Talkback: Six plants for a new garden
Were I forced to leave my corner of Katy and taken somewhere as unfamiliar as Fulton (what in the blue blazes is a Surface to Air Recovery System?) to start a new garden, I would plant the following (once I had recovered from my hospitalization for depression at the thought of life in a place where there were no nurseries or garden centers):
1. Gulf Coast Penstemon (P. tenuis), my favorite spring perennial, and one that reseeds nicely.
2. Red Bauhinia (B. galpinii) for its ability to stop traffic with its nasturtium-like red/orange blooms and its prettily rounded leaves.
3. Vitex 'Montrose Purple', a variety with much fatter and bluer spikes of flowers than the species. Passersby frequently stop to ask me what it is and where they can get one. I could trade seedlings for more plants.
4. Batface Cuphea (C. llavea), because it's hardly ever out of bloom and makes a nice ground cover.
5. I'd have to bring one of the old garden roses ... I'd probably choose Souvenir de la Malmaison for her beauty and fragrance.
6. I'm stuck. Do I choose Echinacea because they're so reliable, or do I gamble on being able to barter Vitex or Penstemon seedlings for coneflower seeds. Mexican Bauhinia? Rangoon Creeper? Coral woody penta? Mexican Buckeye? Wait, there will be no spring garden if there is no Toadflax, my favorite annual ever. I'll put the seeds in my pockets. That's my 6th!
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Interesting to see your list, Katy, as I haven't ever grown most of those plants: I am particularly smitten by Bat Faced Cuphea. I think that pockets full of toadflax seed is perhaps stretching the rules a little bit.
Grannyanne: nothing is ever bog standard if it makes you grin (except perhaps certain colours of Bizzy Lizzy that are best in other people's gardens!)
Emma: You are definitely pushing the tolerance of the judges! Cut your list down by two.
Jamesia americana
Monkey Puzzle
Emmenopterys henryi
Clematis "Arabella"
Crocosmia "Loosifer"
and a veg plot
all done peat free of course.
I might not be able to do without Fuchsia "Wilson's Sugar Pink"
and maybe if I'm allowed one more, Brilliantaisia subulugurica