A row of sunflowers is still growing strong on Magazine Street in New Orleans.
I spent part of my holiday visiting family in south Louisiana, including
a day walking up and down Magazine Street in New Orleans. While others
might have taken this opportunity to do some window shopping, I spent
more of the time stalking plants in locals’ front-yard gardens. And let
me just say: way to go zone 8—you’re still alive and kicking! I could
barely believe it when I saw sunflowers
lining a side street. The bright summery blooms created a striking
contrast with the now-leafless trees towering over them. Normally
planted in spring for a late summer bloom, some hopeful someone must
have planted these sunflowers (which are killed by frost) in late
summer, betting on a mild winter and this lovely mid-season show.
I loved the mix of traditional Christmas greenery and tropical canna lily foundation plants at this adorable New Orleans home.
I couldn’t help but snap a few shots of this picture-perfect house and landscaping. Canna
appears to be the perfect four-season landscape plant in this region,
with bright green leaves shining as bright as Christmas décor. In other
places like my home in zone 7, this perennial’s leaves have already
turned black from frost, but the plant remains leafy and green through
winter here in Louisiana and further south. It’s the perfect choice in
this home’s front landscape, planted en masse.
The variegated leaves of this canna variety add extra appeal in a mass planting. Photos by Derek R. Trimble.
Every time I visit The Crescent City, I get a cozy feeling walking past
homes whose front doors and front porches are almost within reach. I
don’t mean this in a super-stalker way. It’s just that the community
seems so open and welcoming, and so do the gardens, despite the lovely
scrolled iron fences and gates keeping me out. Most of the yards in
houses along Magazine Street are tiny, which means they show some clever
uses of space. Take this combo house-and-shop’s window boxes and pots.
On a tabletop just inside an iron fence, aloe mixed with herbs for a
culinary-medicinal combo. How did I miss that aloe plants send up nice trumpet-shaped blooms like this one, starting to fade?
Aloe grows well in clay containers where it gets good drainage. Too much water can cause this plant to wilt and get mushy.
Just inside a gate not far down the street, pops of orange (the fruit
and the color) satiated my desire for bright hues in winter. The lucky
zone 8 crew can grow citrus trees
outdoors through the winter with frost protection on the coldest
nights. While the citrus is the star of this scene, a potted croton,
with leaves striped green, gold and orange, also caught my eye. Grown
for its colorful foliage,
gardeners in more northerly climates usually treat croton as an annual
or use it as a houseplant. Planted in a container, this one could easily
be brought indoors if frost threatened.
If grown in containers like these, citrus trees can be brought indoors when weather threatens. In the front pot, multi-colored croton leaves add interest through color and texture.
Of course, New Orleans is also a place with a sense of humor and whimsy.
This wood and iron frame has a Magritte-like quality that totally fits
the city’s aesthetic—both romantic and surreal. Serving to divide the
spaces, the frame -- being open -- also connects them. And it gives that
blooming rose some climbing support (no doubt trained by the gardener).
A frame of roses—how clever!
Appearing to be hanging, the frame actually sits on two posts, painted black to fade into the scene.
I couldn’t help chuckling over this other front yard, where a faux-snow flocked Christmas tree is surrounded by unruly indeterminate tomato plants.
Tomatoes in winter? Yes, it’s actually possible in far-Southern
regions! These plants were loaded with green fruit. I imagine the cooler
weather hinders the tomatoes from ever fully ripening on the vine, but
they can easily be ripened indoors (try placing them in a cardboard box
in a warm spot and check often) or used green for a summer delicacy --
fried green tomatoes -- in January. Even frost-tender basil is hanging on in this wildly festive garden space.
A faux white Christmas tree stands in contrast to the tall tomato and basil plants, still hanging on from summer, in this whimsical New Orleans front yard garden.
Knowing that tomatoes and basil are still holding on helped convince me
that the cucumber donning this Pimm’s Cup was locally grown, too. After
all what’s a day of garden stalking in New Orleans without locally grown
cocktails?
Knowing that tomatoes and basil are still holding on helped convince me that the cucumber donning this Pimm’s Cup was locally grown, too. After all what’s a day of garden stalking in New Orleans without locally grown cocktails?
0 Comments About this Article