GPOD on the Road: Niagara-on-the-Lake - FineGardening
Cherry Ong is again taking us along to visit beautiful gardens, this time plantings in Niagara-on-the-Lake in Ontario.
One of the top reasons I love walking along Queen Street in Niagara-on-the-Lake is to experience the amazing summer annual display along the street and fronting the stores and hotels. I walked the street twice to study the garden and container-garden designs (patterns and colors and all) hoping to take inspiration home with me for planting my own summer garden.
This photo along the Prince of Wales Hotel includes spectacular window boxes planted with Streptocarpella saxorum (Zones 10â11 or as an annual) and Petunia hybrids (Zones 9â11 or as an annual).
This view of the hotel, shows the planter boxes full of flowers on the fence around the little patio area.
This study in foliage color includes tall papyrus (Cyperus papyrus, Zones 9â11 or as an annual) at the top growing through lime-green coleus (Plectranthus scutellarioides hybrid, Zones 10â11 or as an annual), which contrasts with the coppery-colored sweet potato vine (Ipomoea batatas, Zones 10â11 or as an annual), and zebra plant (Tradescantia zebrina, Zones 10â11, or as an annual or houseplant). A few blooms of wishbone flower (Torenia hybrid, Zones 10â11 or as an annual) are scattered here and there but are totally upstaged by the great leaves around them.
Hostas (Hosta hybrid, Zones 4â9) and Japanese forest grass (Hakonechloa macra, Zones 5â9) are always a good combination. Both thrive in the shade and have beautiful contrasting and complementing textures.
Mandevilla (Mandevilla hybrid, Zones 10â11 or as an annual) vines give a great vertical accent in this planting. Most mandevilla are twining tropical vines, but some of the newer varieties stay as shorter, bushy plants. Both are beautiful, but the vines are very useful for adding height to annual plantings.
The red flowers of the mandevilla vines are intense.
These huge, dramatically colored elephantâs ears (Colocasia hybrid, Zones 7â10 or as an annual) look all the more intense for being paired with bright yellow-green sweet potato vine.
Purple spider plant (Tradescantia pallida, Zones 7â10 or as an annual) makes a dark background for this fiery planting: New Guinea impatiens (Impatiens hawkeri, Zones 10â11 or as an annual), coleus, and yellow cannas (Canna hybrid, Zones 7â10 or as an annual).
A pink Rieger begonia (Begonia hybrid, Zones 10â11 or as an annual) takes center stage in this planting. These hybrid begonias are abundant bloomers and generally perform best in climates with cooler summers.
Brilliant orange canna and coleus foliage is the star here, backed up by a cool ring of purple petunias.
Toning things down a little, this planting is a sophisticated mix of white flowers and the purple leaves of Strobelanthes dyerianus (Zones 10â11 or as an annual).
A final container is also elegant in its restraint: white variegated caladium (Caladium hybrid, Zones 9â11 or as a tender bulb) and spider plant (Chlorophytum comosum, Zones 8â10 or as an annual or houseplant), with the bright yellow foliage of creeping Jenny (Lysimachia nummularia âAureaâ, Zones 3â9).
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