Green and white in a container garden can be spectacular. I have more than a few clients who request this cool and collected color palette. Summer in the mid west can be cruelly hot. A white garden always looks cool and crisp; white shrugs off the heat. White flowers read well from a distance, and are startlingly beautiful at dusk. When they are well grown, white flowers are stunning. Among my favorites? White hardy hibiscus, Visions in White astilbe, white anemones of any genus, white daffodils, white roses, need I go on? Green is what gives a garden or landscape a living context. Living green is vastly different than green paint. Light endows green and white in a garden with as much visual energy as serenity. Odd, that. This client has a decidedly contemporary point of view, and a big love of white. I try to give that white to her with both reliable and unusual plants. The diminutive white and purple streptocarpus, the big leaved white caladiums and the white streaked watermelon pepperomia set the stage for this very shady set of boxes.
Birds nest ferns and variegated licorice provide the supporting cast. The white New Guinea impatiens are the most astrikingly white of the group, and they are thriving here.So happy to see them tolerating such a low light level. This is the shadiest of my green and white containers for this client. I deliberately split up the white plants, to establish a lively rhythm.
The window boxes in front-I have no need to trick them out. A contemporary expression asks for simple. White New Guinea impatiens in all of the boxes-perfect. Once they have a little time, and some more heat, they will thrive.
The rosemary standards were part of the spring planting. There is no need to replace them. The are growing. I under planted them with scotch moss, just to give the trunks a little space. I have my fingers crosses that the water the moss wants will not be too much for the rosemary. Every container planting has its drama. The key will be thoughtful watering. The XXL dahlia series is the best medium height dahlias it has ever been my pleasure to grow. The stems are sturdy. They are disease resistant. They flower heavily early on. They are oh so showy. White petunias in the front-ordinary as can be. But paired with showy oregano, the relationship is a little more complicated and interesting. My crew fusses that I post pictures during a planting. They would rather I take pictures at the end, when everything is thoroughly watered and cleaned up. I like the pictures with the dirt. I cannot really explain this, but I learned from my Mom that good friable soil that is loaded with organic material and drains well is clean. The dirt inside my socks and under my nails this time of year is a comfort. It means all is right with my world.
Those dahlias laid out in a block awaiting planting are so incredibly beautiful. Showy white plants have their place in pots. An ordinary container cannot hold enough Queen Anne’s Lace to make a statement. Those airy blooming relatives of the common carrot belong in a field. Selecting white flowers for containers? Try white dwarf cosmos or cleome, white angelonia, white New Guinea impatiens, Lanai white trailing verbena. white geraniums-if you must. White zinnias, both dwarf and tall are great in containers. As a centerpiece, white mandevillea cannot be beat. Vinca vine-as ordinary as red geraniums. But skillfully used, it is a beautiful white accent in a container. We have on occasion wound it upwards on a plant climber.
This rosemary topiary did not ask for much fuss. A collar of white petunias is enough.
I planted a tall cylindrical pot in deep shade with one of my favorite green plants-pepperomia. Trailing down the sides, the garden variety vinca vine, and a white variegated tradescantia. Once this grows out and up, it will do justice to this gorgeous contemporary Atelier Verkant container.
The mix of classical and contemporary containers here is striking. A green and white planting is a great way to focus on the mix of container shapes and materials. In a month, the relationships the plants forge from one pot to the other will be much clearer.
This pot features a rosemary topiary surrounded by a giant collar of lavender. I am quite sure that given some time, each of these elements will grow in to each other in an interesting proportion. I do not mind the lavender in this green and white color scheme. A green and white rule is better when that rule is broken.
Should I ever plant a spike or a phormium in a container, Lucio ties up that cascading centerpiece, so he can plant all around it. This is a picture not so much about design, but about how my crew and I work together. All of them to the last have a gift for planting and growing plants. This is his signature, which I greatly respect.
Every plant has a face. That face needs to be forward. Every center plant needs to be perfectly placed in the middle. Every center plant needs to be oriented to the primary view. Some center plants need to be planted at the back of the container, depending on their placement. Some plants need to be pitched over the edges of a container. Others need to be planted vertically. This is not so much about color, texture or mass as it is about planting technique. My crew never rushes a planting. Watching them plant from a plan is the best part of my good life.
I am very pleased about this day’s work.
Green and white. Pure delight.