Tag Archives: Landscape

Trees And Flowers Attracting Birds Through All Seasons

The trees that produce fruit or seeds which are useful in attracting birds include the apples, cherries, mulberries, mountain ash, Intwthornes, crabs, hack-berry, sour gum, buckthorne, box elder, birches and hollies. Many of the annual and biennial weeds of the garden and the borders of the flower beds produce the greatest crops of acceptable food for the seed-eaters. Evening primrose, fox-tail grass, lamb’s quarters, ragweed, mullein, goldenrod and sweet clover, retain their seeds and are strong enough to project through the snow. Juncos, tree sparrows, goldfinches, siskins, purple finches, and redpolls enjoy these seeds.

For those who can’t permit themselves to let the last crop of weeds grow along with some late lettuce, salsify, turnips and broccoli for the birds, it is possible to substitute some flowers from the same or similar plant families for the same purpose. You can plant some extra sunflowers, zinnias, coreopsis, bachelor buttons, cosmos, amaranths, love-lies- bleeding, prince’s feather, China aster, California poppies, forget-me-nots, blessed thistle, tarweed and portulaca.

It would also help reduce the cost of your winter feeding if you planted a corner of your garden with some of the grains which can be left to ripen and serve as automatic feeders. Those most suited for the purpose are common millet or barnyard grass, Hungarian and Japanese millet, canary grass, buckwheat, red clover and sunflower.

Since cover can often be supplied by the same plants which produce food, such as red cedar, arborvitae, yew, bittersweet, etc., we should use such dual purpose plants as much as possible. When extra cover is desirable, evergreen trees and shrubs, and shrubs or vines which make thick tangles, especially those like hawthorne, blackberry and honeysuckle, should be chosen.

In order to provide a year-round balance to attract birds at all seasons, flowers should also be planted for the hummingbird-trumpet creeper, bee balm, tiger lily, salvia, hollyhock, cardinal flower, scarlet runner beans, fuchsia, pea tree, phlox delphinium, columbine, gladiolus, canna, azaleas, weigela, nasturtium and jewel weed. The horse-chestnut is also a favorite tree of the hummer.

 

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The Factors In Deciduous Or Evergreen Foundation Plants

The landscaper must decide whether deciduous plants (those that drop their leaves) or evergreens should be used in the foundation planting. Your taste and your climate will be the key factors. But remember that a mixture of the two is rarely, if ever, desirable – although an evergreen ground cover can well be used with whichever type of plant you decide on. Indeed, such a ground cover might be even more useful and effective around deciduous material than around evergreens. It will keep the planting from looking sparse and bare after the shrubs go dormant and drop their leaves.

Seasonal Changes

Deciduous plants grow much faster and larger than most evergreens so you need to know more about plant habits generally to use them properly. As to which type offers the greater interest throughout the year, it may surprise you to learn that the deciduous plants lead. In many parts of the country such plants go through four seasonal phases in each of which they take on different characteristics.

As an example, imagine a high-bush blueberry growing near a window from which you can see its branches. In the spring it is decked with attractive creamy-white lily-of-the-valley-like flowers, a beautiful sight to behold. By mid-summer it has picked up its full foliage and also a crop of cool-looking blueberries which attract birds and add life to the garden. In the fall, few plants can surpass the brilliant foliage coloration of this species. And, finally, in the winter, the zig-zag growth of its bare twigs is attractive, especially when sheathed in ice during a sleet storm.

Evergreen Phases

Most evergreens, on the other hand, have but two phases which are not too strikingly different. In the late spring and early summer the new bright green growth contrasts pleasantly with the dark green older growth. After a few months the two blend into one more or less uniform greenand that is the extent of the seasonal change.

Of course, they present a beautiful picture when covered with snow, but if the snow is heavy it may split off branches or bend them over and permanently spoil their looks. Give that aspect of the situation some consideration in your planning if you live in a region subject to ice or snowstorms. Look around and see how evergreens on properties in your locality have fared.

 

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