KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
Free-standing pots are like a blank slate. Each decision you make
gives them a personality that enhances the ambience of your home. Whether
it pertains to the container, plant material or location, your choices
create a mood, a design statement and a tone that helps you set the mood
for your home and outdoor living space.
Before you head out to the garden store, take inventory of what you
want your pots and plants to accomplish. Do you want seasonal color for
the front door area or simplicity with boxwood that stays green all year?
What kind of maintenance time are you willing to spend? What size fits
best with the area you want to fill? Is it shady? Is it sunny? How will
it get watered?
Let’s start with the pots. Unless you are creating a water garden, be
sure to select a pot that has a drainage hole. Choices are abundant and
include terra cotta, glazed ceramic, concrete, cast iron, wood and
galvanized steel.
I often tweak the retail look of my pots to give them a unique, custom
flavor. If you like the patina of aged pots, you can mimic the look of
accumulated moss and leeching minerals by applying a mixture of
fine-sanded stucco tinted with a little brown and green pigment. Apply
the mix in an uneven pattern to give your pots an well-worn look.
Creation is a process, and I’m not shy about experiments. I recently
bought four large concrete planters for the backyard. I have been
coveting these beauties for ages and decided the new backyard deserved an
upgrade from the terra cotta pots I have had for 15 years. When I got my
new pots home, they did indeed look big and beautiful, but a little too
new and slick for my liking.
My first thought was to dirty them up a bit and give them a mossy
green look, so I lightly applied some old concrete stain that was
gathering dust in the garage. Now the pots took on a surreal Martian
quality. Not good. I tried to tone down the green with a mixture of gold
(actually raw sienna) tint. This gold-on-top-of-green mixture gave me a
rather shocking chartreuse color, which was not the subtle “old” look I
wanted.
When all else fails in my house, I go to black. The third coat of
pigment was a charcoal wash I created out of water, lamp black pigment
and some copper metallic additive that I’d bought years ago and hadn’t
figured out how to use. The third coat was not the charm, but the second
time I reapplied the charcoal wash (which, yes, brought the count up to
four coats of pigment), I was thrilled with the result. I sprayed on two
coats of matte sealer to make sure the color didn’t rub off and called
the project complete. They look unique, a little old and crusty, and are
a perfect foil for the outdoor furniture.
After you select your pot, be sure to fill it with a premium potting
soil. Dirt from the garden will lose its moisture too quickly and compact
too dramatically. Get a lightweight potting medium and, for extra
insurance that the dirt won’t dry out, incorporate some water-absorbing
polymer-gel crystals. This is especially important if your pot is going
to have full-sun exposure.
Select a vertical plant for the center of the pot and surround it with
plants that have a low-growth habit or cascade down the sides. If you
choose not to add accent plants, get a ground cover -- such as shredded
bark, pea gravel or decorative stones -- to help minimize moisture loss
from the pot.
Plants in pots need to be fertilized frequently to replace nutrients
that are absorbed by the plant or leak out the bottom. Adding an extra
dose of the appropriate fertilizer will keep your plant healthy.
Plants in pots need to be well-watered, especially if they are placed
in full sun. A drip irrigation system is the most foolproof way to
guarantee watering. This requires some planning, but the effort is worth
it.
My drip system is highly technical. I’m the drip, and I water
everything by hand. But this has its advantages. I can monitor the
plant’s growth, give it a little encouragement, admire my pots (at least
in the backyard) and have a moment to realize that any time spent in the
garden is time well spent.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Saturdays.
PO This horsetail is a good choice for a pot: The container limits the
spreading root system. Decorative stones placed on top of the planting
mixture help reduce moisture loss.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.