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In the Heat of the Night (Photo by Craig Mabray of All Pro Landscaping)

Pushing paper all day instead of a mower, most of us have few daylight hours during the week to get landscaping chores done, much less do gardening we might actually enjoy. Extending the days with the “spring forward” of Daylight Savings Time may help for a few months, but come autumn we are forced once again to “fall back” into darkness.  But a new trend bunks the excuse of not enough time in the day to do it all: it is night gardening.  And whether for time constraints or physical ones -- such as skin cancer or lupus or simply an aversion to Houston’s heat -- night gardening has become a popular alternative for those who would rather work out in the yard than work out in the gym. 

All of us, given a cool breeze and a bit of insect repellent, would probably enjoy being in a lovely garden at night.  But working in it?  It’s easy.  All it takes is an open mind, a good light system and the proper plant materials, preferably those that are at their peak during twilight or darkness.  So assuming you have the first prerequisite taken care of, let’s look at the next two. 

The moon’s reflection is about 1/600,000th of the sun’s brightness and only occurs periodically anyway, so expect to invest in additional lighting for a night garden.  Lighting in an outdoor space can be categorized the same way as that in indoor spaces.  Today’s homes have outdoor lighting that generally falls into security/safety (such as porch lights, floodlights, walk lights, etc.) or accent (well lights, up lights, tree down lights, etc.).  Security/safety lighting is normally wired into the house at construction and switches can be either inside or on a “dusk to dawn” or “motion” mechanism causing it to automatically come on when needed.  Accent lighting outdoors may be considered a luxury item and added on as that.  But another category of lighting will be necessary to allow gardening at night: task lighting.  Just like in the kitchen preparation area or at a desk, task lighting an exterior space will require determining WHAT and then WHERE the task is.  

If a full scale landscaping operation will be performed after dark, floodlights are warranted and a licensed electrician may be required.  Check local electrical codes before beginning this project to see if the UF cable can simply be buried or if it will be necessary to encase the cables in plastic conduits before burying.  Always install GFCI (ground fault circuit interrupter) devices as a safety precaution. It is also a good idea to make sure your new lights will not be interfering with the sleep of those in your house or neighborhood who choose not to garden at night.  Point beams toward the specific spots you will be working and not out in a general direction.  This may require more lights to be used, but your family and friends will thank you.  If floodlights are already in place at the corners of the house or garage or near the back door, consider using that area for the night garden so that additional lighting might not be necessary.  Or use temporary, plug-in lighting.  That does not mean haul the Hawaiian hula dancing floor lamp out onto the patio….just purchase a few clip or stand, heavy duty lights (like those used by mechanics when they work under the hood) and some outdoor extension cords. 

After you install your garden by the light of the moon, you will probably want to enjoy it under similar circumstances.  Louis XVI had hundreds of men holding torches to light Versailles for a midnight stroll through the garden.  Unless you have a very large family and stock in a candle company, however, low voltage lighting might be a better choice for accenting your night garden.  The diffused glow of a low voltage system brings the garden to life without a huge drain of electricity by reducing the 120-volt outlet current into a 12-volt one.  Most transformers allow for up to six lights at 75 watts or less on each line.  These systems can be purchased inexpensively at hardware, gardening, home improvement or discount stores.  Various fixtures may be mixed and matched to give drama to the landscaping.  Although kits are available, landscape lighting is not really a “one size fits all” proposition and the kits often turn a languid sidewalk into an airport runway since most -- if not all --- of the kit fixtures are exactly alike (4-5 Tiki looking accent lights and one spotlight). 

So now the lighting and garden are mapped out and installed.  But what plants do you use in a night garden?  Nocturnal plants are typically tropical, easily suited to our temperate climate, although some will require being grown in pots to bring in on those nights it dips below 45-50 degrees.  (A containerized night garden is also a wonderful option for those who live in high rises or other limited gardening space homes.)  Night blooming plants are usually pollinated by moths, although bats are responsible for the pollinating of many cactuses and trees that are nocturnal and beetles work on most of the magnolias.  But the colors of the daytime world are no longer effective beacons calling out for pollinators in the night. White, yellow, blue, black and shades of gray are the only ones truly visible.  It is now that the smell summons many prospective suitors. In her 1932 book, The Fragrant Garden (The Macmillan Company), Louise Beebe Wilder wrote,

Fragrance speaks to many to whom color and form say little, and it can bring as irresistibly as music emotions of all sorts to the mind.

 Just as one person’s favorite brussel sprout dish would turn the stomach of another, so is “fragrance” arbitrary and personal.  It is recommended that prior to installing a specific plant in your garden for its delicious scent, you try it before you buy it.  Some release their perfume only at night, while others’ fragrance simply becomes more intense with the setting sun.  

Creating a garden can be cathartic for anyone tolerating the stresses of everyday life.  So don’t deprive yourself just because the daylight hours are too few. Build your own night garden and retake the evening as your own, building a space that you can use to unwind and relax whether swinging a hoe or a porch swing. 

NIGHT GARDEN PLANTS 

The flowers that keep

Their odor to themselves all day;

But when the sunlight dies away,

Let the delicious secret out

To every breeze that roams about.

                                                            Anonymous

 Night gardens can be a wonderful addition to any landscape.  Whether the garden is planted and cultivated at night or simply enjoyed after dark, some of the easiest fragrant and/or night blooming flowers are listed below to give you a beginning to start your own night garden. 

garden lilies (Lillium spp.)

angel’s trumpet (Brugmansia spp.)

viburnums

night jessamine (Cestrum nocturnum)

mock orange (Philadelphus spp.)

gardenias (Gardenia jasminoides)

banana shrubs (Michelia figo)

various gingers

magnolias

evening primroses (Oenthera spp.)

honeysuckles (Lonicera spp.)

evergreen wisteria (Millitia reticulata)

Asian wisterias

datura (Datura wrightii) – beautiful native shrub but not necessarily thought of as fragrant; the leaves may cause an irritation to skin, so relegate it as a focal point toward the back of a garden

moonflower vine (Ipomoea alba) – reseeding annual

evening stock (Matthiola longipetala) – cool season annual

four-o’clocks (Mirabilis jalapa) – reseeding annual

flowering tobacco (Nicotiana spp.) – annual

night-blooming daylily (Hemerocallis citrina)

sand verbena (Abronia fragrans)

gauras (G.coccinea, G. lindheimeri, G. parviflora)

night yucca (Hesperaloe nocturna)

night blooming cereus, or one of the other 450 night blooming cactuses

 

 

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