A little more room for pollinator plants

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Pam/Digging

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April 16, 2020
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Taking out the stock-tank pond opened up a partly sunny spot in my shady garden. You can bet I wasn’t going to let that go to waste! Inside a new circle of diminutive ‘Micron’ hollies, which echo the form of ‘Winter Gem’ boxwoods at the entryways, I planted pollinator-friendly flowering perennials and annuals.

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Two months after planting, tall verbena (Verbena bonariensis) has shot up to 5 feet and towers over native Gulf Coast penstemon (Penstemon tenuis).

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The pretty lavender flowers entice bees and butterflies.

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I love the new flowers and am delighted to have a pollinator pit stop. In photos, unfortunately, the tall verbena looks weedy as it soars over a central potted Agave ovatifolia. In person I find it romantic. Walking past those giraffe-like verbena, I stretch out my hand to make the airy stems bob and wave, like Ruth Wilcox strolling her garden at Howards End. (Imagining myself in a long, white dress trailing across dewy grass…)

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On Sunday my first iris opened, the one I call Shoshana’s iris. I haven’t been able to get an iris to bloom in this garden in years. It’s just too shady. But when I moved a few straggly plants over to the new Circle Garden, they immediately started growing, and now this!

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I’m pretty happy about it.

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Shoshana looks especially lovely next to Gulf Coast penstemon.

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There’s columbine too.

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Along the chimney wall of the house, I’ve planted Hesperaloe parviflora ‘Desert Dusk’, a new cultivar of our native red yucca, with wine-red instead of coral flowers. It’s also a little more compact than the standard hesperaloe. And bees love it.

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I watched this busy bee adding to her pollen sacs…

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…fertilizing the flowers as she goes. Keep up the good work, bees!

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