The 4 Second Landscape
By Shirley Cole
Most
of us who live in houses along a street own a 4 second landscape.
Some of us only have a 3 second landscape. There are homes that
only have a 1 second or even a zero landscape. Think about it.
As we glide down a residential street on our way home or to work,
there are certain homes that we take the time to enjoy and view
their lovely landscapes. We pass these houses in approximately
4 seconds. We do not have time to take in the small details, or
the busy items. We enjoy a balance of plants to the house, pleasing
textures, and exciting color that relates to the house. Examples:
Pink crepe myrtles with a backdrop of a pale rose colored bricked
home, or dramatic white annuals against a formal grey and white
home with dark green boxwoods.
A 4 second landscape must quickly send its message of color, drama,
architecture and mood. It needs simplicity, a clear definition
and neatness. Color or drama at the front door is very important.
Mood is largely set by the trees or lack there of. If the yard
is devoid of foliage trees, the mood is light and bright in the
cool season, and warm to hot in the summer. Sun perennials and
shrubs can always be planted to enhance the landscape. If shade
reigns, the mood of a shady yard will provide coolness for the
home and foliage in the hot Georgia summer. The trees will shed
leaves in the fall to admit light and the sun’s warmth on
a home in the cold months of the year. However, the leaves and
debris that a tree sheds during the year is a maintenance chore
that must be done to maintain a clean landscape. Limbs must be
pruned up to provide a high canopy. Too much shade will reduce
or destroy all hopes of flower color. Large, overgrown shrubbery
will obscure a home completely. The home becomes a 1 second, or
a zero landscape if it goes unnoticed.
The successful 4 second landscape might have a large planting
of Daylilies on a bank with Juniper interspersed to keep it looking
attractive during winter. Daffodils in the early spring are the
only plants allowed to enter the landscape before the Daylilies
bloom. Plants that give us their incredible color, but only for
a little while look best when they are boosted with a reliable
year round green. Juniper is a good example, which carries on after
the blooms fold and their foliage browns. One could also hold that
excitement by adding an Autumn Fern, always reliable and it will
last the year in your bed. I would like to give you four major
plants for this bed: Daylilies, Autumn Fern, Tet a Tete Daffodils,
and a low Juniper (Procumbens or Parsonii). You may want to add
a few two man boulders to the hill and it will have a real personality.
(A two man boulder takes two men to lift and place it). You now
have a 4 second landscape.
A 3 second landscape is one that the eye will see, but it is too
busy to be enjoyed by the eye, or too bland. The 2 second landscape
is largely ignored and sometimes is not observed at all. It simply
does not attract the eye.
We are lucky to live in a climate that will tolerate year round
color. A 4 second landscape has a tough time looking flower pretty
all the time. We must choose our plants and colors carefully to
present them in our landscape. That is why we use annuals in color
beds to boost our color presentations. Annuals have a short life
and must be changed out every six months.
Nature is a constant happening. Next month I will talk about fall
color and why you must plant foxgloves at that time.