background check

buckwheat-without-background

My last post has me think­ing more about the back­grounds that plants grow against.

I was get­ting excited that the San Miguel Island buck­wheats(Eri­o­gonum grande var. rubescens) that I’d grown from seed were com­ing in to bloom. But stand­ing back from them, I real­ized that the place where I’d trans­planted them–a raised bed with a red brick retain­ing wall behind it–might not have been the best place for the plants.

The dusky pink flow­ers blend so well with the red­dish col­ors of the brick that they prac­ti­cally van­ish. And the busy grid­ded back­ground of the brick and weep­ing mor­tar draws so much atten­tion that any­thing in front of the wall just gets ignored.

buckwheat-with-background

What would it look like against a more neu­tral back­bround? I won­dered. And so I went to grab a piece of white mat­board and posi­tioned it behind the plants.

Wow. Big dif­fer­ence. It’s sud­denly eas­ier to make out the shapes of the umbels of flow­ers, and you can begin to appre­ci­ate the sub­tle color of the flowers.

buckwheat-with-background-closeup

Up close, the white back­ground almost made the plant look like a botan­i­cal illustration.

buckwheat-with-bug

The low con­trast against the back­ground didn’t pre­vent this bug from find­ing the buck­wheat. Clearly, a bug’s eyes and brain don’t work the same way our human ones do.

Once these plants grow in more and achieve some more height they should stand a bet­ter chance of hold­ing their own against the back­ground of busy brick­work. But the plants will never “pop” against the wall in the same way they’d show against a sim­pler, more neu­tral back­ground. So, in the “note to self” cat­e­gory, I’ll be pay­ing more atten­tion to con­trasts between the plant and the hard­scape around it.

July 10 2009 | Categories: gardeninglandscape designmy garden | Tags: | 10 Comments »