Game On, Spring

As February races toward its conclusion, this Austin garden is ready for spring.  I started pruning in late December, after the first of the freezes lay waste to the herbaceous  perennials in my gardens.  I’ve been pruning since.  Seven garbage cans full of garden detritus every week, for almost two months.

Plants like Turk’s Cap (Malavaviscus arboreus var. drummondii) are whacked.

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The luscious, sunny-blooming Goldeneye (Viguiera dentata)? Nary but sticks protruding from the ground.

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The Martha Gonzales Roses are reduced to a fifth of their full size.

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Some Variegated Flax Lily (Dianella tasmanica),

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fared better than others in my gardens.

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All I pruned from the Flax Lily were the freeze damaged straps.  It’s the one plant (I have four groups of them) that I dutifully covered with each freeze forecast into the 20s.

And the  Autumn Sage (Salvia greggii) and other evergreen native shrubby plants are pruned into tidy balls,

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or spindly bits of green perched on woody stems, waiting for the just right  light and breath of warm spring air to burst into new growth.

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I still have more to prune, but I’m almost finished for the year.

I didn’t lose any established plants this winter and that gratifies me and validates my garden choices.  I choose natives or hardy non-natives, with the occasional splurge for the newest, cheap thrill plant that everyone (okay, just gardeners) is talking about.

I always think of the winter landscape as barren, but it isn’t, even in this winter which was colder than any of the past 19 years.   With most of the flowering perennials in my front garden temporarily gone, I’m reminded how nice my ignored-most-of-the-year evergreens are during their winter concert on this sunny February day.

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And in my back garden, I like the clearly defined garden and pathways.  The iris and yucca straps dominate,

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while the Heartleaf Skullcap (Scutellaria ovata ssp. bracteata) insinuates its soft green carpet anywhere allowed.

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I have a clean pond, which will make pond maintenance easier for the rest of the year and appeals to my aesthetic sense.  I don’t think the fish care whether I clean the pond or not.

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Spring is almost here.  The Mexican Honeysuckle (Justicia spicigera) is pruned to the ground

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but life begins anew.

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The Columbines (Aquilegia chrysantha var. hinckleyana) are lush,

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their first buds emerging.

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Bring it on, Spring.

Implements of Destruction

In this mild winter, coupled with the heat island effect in Central Austin, very few of my perennials have actually frozen to the ground.  I could have titled this post, “To Prune Or Not To Prune?”   I’m flummoxed as I ponder what to cut back.  There are only a few plants that actually “died” to the ground with the limited cold that my personal garden has experienced this winter of 2011-12.

The Blue Mistflower (Conoclinium coelestinum) is gone.

The Cuphea ‘David Verity’ (Cuphea x. ‘David Verity’) suffered some freeze damage early on which I’ve pruned and  it’s coming up bright and cheery.  I hope we don’t have a freeze now, because it won’t be bright and cheery anymore.

Here, another re-leafing Cuphea is accompanied by Heartleaf Skullcap (Scutelleria ovata sp. bracteata).  The Cuphea is the plant with the bright green leaves and the Heartleaf sports the scalloped, grey-green leaves.

A perennial Hibiscus (Hibiscus moscheutos x. hybrida), is a stick, at the moment,

while the Lemon Rose Mallow (Hibiscus calyphyllus) thinks it’s time to start growing again.

The Leadwort Plumbago (Ceratostigma plumbaginoides) never died back completely.  Its leaves turned a lovely burgundy with suggestions of a more vibrant red here and there.

Lastly, the Pickerel Weed (Pontederia cordata), which is the bog plant in my pond, succumbed to the limited cold temperatures, but is beginning its growth very early this year.

The lilies in my pond have bloomed on and off, all “winter.” The Colorado Lily (Nymphaea) bloomed  beautifully this past week.

Even the Firebush (Hamelia patins), didn’t completely die to the roots this year.

Many of these plants are already leafing out as if it is spring.

Well, I guess it is, if they say so.

I’ve begun my hard winter pruning in earnest this past week.  I delayed as long as possible, hoping/fearing a hard freeze, but I can’t procrastinate any longer.  It’s time to sharpen the lopper, change the blade on the fabulous Felco hand pruner and then…. take the horrid ElectriDestructoPruner off of the shelf to which it is banned for most of the year.

My son thinks it’s “bad-ass”–his words, not mine.

I first used this creature last year after having developed severe tendonitis in both elbows during the winter/spring of 2010 because of the massive amount of manual pruning, trimming and cutting for the various gardens I tend.  Lest you think, ‘what a wimp’, I was in so much pain, for months, that I was concerned that I might have to stop gardening.  EEK!! (You can’t imagine just how many things a human being needs elbows for, until they hurt, hurt, hurt all the time.)  So I sought medical intervention  and eventually had about four months of physical therapy.  In time, the physical therapy repaired and strengthened the ligament overuse damage and I’m able to continue  the gardening I love.  The damage is  permanent and I still  use resistant bands for about an hour of home physical therapy every week and will do so for the rest of my life.  Gardeners beware!  You can hurt yourself with too much physical strain–overuse injuries are common for those who garden.  On a positive note, the physical therapist (yay, Debbie English!) at the Sports Center, was incredible and the entire staff is knowledgeable, warm and compassionate.

I used the Implement of Destruction to prune plants that are not too woody and thick and that don’t require sharp, precise cuts.  It’s electric, so other than holding it, it doesn’t require much muscle/ligament strain for me. I permanently borrowed it from my in-laws, who probably haven’t used it since about 1965–that’s how old it is.  It tends to shred a bit, so I can only use in on plants that can survive anything.  Fortunately, many of my plants are in that category.  I still use my excellent Felco hand pruners and Fiskar loppers for the plants that need to be pruned more carefully. But for things like Turk’s Cap,

Zexmenia (Zexmenia hispida),

Inland Sea Oats (Chasmanthium latifolium),

as well as other tough plants, the Implement of Destruction is perfect–it’s quick and it doesn’t add much strain to my hand, wrists and elbows.  This Turk’s Cap mayhem took about five minutes to achieve.

It’s so much faster than hand pruning the stalks.  On the down side, I like a quieter, more serene and meditative gardening experience and the Implement of Destruction is noisy.  But, it saves my elbows and that’s worth a few minutes of noise pollution once or twice a year.

I’ve debated  cutting back certain things this year and I’ve decided (a hard freeze, notwithstanding) that I’m not going to prune everything that I normally prune.  I did decide to prune most of my Turk’s Cap (Malvaviscus arboreus), although I fretted over it a bit.  I’ve not pruned them in a past mild winter and they bloomed well the following year.  But this year I’m giving in to my inner neat freak and pruning most of them to the ground.  I’m going to leave three groups in my front gardens un-pruned, just to see how they fare in the coming year with the drought predicted to last through 2012.  I’ll tidy a bit around the edges, but leave them mostly alone.

I’ve already pruned the Yellow Bells (Tacoma stans) although they were still green with some leaves,

and I’ll also prune the Pride of Barbados (Caesalpinia pulcherrima) and Orange Bells (Tacoma stans, sp.), to the ground.  I’ll prune the various salvias, ornamental grasses and all the Rock Rose (Pavonia laseopetala) to about 8-10 inches in the next week or so.

One of the biggest mistakes home gardeners make is that they’re shy about pruning back.  It’s true that some things, like Mexican Feather Grass  (Nassella tenuissima)
shouldn’t be pruned at all or other plants (roses of all sorts)  are pruned a certain way or at a certain time.  But for most herbaceous perennials, it really is best to cut to the ground, even in a year as mild as this.  
Sometimes, brutality is a good thing.