Updated Rain Gardens Just in Time for Fall

Disconnected downspout water feeds into small rain garden in Portland, Oregon.  Rain Garden plants like dwarf Golden Acorus add drama.

Rain Garden with attractive evergreen grasses makes the entry look great even in winter. (Smith Entry 2008)

Portland rain garden surrounded by pollinator friendly plants such as Black Eyed Susan, Salvia, Blanket Flower catches winter water

Alana and I teamed up to design this Portland eco garden with loads of pollinator friendly plants and a rain garden. This was so much fun. July 2023

Rain Gardens in Portland Oregon Are Now Part of Local Culture.

This blog is from 2008.  Goodness we have had so much fun with rain gardens since then. Portlanders have fully embraced the concept of directing winter water into areas where the water can return to the earth instead of the local water treatment plant.

 

My clients had disconnected their down spout and sort of had a rain garden but rain water flowed across the front walk making it slippery, mossy and messy.

After I created a basic design for the rain garden, I brought in Donna Burdick of
D & J Landscape Contractors.  We worked together to finalize the design and then placed the rock to create the stream effect. Plantings were the finishing touch.

 


Year Round Interest Plants Used

Wet area needs Rain Garden

Before Rain Garden: The Smiths enjoy their holiday flamingos in a wet untamed area by their front door.

Christmas Plantings Look Great

The plantings look good even at Christmas with glossy gold grass and dark green leafed plantings.

Now when the Smith’s get out their flamingos for holiday decoration, their entry looks lush and welcoming.

 

 

Rain Gardens are not just a ring of drainrock!!! Courtyard entries are the norm in Charbonneau, a planned community in Wilsonville, Oregon.

The client and Carol Lindsay of Landscape Design in a Day placed the  rocks and plantings.   No more standing water.

Courtyard Entry w Rain Garden

The rain garden fits into my clients’ garden style beautifully.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rain Garden Solves Entry Pond Problem
Small courtyard entries are the norm in Charbonneau, a planned community in Wilsonville, Oregon.  My clients had a yearly winter pond in their courtyard entry.

Heavy Clay Soils Present Design Challenges
The soil has heavy clay and does not drain well. My clients in this area do a lot of soil prep. They have to install drains or take drastic measures to deal with winter rain water.

One half of the courtyard was buried in several inches of water every time it rained. It would take days or even weeks to drain away.  We decided a rain garden with pizzazz might solve their water problems and fit in with their garden style.

Landscape Design in a Day Comes to the Rescue
The client and Carol Lindsay of Landscape Design in a Day placed rocks and plantings. We used the large-sized Gold Acorus grass (Acorus gramineus ‘Ogon’) with Kelsey’s Dwarf Red-Osier Dogwood (Cornus sericea ‘Kelseyi’) along the back wall. We may look at using a dwarf Compact Inkberry Holly (Ilex glabra ‘Compacta’) instead as the garden continues to develop. The client installed their own perforated pipe under the rain garden – resulting in no more standing water going for over five years now.

Rain Garden in Alameda neighborhood in Portland Oregon doubles as play area for kids and is decorated with their plastic dinosaurs.

Rain Garden in Alameda neighborhood in Portland Oregon doubles as play area for kids and is decorated with their plastic dinosaurs. 2023

Updated-Here are rain gardens designed in the last few years, mostly in N and NE Portland.

Catio Tour – Patio hang out for you and your pets

Perfect patio is pet friendly and lets cats be outside and safe.

This enclosed patio for cats and their humans is airy and elegant.

Last weekend I toured 16 Catios (patio enclosures for humans and their cats) on the first-ever Catio Tour.  This tour is the brainstorm of the Feral Cat Coalition of Oregon and the Audoban Society of Portland.  Audoban’s idea being that fewer songbirds will be made a meal of if more of us contain our cats.

This is sure to be the new trend in gardening and landscaping since as a gender women tend to love gardening and cats.  Many of the Catios were very simple affairs that let cats come outside through a window and climb around in a 6 x 4 cats only enclosure.  Others were made so the cats and their humans could pal around outside in purrfect comfort. The tour was friendly and fun and very well attended.  I’m looking forward to incorporating some of what I saw into designs for my clients who want to enjoy the company of their cats outdoors in the same way as they do indoors.

Before and After: Curb Appeal

Before: Formal, and Flat with No Curb Appeal     

Earlier this summer, we featured Skinny and Tricky front yard design from scratch. This time, we’re showcasing an existing front landscape that needed a complete ‘do over’. Carol and the clients had worked together on their previous home.

The Design Challenge

Before the design process, the front entry was to the side of the house and very formal.

The new house was big enough for their growing family and just down the street  from their former home, but the new house had some problems.  First, the “real” front door was on the side of the house and everyone used the mud room entry instead.  The  great room windows were too close to the public sidewalk. The existing front walk, the one everyone used,  was a narrow awkward shape, and not at all welcoming. There was a lot riding on the redesign of the former mud room entry into the front door entry.

They were already using the formal front porch as a sitting area. They put a big comfy wrap around sofa on it even though it was not yet private. The heart of the family porch was already there, it just needed to be remodeled a bit and screened. Since they live near a very popular dog park….there were far too many doogie dooleys in the lawn but they didn’t want an unfriendly fence in the front yard.

“Working with both Bob and Carol Lindsay made the house work for us perfectly.” – Rob and Jen Hendrickson

Landscape goals have been completed in the new design.

 

 

 

After: Easy Care and Inviting

The new wide entry walk is big enough to use as a play area.

To make the insides and the outsides work properly, Carol brought her partner Bob Lindsay, home design/build  Urban Renaissance LLC,  to work with the clients on redesigning parts of the home that did not fit their family.  They designed and then remodeled the mud room, added a wall that made the flow into the kitchen and great room great and added a fireplace. He also created  furniture grade cubbies and cabinetry for the family’s new entry so it could function perfectly as the primary entry for the family AND the new front door. The interior’s style morphed into more of a Cape Cod beach house which fit this family’s laid back NW ways better.

The Perfectly Integrated Solution

Carol’s landscape design added a wide and welcoming stone front walk. The big hit was the custom stone wall that acts as a raised bed and is visually dramatic and drop dead gorgeous year round. It also provided seating for visiting with the neighbors or watching the kids play. To achieve a classic ‘northwest natural’ look, Carol mixed boulders with rich and warm toned stone tiles.

A Place to Repose

The original formal front entry made a lot more sense as a private family sitting porch with a breathtaking view of Mount Hood for morning coffee.  Last but not least, the planter and plantings create a barrier that blocks most dogs from leaving gifts on the lawn.

Cistern Installation

Portland Purple Water Cistern

Photo courtesy of Portland Purple Water

In addition to a landscape design for the back yard which included a large edibles garden, the clients also wanted a cistern for watering the landscape. Bob Lindsay,  Urban Renaissance and Joe Hurd,  installed a 1,500 gallon cistern under the second story deck.

Rob says, “We’re collecting winter rain and using it to grow our food and have a garden! Using all that city water to maintain the lawn…well it didn’t feel good.  Now it feels right and I love it!”

Perfect Blend of Fit and Function

Hendrickson plant tex

The large stone planter and planting provided enough visual power to balance  the Cape Cod home’s style.  The planter  fits this very social neighborhood by providing seating for visiting with neighbors or watching the kids play.

The new wide entry walk is also big enough to use as play area which in a neighborhood with lots of kids is ideal.

Does Your Home Need Curb Appeal?
Call 503.223.2426 or email today so we can make your home and garden welcoming and warm.

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Dog-Friendly Landscape Design from across the country

As you may know, part of the joy I get working with clients is helping them design a space that reflects their life and lifestyle. So it won’t surprise you that I enjoyed hearing from two dog lovers who wanted my help with a dog friendly landscape design for their homes.

Check out the story featured in this week’s Oregonian by Kym Pokorny, “How to create a pet-friendly garden: ideas, tips durable plants.” It includes 10 Tips for a dog-friendly garden and links to toxic plants you’ll want to avoid.

 

 

My Impatiens Have Mildew – What to Do?

A warning about a new mildew problem affecting colorful, shade standby annual impatiens and Landscape Design in a Day alternative recommendations:

Summer Color in the shade with annual impatiens

Impatiens planted in garden beds?
A thing of the past? We hope not!
– Carol Lindsay

It’s bad news, but the Oregon Association of Nurseries Digger Magazine issued a warning about a new mildew problem in a colorful shade standby—annual impatiens. This elegant annual provides a season-long burst of color in the summer landscape. For decades, if you wanted colorful flowers in the shade, this plant was the standard.

The perpetrator is downey mildew (Plasmora obducens) and it’s now a common problem here in Portland, Oregon.

How bad is the problem?
Bad enough that gardeners may need to find a substitute for one of America’s favorite flowering annuals. The first outbreaks were in Germany in 2007.  How small our world has become!  To learn more about this outbreak,  read on for my suggestions on substitutions:

Put Down that Fungicide!

Mike Darcy

Photo by Kym Pokorny, Oregonian Newspaper

Mike Darcy says “It isn’t practical to try to control this mildew with sprays.”  Who wants to spray chemicals on their plant at all, let alone every few days? That’s what it would take and even then it wouldn’t work all summer.  Many fungicides are also lethal to honeybees and frogs too.

He also says, “Some home gardeners are reporting success with their impatiens that are in pots but not in the garden ground.” That’s a little good news and I’m seeing happy and healthy Impatiens in baskets and planters this summer (2013).

Choosing Shade Garden Substitutes
When it’s time to use alternatives, here are some good ones:

Part Sun or Shade, Dragon Wings Begonia from Proven Winners

Dragon Wing® Red Begonia thrives in part sun or shade.

New varieties of Begonias
There are better colors and pillows and billows of flowers so these are not your grandma’s begonias anymore.  Most of these new varieties are self cleaning so you don’t have to deadhead. YES!

Be careful to purchase Begonias that flower well in shade.  They have many varieties that must have half day sun to thrive.  Dragon Wing® is a great variety because it will do well in either shade or part sun.  Angel wing begonias are taller than impatiens, billowing up to 24 or 30″ tall.

Summer Shade substitution for Impatiens

Consider using dazzling Summer Wave® Blue Torenia instead of impatiens

Summer Wave® Blue Torenia
This filtered-sun lover provides superb color throughout even the hottest months of the year and does well in pots and window boxes. This annual thrives in high humidity.

Coleus Colorblaze 'Sedona'

ColorBlaze® ‘Sedona’ – Hot orange with wine tones in the leaf are an exciting addition to the summer shade garden.

Coleus
Crazy with color these days – be sure to select varieties for shade – as there are many Coleus for sunny areas now that do not do well in shade. This is opposite of 20 years ago when all Coleus were meant for shade.

Shade Loving Colorful Coral Bell "Green Spice" is a perennial.

Shade loving, colorful Coral Bell “Green Spice”.

Heucheras
Coral Bells are VERY colorful and newer varieties flower much longer than older ones.

Laguna Sky Blue Lobelia by Proven Winners

Some sun is needed for success so don’t plant Lobelia in full shade.

Lobelia
Lobelia such as Laguna™ Sky Blue must have some sun to be successful.  Pair it with ColorBlaze® ‘Sedona’ Coleus for a dazzling burst of summer color.

Plant photos courtesy of Proven Winners