Mostly native plant list for a modern California garden
November 1st, 2011
Joel Lichtenwalter and Ryan Gates of Grow Outdoor Design, based in Los Angeles, have introduced me to some really creative gardens they have designed. And what strikes me when seeing these mostly small, urban landscapes, is how well plants are used as architectural elements within the spaces they reside.
You won’t see fluffy cottage gardens with English-inspired perennial choices in Ryan and Joel’s gardens. Yet even when they design for bungalow-scaled residences, some of the same intimate, cottage garden experience occurs for the humans who occupy them. That emotional sense of being surrounded by plants, layers of textures — and even color in a tonal, modern sense –happens in their gardens.
I wrote about one such place recently and you can follow the links to the Los Angeles Times story here, including an extensive web gallery.
For those who ask: What plants are appropriate for a lush, low-water landscape? I think you’ll appreciate Ryan and Joel’s plant list for their clients’ lawn-free front yard now filled with native and Mediterranean grasses, shrubs, ground covers and trees, many of which display multi-season beauty:
A shopping list of California native plants and their Mediterranean companions
Natives:
Ceanothus griseus horizontalis Yankee Point
Cercis occidentalis
Arctostaphylos ‘Howard McMinn’
Arctostaphylos ‘Emerald Carpet’
Leymus condensatus ‘Canyon Prince’
Muhlenbergia rigens
Platanus racemosa
Carpenteria californica
Eschscholzia californica
Juncus patens
Sisyrinchium montanum (Blue Eyed Grass)
Non-Natives:
Arbutus ‘Marina’
Agave bracteosa
Leucadendron ‘Safari Sunset’
Agave vilmroniana
Olea europaea
Chondropetalum tectorum
Materials:
Composite decking (raised deck and boardwalk)
Square pre-cast concrete pavers
Poured-in-place concrete bench
‘Del Rio’ gravel
Decomposed granite (DG)
Shredded tree mulch
November 1st, 2011 at 10:08 am
Thanks for sharing about Joel Lichtenwalter and Ryan Gates native garden. We have a passion for installing native landscapes up here in Montana, and it is very interesting to see the difference in texture and plant material for a native landscape in California. Going native in your design is always a fun, challenging, and rewarding task and we encourage everyone to implement the use of natives plants as much as possible, if not entirely.
-inContour
http://www.inContour.com
March 4th, 2012 at 11:20 pm
Love that you are showcasing California natives. They’re a passion of mine and I just really to see other people not just spreading the word, but showing how beautiful they can be in both residential and commercial settings.