I Love The Nightlife
The days
are getting shorter. I know I know….the days are not actually getting shorter,
we are just having fewer hours of day light. Anyway, the days are definitely
getting shorter, which makes you think that you have less time to enjoy your
garden. These longer evenings can give you an opportunity to enjoy and
experience you garden in a whole different way. A night garden, plays with your
senses, causing your eyes to focus on luminous blooms, touching foliage and
catching the scent of a hidden flower. A night garden can be a totally separate
part of your garden or it can be incorporated into the existing one.
When the
sunsets in the evening, the garden usually fades with the light, but with
certain plants you can bring out the beauty of the garden in the moonlight.
White
blooms, such as large mop head hydrangeas, take on a luminous glow in the
evening light. Yellows and pinks can take on a beautiful glow at night that
they cannot achieve in the bright sunlight. Patterned flowers and variegated
foliage become more visible at night. One of my favorites is Minuteman Hosta,
with its dark green foliage, deeply edged in white, which stands out in the
half-light of dusk.
If you
are looking for a night blooming plant, look no further than the Moonflower
vine. It is an annual vine which can be prolific in its growth. It produces six
inch pure white trumpet flowers that unfurl in slow motion every night at
sunset. The blooms only last one day, I mean evening, and remain fragrant well
into the night. It may be a fast growing vine, but it doesn’t freely reseed
itself, so save some seeds for next year. Along with the Moonflower, other
flowers wait until nightfall to release their perfume into the air, such as Nicotiana,
Night Phlox and Four-o’clocks.
A night
garden takes on an exotic appearance at dusk with different sounds, smells and
sights and can extend your garden enjoyment for a couple hours longer each day.
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