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Knockout Color Pots

   Need something that not only makes it through summer heat, has great color, and thrives in neglect? If you have a hot spot that could use a pot, you’ll want to do a little research ahead of time to get the most bang for your buck with the least amount of effort.  We in Texas are blessed with a number of native plants and other drought tolerant annuals (need replanting every year), and perennials (usually come back the next year that survive with minimal care and water.  Some of these do quite well from seed, making them very inexpensive. Some shrubs also foot the bill nicely, bringing in color and usually additional height that is often helpful in larger scaled spaces. 

            To narrow down your choices, look carefully at your needs by using this checklist.

1)     What color do I want? Consider also that your CONTAINER might be the focal point and the plants just background.  Mixing colors will usually give a less formal feel while monochromatic schemes will typically appear more formal.  Repeating colors found in your home --- especially when they look out onto the area --- will tie your inside and outside space together.  And remember, GREEN is a color!

2)     What size does it need to be?  Size DOES matter!  The bigger the pot, the less often you will need to water.  But a single 4” plant in a 4’ pot will look ridiculous.  Use several types of flowering plants (upright, weeping, rounded) and mature sizes to fill all of the space.  That’s how the pros do it, instead of using 10 tiny pots each with its own type of plant.  Don’t be afraid to trellis one of our great native vines in a container too if you need additional height.

3)     How can I water it?  That takes us to the big stickler…..how can you keep your new plants watered, especially if you will be gone on vacation during the heat.  If you have an automatic irrigation system, think about reworking the spray area to either include your pot or replace a spray with an emitter line that goes directly into your pot. (If neither of these is an option, move the pot into an irrigated area while you are gone.) You might also consider purchasing potting soil that has ingredients to absorb and retain water better also or add these “hydrating crystals” into your own soil mix.  Once established well with a vigorous root system, your pot will need to be watered less often.

4)     Do you want to bring in ALL of the sense, or even some wildlife?  Specific flowers have scent.  Some types of flowers (i.e.. tubular) or colors (especially reds) attract hummingbirds or butterflies.  Seeing brightly colored flowers, watching the antics of hummingbirds, and smelling sweet fragrances can provide wonderful family alternatives to the reruns of summer television (few of which, in my opinion, were worth watching the first time they came around!).

 

            Now that you have an idea of the type of planter you want, here are a few plants that will take Texas sun with flying colors.  The following list is but a small sampling of natives and well adapted non-natives that foot the bill, making it happily through the dog days of summer with only occasional watering and drawing in wildlife to boot.  So many others could be added to this list.  Ask any gardener and they will come up with fifteen other favorites of their own.  But don’t forget to feed your bloomers.  A bit of slow release fertilizer put in when planting will carry flowering plants a long way when it starts to really get hot. Then top-dress your pots with mulch, sit back and enjoy.  You may even be calling Goodwill to see if they might have a need for a good, used television.

 Asparagus fern --- Asparagus densiflorus (green w/ tiny white flowers)

bachelor button --- Gomphrena globosa (pink, purple, white, lavendar, rose)

black-eyed susan – Rudbeckia hirta or R. fulgida (yellow);

butterfly bush – Buddleia davidii (white, pink, purple);

butterfly weed – Asclepias tuberosa (yellow, orange with yellow);

coneflower - Echinacea purpurea (pinkish purple or white);

coreopsis – Coreopsis var. (yellow);

cosmos - Cosmos bipinnatus (various);

flame bush, hummingbird bush – Hamelia patens (orangey-red);

lantana – Lantana horrida, L. montevidensis, L. camara (various);

Mexican heather – Cuphea hyssopifolia (purple or white);

Mexican petunia – Ruellia brittoniana (purple, white, pink);

ornamental grasses --- pennisetum, miscanthus, etc.

penta – Pentas lanceolata (white, pink, purple, red);

salvia – Salvia spp. several  species with leucantha & greggii  two of my favorites (blue, red, pink, white);

Texas star hibiscus – Hibiscus coccinea (crimson red);

vitex – Vitex agnus-castus (purple, white);

zinnia – Zinnia elegans (various)

  

 

 

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