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Home » Let's 'jazz up' our gardens for winter
WINTER GARDEN ... Comments

Let's 'jazz up' our gardens for winter

Thoughtfully place a few built structures and plants that provide winter interest

PUBLISHED ON December 20, 2020

We can add something like this colorful birdhouse for a quick pop of color this winter! (Photo credit: Pixabay)

NORWOOD, Colo. — Most of us are not getting out much right now and/or we are working from home, so we see our own landscapes much more than usual. Are you, like me, experiencing some boredom and some “I miss my summer garden” blues? Consider adding more winter interest to your garden- I am!

Thoughtfully place a few built structures and plants that provide winter interest and food and shelter for birds or other wildlife. This will make our gardens more inviting in winter. When the weather is not hospitable for being outdoors, arrange indoor seating for outdoor viewing, place colorful elements where they can be seen when leaving or returning home from walking the dogs, getting the mail, getting groceries, or just going for a drive. Make use of or plan to create paths that invite a walk through your garden in the winter.

Some built structures that can be added or ‘jazzed up’ are walls, fences, trellises, covered seating areas, raised beds, containers, fountains, sculpture and outbuildings. Consider adding a pop of color with paint or stain to any of these structures to brighten things up. And string lights are not just for Christmas decorations! You can also shine light on things that you want to highlight, like sheds or trees.

Branching form of trees and shrubs, colorful or textured bark, and seed heads on perennials and grasses provide winter interest. Winter color is also in fruit and bark. Some conifer foliage can even change color in the winter!

This trellis isn’t colorful but its presence makes a statement.  Maybe I could paint the chair orange for more interest!
The Playhouse never fails to cheer me up in any season!
There are many beautiful ‘Winter King’ Hawthornes in Grand Junction showing off their red fruits this winter! (photo credit: wikimedia)
One of my favorite pines is Pinus bungeana, lacebark pine. Isn’t the bark coloration beautiful? Denver Botanic Garden has some good specimens. (photo credit: Penn State Extension)
Phlomis russeliana seedheads in winter. Try the Plant Select Phlomis cashmeriana. (Photo Credit: My Wildlife Allotment)

— Yvette Henson, San Miguel Basin, CSU Extension
CO-Horts Blog 

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