Every year the Pantone Color Institute—in an astute publicity move—announces a “color of the year.” Foodies and Italian expatriates will rejoice in discovering that the color for 2015 is Marsala. For the uninitiated, Marsala is a fortified Sicilian wine that is similar to port, sherry, and Madeira.
Like sherry, Marsala comes in a range of ages, colors, and sweetness levels. A drier Marsala is traditionally served chilled between the first and second course, and paired with parmesan, gorgonzola, or another tangy cheese. Sweet Marsalas are served at room temperature as a dessert wine. Most of us have encountered Marsala as a reduction of the wine, prepared with shallots, mushrooms, and herbs for the well-known chicken dish.
As far as the color of the year is concerned, many of us will be delighted that earthy tones are back. They are so wearable! Marsala (the color, that is) is a warm and seductive earthy wine-red. Colorists have described it as hearty, nurturing, stylish, and sophisticated. I am looking forward to wearing the shade on my lips and nails. It partners well with blue-grey, pale lilac, silvery pink, purple, blue, tan, golden green, apricot, and ochre.
I thought it would be fun to search out plants that embodied this color. There are lots of burgundies on the market, and there are many wine-colored reds, maroons, and deep brownish-purples. I fired up PowerPoint and started laying out slides. On each slide I placed a color swatch of Marsala, then I perused my favorite online catalogs in search of earthy, fortified, red-brown flowers and foliage.
For the plantaholic, the New Year brings new vices. Fortunately, most of them are harmless and the conundrum gardeners are most often faced with is finding a good home for this year’s novelties in an already crowded garden.
One person who is always ready to play to our weakness is nurseryman Dan Heims of Terra Nova Nurseries. Terra Nova is a wholesale nursery situated just 25 miles south of Portland, Oregon; for sourcing plants from them in your area, this page will direct you to a store near you.
When it comes to color, curiosity and the “wow” factor, Heims’s breeding program has developed a formula for success. This year, leading the charge for “something completely new” is Mukgenia Nova™ ‘Flame’. It may sound like you are knee deep in sludge, but Mukgenia is actually the first ever intergeneric hybrid between a Bergenia (pigsqueak) and Mukdenia ‘Crimson Fans’.
Mukdenia (the parent) is essentially a coral bell (Heuchera) with palmate leaves. Their foliage colors beautifully as the season progresses. The green palmate leaves become tinged with a brilliant red. The only problem, here in our New York climate, is that the foliage senesces rapidly in late summer; particularly when it has been a hot summer.
Over the past few weeks, I have been coordinating with one of my colleagues at the Shop in the Garden regarding some attractive fall options for containers and the garden. We perused the availability lists from one of her vendors and came up with some refreshing changes for late season color. Traditionalists need not venture into our Shop with trepidation—my colleague also ordered plenty of the stalwart fall mums. I, however, was looking for something beyond mums. Here are a few suggestions that we came up with.
One of my first picks was Euphorbia x martinii ‘Ascot Rainbow’. It is an intoxicating variegated spurge that looks good from spring until frost. The variegated foliage is a green-grey color (more green with smoky overtones) with creamy yellow edges. In the fall, the foliage takes on a pinkish orange autumnal hue. This 20-inch perennial is hardy from zone 5 – 9 and is deer and rabbit resistant, as well as being drought tolerant. It makes a wonderful addition to a mixed container display as well as growing beautifully in your mixed perennial border.
Shade gardens call to mind stalwart plants such as hostas, ferns, and astilbes. While the Azalea Garden has an interesting array of exquisite hostas and intriguing ferns, it also includes less familiar shade-loving woodland inhabitants.
Many of these plants have interesting foliage that can add texture and color to a shade garden, and a number of them flower later in the season, providing color in the garden long after spring ephemerals and the majority of azaleas have finished their early season show. These woodlanders come in all shapes and sizes, from groundcovers to large perennials, and in a myriad of leaf colors–variegated, deeply veined, and color-tinged–and in a range of textures–fuzzy to matte and glossy.
Mukdenia rossii 'Karasuba' with Beesia deltophylla in the back
Mukdenia rossii ‘Crimson Fans’ (Karasuba) is one of two unusual plants in the Azalea Garden with foliage that gets a beautiful red tinge as the season progresses. A relative of the coral bell (Heuchera), mukdenia has been available for a few years from specialty growers and is now becoming more widely available. The main attraction of mukdenia is its spectacular fan-shaped leaves that turn red around the edges in mid-summer and continue coloring into fall. Panicles of small white flowers that resemble foam flowers rise above the plant in early spring. Mukdenia grows 12-16 inches tall and fans out 12-24 inches, like coral bells, into a nice clump. In the garden it will perform best in moist, well-drained soil in part shade. The plant pairs nicely with late flowering red astilbe such as Astilbe x arendsii ‘August Light’. Mukdenia is native to Korea and China, where it grows on slopes and in rocky ravines at the side of streams.
Beesia deltophylla, a native of China, is another plant that gets red hues as the summer progresses. Beesia makes a wonderful evergreen groundcover in a woodland garden when planted in drifts. The foliage is spectacular: The leaves are large, glossy, and heart-shaped, with deep veins that give them a rippled, puckered appearance. Beesia looks like a mutant European ginger (Asarum europaeum) on steroids (in a good way). Small white flowers appear in summer on tall stems and are fairly insignificant compared with the foliage. Beesia will grow in many soil types but does best in moist, well-drained soil in part to full shade; it grows 10-15 inches tall and spreads up to 24 inches wide.
Syneilesis aconitifolia, the shredded umbrella plant, pokes its head out of the ground in spring wearing a fuzzy white coat that disappears as it matures. The leaves open like an umbrella to reveal large, heavily dissected, lacy leaves, looking like a mayapple (Podophyllum – See “Geographic Diversity In the Azalea Garden” for more on these plants) that has passed through a paper shredder. The shredded umbrella plant will thrive in part to full shade and can tolerate relatively dry soil. It reaches 2 feet in height. Its dissected foliage looks great when paired with a broad-leaved hosta that has smooth or puckered foliage.
Cardiandra alternifolia
In the Azalea Garden are some unusual members of the hydrangea family, all recognizable by their hydrangea-like foliage. Two are perennials that reach about 18 inches tall. Cardiandra alternifolia flowers in late summer with pretty pale-pink flowers reminiscent of a lace-cap hydrangea. Deinanthe caerulea ‘Blue Wonder’ flowers in midsummer with large, nodding lavender flowers. It has the demeanor of a hellebore. Both these woodlanders like part shade and moderate to moist soil. The sub-shrub Platycrater arguta reaches 2 feet tall and 2 feet wide. It flowers in midsummer with white blooms that resemble mock orange (Philadelphus) or deutzia (Deutzia).
Dealing with Deer
Aconitum krylovii, a monkshood from Russia, is a woodland plant that is deer-resistant–or at least has the promise of being so. It can be grown in full sun to full shade and matures to a height of 2 feet. Its deep-green, deeply veined, maple-like foliage is attractive even when the plant is not in bloom. White to pale-yellow flowers tinged with green open mid to late summer.
Leucosceptrum stelipillum 'Ogon'
Both deer and rabbits tend to avoid members of the mint family and so may also pass up Leucosceptrum japonicum ‘Variegatum’ and Leucosceptrum stelipillum ‘Ogon’, Japanese shrub mints. The ‘Variegatum’ has brilliant chartreuse-and-green variegated foliage that brightens up any shade garden. ‘Ogon’ has yellow-green foliage that is equally as impressive. Both produce pale-mauve flowers late in the season, September to October, and reach 2-3 feet tall.
Trachystemon orientalis
Rabdosia longituba, trumpet spurflower, also in the mint family, looks similar to many late season ornamental salvias. This relative has an open and airy vase-shaped habit. It grows to 3-4 feet tall with long sprays of tubular lavender flowers that appear from October into November. It tolerates dry soils, does best in part shade, and pairs nicely with Japanese anemone (Anemone japonica).
The Azalea Garden has many other interesting exotic woodland plants to explore. Creamy-yellow flowered Salvia koyame blooms from September to frost while the penstemon-like purple-pink blooms of the Chelonopsis yagiharana begin in August and last into October. For early season color try the elegant Asian twinleaf (Jeffersonia dubia), with its lavender cup-shaped flowers and lobed, red-edged foliage, or the tough, weed-smothering Trachystemon orientalis, with its borage-blue spring flowers and large heart-shaped leaves.