pointillist garden color

It dri­ves John crazy, but I love it when plants begin to grow into each other. When I’m ready to sit back and enjoy the moment, you can hear the open­ing and clos­ing of prun­ing shears in his hands.

Pointillist garden colors

Pointil­list gar­den colors

Here’s a plant­ing that reached this crit­i­cal stage a cou­ple months ago, a clus­ter­ing of pink gaura (Gaura lind­heimeri), blue ivy-leaved sage (Salvia cacali­ae­fo­lia) and the wacky mixed red and/or white blooms of Salvia micro­phylla ‘Hot Lips.’ The plants have flow­ers of approx­i­mately the same size, and from just a few feet away you stop to see the indi­vid­ual flow­ers and begin to see the plant­ing as a gen­tle vibra­tion of col­ors that move from pink to red to white to blue. (The red­dish foliage of the gaura also adds to the effect.)



It makes me think a lit­tle bit of the sim­i­lar color effects in the paint­ings of Georges Seu­rat. His best-known paint­ing, La Grande Jette, inspired Stephen Sond­heim to com­pose his musi­cal, Sun­day in the Park with George.

Seurat Grande Jette
Georges Seu­rat. A Sun­day on La Grande Jette-1884, 1884–1886. Oil on can­vas, 207.5 x 308 cm. The Art Insti­tute of Chicago. [ source ]

Seurat Grande Jette detail

Seu­rat Grande Jette detail

On the can­vas, pointil­list lit­tle dots of color give a vibra­tory shim­mer to the sur­face of the paint­ing. Instead of mix­ing the col­ors on his palette, he lets your eye do it.

Big chunks of gar­den color laid out next to each other can be a great effect. But I also like the shim­mer of lit­tle dots of color. Seu­rat had an inter­est­ing thing going on with his later work–Why not appro­pri­ate it for the garden ?

September 16 2008 | Categories: artgardeningmy garden | Tags: | 1 Comment »

sage as a cut flower

In the past I’ve occa­sion­ally cut flow­ers from the gar­den, only to have them wilt imme­di­ately and dis­in­te­grate into a pile of organic mat­ter on top of a table I wanted to look nice for com­pany. Last week­end I was trim­ming back the ivy-leaved sage, Salvia cacali­ae­fo­lia. At first the stems went into the greens recy­cling can. But they looked too pretty there and I won­dered how well they’d do as cut flow­ers. So into the house they came, mak­ing a big, infor­mal bouquet/science exper­i­ment for the din­ing table.

Cut flowers of ive-leaved sageThe ver­dict? The flow­ers looked great through day three, with only the occa­sional flower falling off the stem. Then after that the ends of the stems where the flow­ers live started to droop. By day five, although the leaves still looked per­fectly pre­sentable, the flower ends were totally wilted, blooms had dropped off the stems, and there was a dry, black, gran­u­lar some­thing or another (pollen? seeds?) lit­ter­ing the table sur­face. Time for the greens recy­cle bin.

That was no worse than the lifes­pan of many of the more clas­sic cut flow­ers, so I’ll be treat­ing myself to vase-fulls of ivy-leaved sage the next time I cut it back.

June 22 2008 | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags: | 4 Comments »

true blue sages

There are plenty of names for shades of blue: azure, cerulean, indigo, cobalt, ultra­ma­rine, sky, and navy. And then there’s even the spe­cial syn­thetic intense ultra­ma­rine shade that artist Yves Klein patented under the name “Inter­na­tional Klein blue.”

A visit to a nurs­ery, how­ever, seems to come up with only a short list of plants hav­ing flow­ers that are truly, intensely blue. Among the more com­mon plants pan­sies, del­phini­ums, peri­win­kles and corn­flow­ers would qual­ify. But decades of breed­ing attempts with roses and pha­laenop­sis and cat­t­leya orchids have failed to pro­duced any­thing other than pale mau­vey or laven­derey col­ors, mainly because those plants don’t pro­duce the nec­es­sary blue pig­ments in the first place.

There are lab­o­ra­tory sub­jects that have been genet­i­cally mod­i­fied to carry the genes to pro­duce blue pig­ment, and they’re pro­duc­ing flow­ers that are knock­ing on the door of being blue. For a flower to be blue, how­ever, in addi­tion to hav­ing the right pig­ments, the pH of the petals has to be absolutely cor­rect. Oth­er­wise you get pinks or more of those close-but-no-cigar col­ors like lilac. (If you’ve played with alter­ing the color of hydrangea blos­soms or mak­ing lit­mus paper change from pink to blue you’re already famil­iar with the con­trol­ling effects of acid­ity. Of course the big dif­fer­ence is that you can accom­plish hydrangea color change with­out going into the lab.) The basic genetic mod­i­fi­ca­tion process creeps me out a bit, and genetically-modified car­na­tions are sen­si­bly banned from Europe.

For­tu­nately the sage genus, Salvia, con­tains a num­ber of species with flow­ers that require no genetic manip­u­la­tion to achieve their amaz­ingly blue col­ors. I’ve devoted a cor­ner of my gar­den to three of them: ivy-leafed sage, arrow-leafed sage, and gen­tian sage.

Three salvias compared

The three species com­pared, left to right: Salvia patens ‘Oceano Blue,’ S. cacali­ae­fo­lia, and S. sagit­tata.

The ivy-leafed sage, Salvia cacali­ae­fo­lia, is a robust grower, four to five feet tall and as big around as you’ll let it get. I’m start­ing to call it the “walk­ing sage” because it can set down roots where the fairly lax stems touch the ground. It also sends up new stems from run­ners, though these don’t wan­der too far from the plant. Ram­bunc­tious, yes, but the plant has been eas­ily con­trolled with the help of Mis­ter Prun­ing Shears.

Ivy-leaved sage flower Ivy-leaved sage plant

As its com­mon name would sug­gest the leaves are a lit­tle ivy-like, tri­an­gu­lar, three inches in length, and a pleas­ant medium green color. The spaces between the paired leaves can approach eight or nine inches, mak­ing the plant look a lit­tle stemmy and infor­mal, but I find the mound­ing plant to be grace­ful and attractive.

Before the flow­ers open the buds develop an intense, almost indigo-blue shade, about as close to Inter­na­tional Klein Blue as you’ll find in the gar­den. The buds open to clean blue flow­ers, fairly sim­ple tubu­lar affairs that are about and inch and a quar­ter long. What the flow­ers might lack in size and showy com­plex­ity they make up with their sheer pro­fu­sion. The plant went into the ground Novem­ber 18 of last year, and it’s never been with­out flow­ers except for when the sprin­kler or heavy rains knocked them off. Har­di­ness reported to Zone 9.

The arrow-leafed sage, Salvia sagit­tata, grows smaller than the pre­vi­ous species. So far, for me, the plant is maybe two feet tall and three wide, with the inflo­res­cence adding a foot to the height. True to name, the leaves are shaped like an arrow­head. They eas­ily attain six inches in length, and have an attrac­tive light, almost lime-green col­oration. Towards the end of the sea­son the plant can lose its lower leaves and get leggy, so you might want to plant some­thing small and mound­ing near the plant to dis­guise the stems. (I’ve planted some lime thyme.)

Arrow-leaved sage flowerArrow-leaved sage plant

The flow­ers are about the same size as those of the ivy-leaved sage, and take the form of small tubes with one petal mod­i­fied to form a frilly lit­tle “skirt”–a handy plat­form for insects to land on. (If this were an orchid, the flower part would be called the label­lum, the “lip.”) The blooms float on thin, dark stems that make them look like exotic lit­tle but­ter­flies hov­er­ing over the plant. Their color is a vivid medium blue color, a main-line blue so pure it doesn’t need a fancy name. Peak bloom runs from May to late fall in San Diego. Con­sid­ered a ten­der peren­nial, prob­a­bly hardy into Zone 9.

The gen­tian sage, Salvia patens, is the newest addi­tion to my gar­den. The clone I chose is ‘Oceano Blue.’ So far the plant is about 30 inches tall and 15 wide, def­i­nitely the most con­strained of these three species. Leaves are oval-to-pointed (“ovate”), medium-dark green, and about two inches long.

Gentian sage flower Gentian sage plant

The flow­ers are almost iden­ti­cal to arrow-leaved sage in color–an intense medium blue–but the flow­ers are huge by con­trast, exceed­ing two inches in length and height. The petals have a dis­tinct for­ma­tion that makes me think of a crab claw. I haven’t grown it through the warmest months, but it has a rep­u­ta­tion for slow­ing down in its florif­er­ous­ness, some­thing I’m begin­ning to observe. Har­di­ness reported to Zone 8.

And what about the com­mon bed­ding plant Salvia fari­nacea ‘Vic­to­ria Blue,’ the mealy cup sage? It can be a great plant, par­tic­u­larly in warmer, less humid cli­mates and sea­sons when pow­dery mildew isn’t an issue. The flow­ers, how­ever, range more towards blue-violet, not a pure shade of blue. So if you’re a blue purist, fuggedaboutit.

June 21 2008 | Categories: my gardenplant profiles | Tags: | No Comments »