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When the
weatherman describes the monthly rainfall total as a
"trace," it's either just an average Texas August or
perhaps it might be time to start planning and planting
for the possibility of drought. Drought or long periods
of low rainfall is devastating to plant and animal life
and continued drought such as Texans have experienced in
times past, isn't just an agricultural problem but
subtly affects all areas of the economy and human
livelihood. Think about your landscape and where it
would really be without water. Those of you who've had
the pleasure of mixing natives and other drought
tolerant plantings in with your traditional landscape
would gain an even greater appreciation for these plants
for they'd likely be all that remained. Probably all
Texas flower gardeners have some lantana, verbena, or
yaupon holly somewhere in their yards but how about some
new ideas to increase the range of drought tolerant
possibilities. Narrowing down from a myriad of excellent
choices, here are a few that I find to be among the
toughest: zexmenia, nandina, salvia x
superba, Jerusalem sage and celosia.
Keep in
mind that these plants need some water to get
started. I've had people tell me that they planted
natives and they all died! Upon questioning; it turned
out that since they knew natives didn't need
supplemental water, they didn't water them at all! -
not as seedlings or as transplants from a nursery. Every
plant needs water to get started - some more than
others, and this is how natives get their start too.
This past spring I saw a tall old fashioned pink cleome
(Egyptian spider flower) blooming against a stone wall
where there had been a sowing of it three or four years
before. Some of the seed from the original plants had
been eaten by birds and insects, some of it might have
rotted in the winter rains, some of it might have been
ground up in the gravel of the nearby road, but one
seed, with the right moisture and the right soil
survived all that time until conditions proved favorable
for it to get its roots down deep enough to survive, and
there it stood in all its glory. And similarly, how many
of you have had your naturalized cedar sage with its
scarlet blooms not return one year due to a dry winter,
only to have it reappear several seasons later after a
nice rainy spring? So, have a watering plan for getting
your plants off to a good start. If you're scattering
wildflower seeds, you'll get a better return for your
money if you scratch them into the soil and sprinkle
them until their secondary leaves appear - then watch
the weather as they grow and if it isn't raining, get
out the hose.
Potted nursery plants - even
natives, are accustomed to being watered. If you're
planting perennials in a drought year, the ground all
around the plant is going to be dry as a bone, so don't
just splash at it because it's a native and
doesn't need water, soak the ground to simulate a
good rain, let it dry out and water it again. These
plants appear to grow very slowly because they're
growing below the surface of the ground more than
they're growing above ground. The roots of buffalo
grass, for instance, can go down as deep as 10 ft., so
that in dry weather they're deep enough to find residual
moisture, but they didn't do that in a season. Keep your
plants watered until they are established or you may
find you have wasted your time, money and effort.
Zexmenia will require some water to get started but
once established it's there for the duration. This
worthy perennial with rough gray-green foliage and
covered with persistent yellow daisies all summer long
is something of an enigma. The nursery trade has never
bothered to come up with an attractive common name for
it and it has been consistently by-passed by native
landscapers for supposedly showier yellows like
gold mound lantana,
daminiata, and calylophus. Zexmenia
is more upright, making a low, dense shrub which spreads
quickly by root and by seed. This sun lover will
tolerate some shade and has the advantage of having an
exceptionally long bloom period and, with periodic
shearing, always looks fresh and full of bloom in heat
and drought. If the course texture of the leaves deters
you, consider planting it on the perimeter of your yard
or on the edge of a wooded spot for a naturalized
effect.
Nandina ought to come as the surprise
choice for most but if you're a hiker, you've surely
come across some escaped nandina in the midst of the
woods far from human habitation and sprinkling systems
and made the connection that this is one tough plant.
Nandina, in fact, is a champ when it comes to drought,
especially with light shade. This versatile shrub, a
native of China, comes in all heights, from 12-inch Nana
to the standard Heavenly Bamboo at 8 feet. With a
smattering of white flowers in the spring, lacy
bamboo-like foliage, fall color and red berries, nandina
makes a good container plant, bonsai, hedge, screen,
walkway border or accent for a desert garden.
Salvia x superba or meadow sage, I have to admit, is
one of my all-time favorite plants. The low purple blue
spires appear summer, winter, spring and fall! This is
another plant that often has been passed up by
landscapers, though it's hard to imagine why. It is
small - 12 inches in height, with dark green basal
leaves; it's evergreen, drought tolerant, and its habit
of blooming when nothing else around it does, makes a
top plant for low moisture gardening. Related plants,
though generally taller in height, "Blue Hills," "May
Night" and "Snowhill" (white flowering) share many of
the same characteristics but may be a little fussier
where they're planted. Start these in loose, well
drained soil.
Jerusalem sage (Phlomis
fruiticosa) is a show stopper when in full bloom.
Its buttery yellow flowers circle the 2 to 4 feet stem
in bright whorls at the leaf joints. This old time
garden plant comes from the Mediterranean where the
climate is cool and damp during the winter and hot and
dry in the summer much like most of Texas. Course,
crinkly, gray-green leaves cover a spreading base 2 feet
or more in diameter. After the late spring bloom the
whole bloom stalk should be removed for more possible
flowering later in the summer. The base can be trimmed
back much the way you groom lamb's ears. Phlomis comes
in several other yellow and some lavender pinks as well.
I have an unidentified lavender variety that is just as
drought tolerant and blooms more frequently than our
Jerusalem sage, so watch for new varieties and colors.
I've included celosia, a reseeding annual, with
these perennials as an example of another way plants
function in drought. Tropical colored celosias don't
have deep perennial root systems to carry them through
dry spells, but put out plenty of seed - which, with a
chance bit of moisture, can sprout and quickly mature in
its effort to propagate itself.
Like the cleome mentioned above,
sometimes you get some pleasant surprises when least
expected from reseeding annuals. Of course, more
consistent bloom is proportionate to water and
fertilizer and celosias respond well with a little
attention. Noted for their brilliant colors of red,
pink, yellow and orange, they also come in novel shapes,
such as the dense, fan-shaped blooms of "cockscomb"
celosia. Plume varieties and cockscomb both make bold
statements in the flower garden, good cut flowers, and
excellent dried flowers noted for holding their color.
When all is said and done, don't forget to mulch! If
you're on expensive city water or well water where
there's just enough water for your home needs and no
more, get straw, pine bark or whatever's handy, and
deeply mulch the bases of all your trees, flower beds
and shrubs. The hardy plants will appreciate it and
there may be a special cutting or a rare plant that will
survive because of the mulch's blanket of protection
from the heat and increased moisture retention in the
soil.
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