Old-fashioned garden plants
By Amy McDowell
“I’d like to
plant some low perennials over here in the shade,” my neighbor said, “but I
don’t want any hostas. They’re too old-fashioned—like something my mother and
her generation would plant.” Raising my
eyebrows, I stammered for a couple of minutes before regaining my composure and
coming up with a list of shade perennials for her.
Trends in plant
popularity are puzzling. What makes some plants “in” and others “old
fashioned”? Hostas are gems in the shade garden and it’s hard to imagine
casting them aside as old fashioned. There are countless plants beloved by
earlier generations that deserve space in our gardens today.
Twiggy old
Hydrangeas (H. arborescens or paniculata) with cantaloupe-sized clusters
of blooms are robust, reliable and trouble-free. Along the shady north side of
a home or underneath the dense canopy of trees, Hydrangeas bloom faithfully and
sucker to form a wide mound. Newer varieties are terrific, but their ancestors
shouldn’t be forgotten.
Hedgerows of
bridal wreath Spirea (Spiraea x vanhoutei)
still frame the back yards of homes in some historic early 1900s Des Moines
neighborhoods. Draped with tiny white blooms along graceful arching stems each
spring, Spirea are pest-free and easy to love. Straggly in shade but dense and
showy in sun, bridal wreath Spirea is great for a privacy planting around a
patio.
Just as we
disregard some delightful old garden plants, we sometimes trip over our own
feet in a rush to snatch up the newest garden center offering. Unproven in our
climate, the newest plants on the market can lead to failure and frustration.
Daphne ‘Carol Macki’ (D. x burkwoodii),
a darling shrub with fragrant white blooms, raged the Des Moines market a dozen
years ago. Everyone planted them, and over the winter nearly everyone lost
them. Daphne’s popularity fizzled out in a few years, after local gardeners
realized she was a no-go for this area.
Every season,
plant breeders, growers and garden centers offer new selections. Some become
raging successes and some fail. Like anything new on the market, there’s always
the possibility you’re buying a lemon. The plants of yesteryear, however, are
tried and true and worth consideration anew.
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