Archive for February, 2010

Commissioning a design

Monday, February 15th, 2010

Each landscape designer is unique. Perhaps it’s helpful to compare them to artists.

Some landscape designers work to develop a unique style, then tend to design in that style until they are ready to move on to something new. You could compare these designers to artists like Picasso, Brach, Miro, Klee, Rodin, Henry Moore, Monet, Norman Rockwell or Toulouse-Lautrec. Their work done during a certain period is easily recognizable.

Others are more like illustrators, adapting their style to fit the project. Many great illustrators enjoy the challenge of working in different media and different styles to achieve set goals. Nonetheless, they do tend to favor certain styles and typically dislike copying other artists’ or illustrators’ work, preferring instead to create something original.

Hiring a landscape architect is similar to commissioning an artist. If you hire say, Picasso, you probably expect to get something resembling his other work, perhaps with some of your input concerning the size of the piece, the subject or the theme. If you’re hiring an illustrator, you were probably impressed with his or her work, have looked at examples in a portfolio, and have an idea of what style you’d like for your oeuvre d’art.

This is why it’s a very good idea to look at a designer’s body of work, then talk to them about what you’d like to accomplish. Just because they never built a certain type of design does not mean they are not interested in taking things in a new direction. They may even have proposed something similar as a concept, but that project took a different direction.

Bodacious Bamboos! (and a palm)

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

We’re getting things together for our designer garden at the San Francisco Flower and Garden show coming up in March. One of our main themes is edible plants – but low maintenance and water conserving varieties.

We’ll be working with Instant Jungle Nursery in Cotati for both bamboos and a variety of palm that has very tasty fruit. The palm’s fruit taste sort of like Mandarin oranges, only with a large seed in the center.

pindo palm

Young pindo palm at nursery (Butia capitata)

Many bamboos have delicious shoots – forget those pale, tasteless things you get in cans or appear on your plate in an Asian restaurant. As far as we know, they’ll grow with gray water from your washing machine for irrigation. They also provide shade, usable canes and grow quickly – so they suck a lot of carbon out of the atmosphere.

The drawback is that they can be quite invasive, so running types need to be contained with root barriers of some kind. Not only that, but you’ll need to occasionally walk the perimeter to make sure the plants aren’t escaping.

Despite this requirement, bamboos can provide a beautiful screen in a narrow area. The canes should be thinned every year to keep the groves looking airy and light – and to let the new canes develop nicely.

If you’re going to be eating the shoots, they can be blanched with straw so that they stay white.

selecting bamboo

Selecting bamboo at Instant Jungle Nursery in Cotati

Moso bamboo

Moso (Phyllostachys heterocycla pubescens), a very tasty variety of bamboo

Phyllostacys vivax aureocaulis

Edible in this case does not mean boring. This Phyllostachys has nice foliage and beautiful canes. It needs a root barrier for containment, however.

Phyllostachys aureosulcata spectabilis

Not all bamboos are edible. This highly ornamental variety, Phyllostachys aureosulcata spectabilis, just isn't for eating. It sure is nice to look at, though.

Phyllostachys aureosulcata spectabilis

Another shot of the spectabilis, showing the foliage

leopard bamboo

This variety, called leopard bamboo for its spots, isn't edible either. It has very nice foliage and makes a great screen.

Black bamboo

Black bamboo, another inedible variety, has interesting new shoots.

Timber bamboo

Timber bamboo growing at the nursery. These varieties are great for places where quick height is desired. The shoots aren't edible, but some varieties such as Bambusa oldhamii are clumpers that don't require root barriers.