It’s tree planting time…

Have you ever asked yourself-when is the best time to plant trees in Perth?

Well, it’s right now…just check out all this wet stuff falling from the sky, rain, glorious rain, it’s so exciting after such a long dry spell. Time to start planning and digging-and a bit like art on your walls at home…there’s always room for one more tree, I say.

This week I will be speaking at Perth Garden Festival-on Friday at 11am and am talking trees.

My 6 favourite trees for Perth gardens are:

6. Nyssa Sylvatica or Tupelo

I love these and have planted a few over the years where I would like a triangular shaped specimen tree. I selected one for a friend of mine who calls her tree ‘Ruby’ such are the beautiful red heart shaped leaves in Autumn. The Nyssa is one of the few trees which colour up beautifully in Perth, to let us know that we have a change in season. If you look closely there always seems to be two leaves close together which turn red at the same time-a tree filled with love. The Nyssa will grow to about six metres

5. Poplus Simonii

These majestic tall, slender trees are fast growing in our climate and provide excellent screening along fence lines. They are great in small spaces and I like the way they sway in the breeze. They cope really well with our dreadful soils and can grow to about 15m so if you want to hide your neighbours new 2 storey extension-get yourself 3 of these!

4. Magnolia

There’s a few to choose from that’s for sure but at the moment I’m loving Coolwyn Gloss, Kay Parris and Howard Poole. It’s great to have a reliable evergreen tree that provides fragrance and flower and generally keeps it’s form-any of these three will do a great job

3. Lagerstroemia Natchez-White

It’s hard to go past the stunning Crepe Myrtle in the late summer and early Autumn with their beautiful crepe like flowers and then when the leaves fall the incredible colour and form of the bark. I prefer the white ones-I think they look stylish planted either as a specimen or in  an avenue. These beauties will also grow to about 6m

2. Mandarin

There is nothing more rewarding than having an edible tree in your garden and these trees provide fruit through Autumn and early winter which your children can easily pick and eat. You can get the semi dwarf varieties now which are great. At the moment ours is heavy with fruit so we are picking mandarins daily for family and friends to enjoy-no chance of scurvy here!

1.  Cercis canadensis  Forest Pansy or purple leafed red bud

I love these small specimen trees and try and fit one in wherever I can in my designs. They do quite well in our soils with a little tender care and a feed of mature compost every now and again. They colour up beautifully and the leaves are large and heart shaped and fade to yellow after a summer of red fading to green and then in spring the branches are covered in rows of stunning tiny pea shaped hot pink flowers before the leaves emerge and off we go again.  A Cercis will grow to about 5m and has a round growing form.

It’s so hard to select just a few treasures for the garden-there’s just so many gorgeous trees to choose from and it really depends on the site and the position and of course shade requirements and soil type and location. I also love Plumeria in all their colourful forms for summer flowering and shade and allowing winter sun and find Pyrus ‘Chanticleer’ or ‘Capitol’ very handy in small gardens or accent spaces planted in threes.

Happy Tree Planting 🙂

Play Time In The Garden-It’s Not Just For The Kids

Last Saturday night my friend Sabrina Hahn and I were the guest speakers at RE-LEAF a Sundowner hosted by Guildford Town Garden Centre. We were there to raise much-needed funds for Beyond Blue which “is the national initiative to raise awareness of anxiety and depression, providing resources for recovery, management and resilience.” This very worthy cause is close to my heart.

We both shared some of the obvious reasons why being in the garden is so important for one’s physical and mental health, such as getting into the outdoors, sunshine on our skin, exercising, breathing fresh air and connecting with the earth.

Home Gardening for many of us living in an urban setting provides the only regular and very convenient opportunities for us to connect with nature. It could be in a park, in a home garden or on an apartment balcony. We might dig a hole and plant something in pot or perhaps dig a bigger hole and plant a tree into the ground and as we do so, a creature may emerge from the soil like a worm or a small lizard, a bird may come down and feast on the slaters we disturb, anything can happen, we are not in control of the magic or the possibilities. It’s unpredictable. Sufferers of depression describe being in a deep dark hole and having difficulty getting out. Gardening provides us with the opportunity to take things into some perspective and “consider that we are but a small part of something much bigger than us.” said my old mate, Sabrina Hahn. Being in nature and surrounding yourself with trees and plants makes you feel good. Gardening gives you purpose because you are actually connecting with nature and creating something.

It doesn’t always have to be arduous work, sometimes a cup of tea need be your only tool, as you wander around your garden plants, tea in hand, you notice things that you would not otherwise do, you take time out of your busy day to just be, to hear the birds, watch the bugs and see the bees at work. You are connecting with nature. The satisfaction one gets from growing edibles on a small-scale can also be incredibly satisfying. There is nothing more joyous that watching a deciduous tree change and grow through the seasons.

Sabrina talked about the importance of “playing” in the garden-unstructured play as an adult is a rare thing these days and almost never happens. Usually, as adults we participate in organised sport, go to the gym or exercise to a regime but gardening provides us with an opportunity for unstructured “play” as adults which no other recreational activity can do.

Creating a big garden, a new little bed, rejuvenating potted plants, planning next seasons vegetable patch or planting new annuals requires thought and imagination as well as execution. This is all part of the activity required in order to create something within our gardens and it’s fun-it is as we did as children-playing.

In the privacy of your yard, it’s completely OK to sit in a hammock or an oversized swing and swing away but may be frowned upon if you suddenly pushed little Jimmy aside and hopped onto the swing at the local park-but you can happily do this in your own garden and just move gently and be at one with nature as it comes willingly to visit you in your garden space that you have created. We have a swinging chair on our back deck and it provides peace and motion for me but also I note of late for our growing teenagers after a hard day at school.

Playing in the garden may involve squirting someone with a hose on a sunny day, laughing as you try to pull out a stubborn weed and fall backwards onto the lawn or just enjoying all of the non-human visitors as they flit here and there while you are doing your “work” so are they doing theirs.

Gardening is a very personal thing-no two gardens will ever be the same because nature simply would not allow two spaces to be identical-we as landscape designers and garden owners can only but stir the urban forest in which we live and make our own little contribution and hopefully make things a little bit greener, our environment healthier and a perhaps a little bit more beautiful.

Let’s face it most of us have very busy lives, too busy really, gardening for us city dwellers helps us re-set the crazy clock by which our lives are programmed and just get a bit dirty and be part of nature and helps us to re-connect the soul to the earth for a little while.  Gardening helps keep things in perspective-it’s as important for us adults as it is for our children as we work towards more nature play for them at schools and in parks-we need to do the same for adults-it’s just as important for our mental health as it is for our physical well being.

If you know someone who is suffering with mental health concerns then Beyond Blue is a great place to seek assistance. https://www.beyondblue.org.au/

beyondblue. Depression, Anxiety - logoGCA

 

 

Privacy Policy
Instagram
Facebook