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Archive for November, 2011

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Tesselaar Plants Predicts Garden Trends for 2012


Thursday, November 24th, 2011



Lawndale, CA (PRWEB) November 04, 2011

Forget all those doomsday predictions about 2012. From the garden worlds perspective, life will continue to be good with gardeners saving themselves water, hassles and misspent money. At least thats according to several savvy garden experts and a leading garden trends survey.

Water-wise plants, products

Most on the minds of landscaping professionals right now are issues surrounding gardening and water, “whether it’s the use of water or the cleaning of water,” says Sharon Coates, co-owner of Zaretsky and Associates, a landscape design-and-build firm in Rochester, N.Y.

In light of recent droughts in places like Georgia, Texas and the Carolinas, people are trying to use the water they do have more frugally, Coates explains. People are making sure theyre watering responsibly, choosing plants that arent water hogs and putting rain sensors on their irrigation systems. Theyre also making sure the irrigation is monitored so its not watering the driveway and sidewalk.

Water-wise plants will also make the Mediterranean garden style (above) hot in 2012, says Genevieve Schmidt, a northern coastal California landscape designer and author of the North Coast Gardening blog. Mediterranean landscape design, she explains, often features open and airy courtyards, light-colored, textured hardscaping such as mosaic walls, gravel beds or unglazed terra cotta pots and low-growing, drought-tolerant plants, hedges, topiary trees and vines (i.e. olive, bay and lemon trees, succulents, lavender, palms, roses and grasses). Of course, the vivid colors also help make this a winning style.

Also, when it comes to cleaning the water, especially storm water carrying pollutants like fertilizers and motor oil into local waterways, many people are turning to rain gardens. These shallow depressions are filled with deep-rooted plants and grasses¬ all of them noninvasive, native or locally adapted that can handle being inundated with water and also dont mind being dry, Zaretsky and Associates Coates says.

Many gardeners are catching their own rainwater in rain barrels and cleaning or recycling grey water (wastewater from domestic activities like laundry, dishwashing and bathing), adds Anthony Tesselaar, cofounder and president of Tesselaar Plants. In fact, in many municipalities now, saving water is not only in, but mandatory.

Hi res image

Mediterranean garden with water-wise carpet roses and Festival Burgundy cordyline

Black and amber

Black and amber shades in plants continue to be a hot color trend, says North Coast Gardenings Schmidt. People have already been bewitched by the dark drama of black plants, she explains, and as they learn to design with them more effectively, theyll only become more popular.

Amber shades, she adds, are also extremely popular amber heucheras, the amber Flower Carpet roses, and other plants with amber tones are going to be big in nurseries this year.

Hi-res images

Tropicanna® Black canna

Hi-res image: Flower Carpet roses (Amber)

Low-risk, high-value plants

Just as consumers are being more careful with their water usage, theyre also shopping smarter. In particular, theyre looking for low-risk, high-value plants that not only look good in the garden center, but have a tried-and-true reputation.

Plants bred to withstand attacks from pests and diseases that are also tolerant of climate and soil extremes provide a better value, says Tesselaar (developer of the low-maintenance, disease- and drought-resistant Flower Carpet® roses, Festival Burgundy cordyline, Storm agapanthus and Volcano® phlox). Gardeners are more aware than ever that choosing the right plant for the right situation is imperative if you want to help save the planet let alone your bank balance.

For as little as $ 15 to $ 25, for instance, you can have long-term color without a lot of expense by using continuously flowering shrubs like Flower Carpet roses, hydrangeas, potentilla (shrubby cinquefoil) and spirea. Or, if your garden already has plenty of beautiful structure, use such colorful, flowering machines to dress up these good bones.

Smaller water features

More and more people are moving away from large ponds and toward smaller water features, says Coates: Now people prefer a cut piece of stone, a boulder or a beautiful glazed urn with water bubbling out of the top.

Coates thinks its a maintenance issue: People either have to be really into ponds and all the maintenance they take, or they have to hire someone to do it for them.

Hi-res image

Fountain pouring into stone, designed by Zaretsky and Associates

Heavy metal

Whats more, says Schmidt, fountains made with natural stone or metal are hotter sellers than features made of manmade materials. The ball-shaped fountains made of stone are very big this year, she says, and I think that copper and other metals are coming into fashion as accents in fountains and as materials for planting containers.

Seasonal interest

In colder areas, where the blooms are gone and deciduous leaves have fallen, Coates is seeing more people keep their ornamental grasses instead of cutting them back, so they can provide winter interest. For the same reason, theyre looking for plants with winter berries, evergreens, barks of different colors and textures or deciduous trees and shrubs with dramatic forms. But theyre also adding plants that change with the seasons, offering new interest with each.

Customers have grown tired of the stark, all-season gardens that were so fashionable a decade ago, Tesselaar says. Every garden needs its backbone of plants that look great year round, but that doesnt have to be at the expense of seasonal interest and color.

More front yard gardens

The number of front yard gardens is also on a steady rise (29 percent in 2011, compared to 27 percent in 2010 and 25 percent in 2009), according to the Garden Trends Research Reports Early Spring 2011 survey (conducted for the Garden Writers Association Foundation). Meanwhile, the number of backyard gardens has taken a 3-percent hit, down from 50 percent in 2009 and 2010.

Gardening up

Vertical gardening is also on the rise, as documented in the new, popular book Garden Up! Smart Vertical Gardening for Small and Large Spaces by California garden designers Susan Morrison and Rebecca Sweet. The practice of growing plants up from the ground instead of out, or of planting them off the ground to start withon trellises, arbors, balconies and wallshas become especially popular among those with small spaces, landscape eyesores or an awkward skinny spot in their garden.

But Coates also notes the growth of a different kind of gardening up green roofs.

Green roofs have definitely seen more of a commercial application and have been done in mostly urban areas, but theyre still a huge trend, she says. Green roofs help save on heating and cooling costs and actually protect the roof underneath from the degrading effects of the elements, so cities have received tax incentives for green roof installations. Some cities, like Toronto and Chicago, are even starting to require green roofs on some new buildings, based on the square footage.

Hi-res image

Vertical gardening: cherry tomatoes

About Tesselaar

Tesselaar Plants searches the world and introduces new plants for the home garden, landscape, home décor and gift markets. Tesselaar Plants undertakes extensive research and development of its varieties and, once selected for introduction, provides marketing and promotional support for its plant brands through its grower and retail network. Tesselaars portfolio of plants is small by design, given rigorous standard




Sunset Announces the 2012 Sunset Design Awards, Opens Call for Submissions


Thursday, November 24th, 2011



Menlo Park, CA (PRWEB) November 15, 2011

Attention Western architects, designers, landscape architects, homeowners, and passionate design DIY-ers: Sunset magazine (http://www.sunset.com) has unveiled the 2012 Sunset Design Awards with a call for submissions.

The newly remodeled design competition represents the merging of two venerable programsthe Western Home Awards and the Sunset Dream Garden Awardswith the addition of two new elements: decor-and-accessories design and DIY. What will remain the same? The winning houses and gardens, which will be featured in a 2012 issue of Sunset magazine and on Sunset.com, will all reflect the best of design in the West.

So many of todays major design trends have started in the Westbut to us, theyre not trends, they are the way we live everyday, said Katie Tamony, Sunset editor-in-chief. Here in the West, we live as much outdoors as in, greenness and sustainability are a given, we take high-tech innovations for granted, and casual is a way of life seven days a week.

Western values of casual indoor-outdoor living, sustainability, and innovation will be central to judging all of the Sunset Design Awards categories. Additionally, special jury prizes will be awarded to the projects that best represent these values as well as to the years best up-and-coming designer or architect under 35 in the West.

The judgeswho will be announced in the coming monthswill include Sunset editors, established professionals, and other notables. And for the first time, Sunset is reserving a spot on the judging panel for one lucky reader. Stay tuned for more information about when and how Sunset will be selecting its reader judge.

Categories and Submission Guidelines

In the Home & Garden Division, architects, designers, landscape architects, and owners of new or newly remodeled homes and/or gardens in the 13 Western states and western Canada are invited to submit completed designs in the following categories:

    How to create a dream home or garden
    Smaller living can be better
    A remodel that works
    A kitchen for entertaining
    How to create a dream retreat
    How to have fun outside
    How to garden anywhere
    Designed in the West

In our DIY Division, nonprofessionals in the 13 Western states and western Canada are invited to submit completed projects in the following categories:

    Your dream room makeover
    Your dream edible garden
    Your dream outdoor room
    From this to that

Complete category descriptions, rules and submission guidelines and fees are available at sunsetdesignawards.com. Deadline for submissions is May 18, 2012. Judging will take place in early June 2012. Winners will be featured in a 2012 issue of Sunset magazine and publicized on sunset.com.

Editors available for interviews. High resolution images available upon request.

Sunset magazine is the premier guide to life in the West, covering the newest and best ideas in Western home design and landscaping, food and entertaining, and regional travel in 13 Western states. Sunset and sunset.com are part of the Lifestyle Group of magazines and websites published by the Time Inc. Lifestyle Group.

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