Dog days of summer have arrived
Steve Kawaratani
Hot time, summer in the city...
--John Sebastian
Roll out those lazy, hazy, crazy days of summer.
--Nat King Cole
The calendar indicates that we are entering the “dog days of
summer,” although the expected warm and clear days have been
inconsistent. There is, however, plenty to do for avid gardeners, as
well as those of us not quite so committed. Our gardening list
includes watering our trees and shrubs as deeply and infrequently as
possible and fastening all plants that require staking in preparation
for the Santa Ana winds.
Spent flowers and seedpods should be removed and bluegrass and
fescue lawns cut taller than in spring. Vegetables, lawns and flowers
should be fertilized with regular, mild feedings. And pests -- such
as weeds, insects, and diseases -- should be dealt with
appropriately.
After the rush of spring blooms, it is difficult to maintain color
from shrubs, which often become quite drab by midsummer. Enter the
bedding plant -- the savior for those of us who enjoy the “idea” of
flowers and enjoy a splash of color in the garden. From a practical
point of view (which means not overburdening ourselves with
uncongenial work), bedding plants are easy to buy, easy to grow, and
are the easiest way to a colorful garden.
By designing your garden with flowers of colors that please you,
your garden will be appealing and renewed. Keep your flowerbeds and
containers well filled and neat by removing spent or dead flowers and
foliage, and your entire garden will appear as trim and well tended
as Catharine.
Garden Sage, Salvia officinalis, has lovely blue or white spiky
flowers and grows in full sun. Fairly drought resistant, it requires
well-draining soil. With a maximum growth to 1 1/2 feet, this sage
should be cut back after blooming and fertilized regularly. The
flowers are fragrant in cut arrangements, and the leaves can be used
for seasoning.
An all purpose summer annual, Sweet alyssum, Lobularia maritima,
displays colorful white, pink or purple flowers in borders, rock
gardens, hanging baskets and anywhere else there is at least a little
sunlight. Reaching a foot in height, the flowers will bloom all year
from self-sown seeds in Laguna.
Cosmos, Cosmos bipinnatus, is one my favorite plants for the
summer. Planted in full sunlight, it blooms in white, pink, rose,
lavender and crimson. Varieties vary in height from two feet up to
eight feet.
Mounding into your garden, Dwarf Cup Flower, Nierembergia
hippomanica violacea, has saucerlike blue flowers. It requires sun
and good soil, with average water. Less than a foot tall,
Nierembergia is a great border or container flower.
Lisianthus, Eustoma grandiflorum, is a terrific cut flower.
Originally introduced from Japan, the tulip-shaped flowers are
available in purplish blue, pink or white. They will bloom all summer
if old blooms are cut off when spent.
The traffic and congestion have become even more intolerable, as
the summer moves toward August. I find myself sequestered at home
during the weekends... venturing hither only to seek food and grog.
Is this the price we pay for living in Laguna? If so, I’ll take our
town over Barstow (or anywhere else) without question, tourists and
all. See you next time.
Steve Kawaratani is happily married to local writer, Catharine
Cooper, and has two cats. He can be reached at 949.497.2438, or
e-mail to [email protected].
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