unusual plants to try. I like to grow one or two specimens of new plant varieties in container first to see how they perform. Then I can move my favorites into the landscape and try something new next season.

Stack your containers for added impact. The added height brings drama and the mass of plants is perfect for creating a focal point, softening a wall and screening a view.

A bit more information: Not sure where to start. Use the simple formula of thriller, filler and spiller. The thrillers are vertical plants like spike, Swiss chard, fennel, fountain grass and cannas. These plants help keep the planting in scale with the pot, provide vertical interest and create a focal point. The spillers are trailing plants like golden moneywort, silver falls dichondra, vinca and licorice vine that soften the container as they spill over the edge. The fillers help tie the thriller and spillers together while adding color and texture in the spaces between them. Classic zinnias, diamond frost euphorbia, greens, coleus, ageratum and begonias are a few plants often used as fillers.

 

Related Ask Melinda

Acer ginnala

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I live in Salem Oregon. Last year I bought 6 Emerald Green arborvitae and planted them each in 5 gallon black plastic nursery pots. I used good soil and compost. They are lined up along the edge of my patio, facing west. The patio has an overhang, and there is a large tree to the south that is near the patio. The arborvitae get sun all day once the sun is overhead. This year, they look healthy, with new growth on the tips. Problem: the tops are flopping over to one side, toward the west. Why is this? Should I turn the pots around to get the tops to go straight? Is it because I have them in pots? (I can't put them in the ground- I live in a condo and we can't plant trees or shrubs).

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