Sunset+201810

(Tina Meador) #1
Reported by MIKE IRVINE & JIM McCAUSLAND

Learn what to plant when with our year-round checklists: sunset.com/checklists.

“Use archways to
frame a favorite
moment.”

MIKE IRVINE, GARDEN EDITOR

PLANT
Among broadleaf ever-
green shrubs grown west of the
Cascades, prickly heath (Gaul-
theria mucronata) has the widest
color range in its berries, includ-
ing shades of pink, purple, red,
and white. Shop for these now,
keeping in mind that you’ll need
a male plant for pollination.


One of the Northwest’s best
native landscape trees is vine
maple. Most nurseries carry
it, but for a wider selection,
look to mail-order specialists
like Mendocino Maples Nursery
(mendocinomaples.com).


City Sprite zelkova is the perfect
sidewalk and parking strip
tree—it’s tough, tolerates pollu-
tion, and has roots that won’t
buckle concrete. Matures as
a 25-foot, compact oval with
yellow-orange fall leaves; add
them to those difficult spots now.


MAINTAIN
East of the Cascades, pull
and compost annuals after the
first killing frost. West of the
mountains, deadhead and con-
tinue to water annuals—they
should last into next month.


If you have finished compost
on hand, spread it over shrub
and perennial beds or dig it into
empty annual plots. To stockpile
for spring, cover your heap with
a tarp to keep winter rains from
washing out nutrients.

HARVEST
Two weeks before the
average date of your first fall

IDEA WE LOVE

Tunnel vision


Look to a supporting cast to pick up the slack as plants settle into dormancy. “As we transition into
colder months, the trellis becomes a piece of sculpture,” says artist Jennifer Asher , co-owner of
Los Angeles’ TerraTrellis. Here in the Sunset Test Garden, one of her steel arbors with a weather-
resistant finish becomes an elegant focal point sourrounded by the cloudlike seedheads of Muhlen-
bergia rigens and the vibrant fall foliage of ‘Navah o’ thornless blackberry. It’s autumn’s last call , but
the arbor will glisten with hints of morning frost and cast long shadows along the path throughout
the winter. Landscape by Homestead Design Collective; homesteaddesigncollective.com.

freeze, pick tomatoes that have
started to show color. Ripen
them on an indoor windowsill.

PROTECT
If you’ve kept houseplants
outside all summer, bring them
in to shield from chilly nights.

Check your lawn for frost as
soon as you wake up every

morning and note the date of
its earliest appearance. Over
the years, this tracking should
reveal the average date of first
frost, which helps calculate the
length of your growing season.

East of the mountains, cut back
fuchsias and overwinter them in
a protected, dark place. A cool
basement will do the trick.

42 OCTOBER 2018 ❖ SUNSET


Home & Garden


CHECKLIST


NORTHWEST

SAMANTHA BROWN
Free download pdf