Every garden-maker should be an artist along his own lines. That is the only possible way to create a garden, irrespective of size or wealth.
(Vita Sackville-West)

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Container Garden Idea: Multi-container designs

Colorful Camouflage
Full/Part Sun
2 Cherry Blossom Begonias
2 Spellbound White trailing impatiens
1 ‘Purple Majesty” Ornamental Millet
2 King Tut grass

If you're using containers to solve garden problems and have a large area you wish to fill, using several containers which work together to create one large combination is an inexpensive and easy solution. Not only can you create virtually any size or shape that you need, but you can vary the size and heights of the pots to add interest and structure.

In my previous post, I mentioned that I had a problem area in the back of my house. The electrical/phone/cable boxes all converge in one area. Because of the buried wires in that area, I’ve decided to use a multi-container design as camouflage. I
started with 3 large containers placed in a triangle shape in front of the eyesore electrical boxes. ‘Purple Majesty’ ornamental millet is the focal point at the point of the triangle. Once again, I stretch this plant out of its comfort zone. It’s a full sun plant but does well on the east side of my house where it gets 6 to 7 hours of morning sun. Ornamental millet is a fast growing annual that reaches up to 5 feet tall. It also has broad deep purple leaves which brings much drama and substance to the design.

King Tut grass goes in the two containers behind the millet. King Tut grass is a real work horse plant that does well in a variety of conditions. It’s a full sun plant that does well in partial sun and it’s a water plant that does extremely well in drought conditions. One caution is this plant grows fast and gets huge. It will take over a container so either make sure you have a large enough container that it won’t crowd out your other plants (a successful container combo with this plant was in an old bathtub!) or plant it alone and combine that planter with other containers. I plant it in an 18” square container and the root ball takes up the entire container by the end of summer.

In this case, both the millet and the King Tut are the perfect plants. They are fast growing, tall plants that cover up what I would rather not look at while still enabling easy access to those boxes. The millet offers a strong vertical element with dramatic foliage as the King Tut fills in behind also adding height and texture. Because these plants grow so large and I have a great deal of ground to cover, my fillers and spillers go in their own separate pots as well. I use 4 medium sized containers around the base of the larger three.

In the two side containers, I planted Cherry Blossom Begonias. I love this plant! It is a fibrous begonia that grows quite large and is covered with delicate pink and white double blossoms. For me these blossoms changed from the bi-color in the spring to dark pink later in the season. Whether that was due to sunlight or maturity, I don’t know. At any rate, the result was stunning against the dark purple of the millet.

The last two pots contained Spellbound white trailing impatiens. These took the heat and sun much better than the Fanfare variety I’ve used in the past and were also more drought tolerant and faster growing. In a word, gorgeous!

While I consider his combination a success, I will move the Cherry Blossom Begonias front and center next year for two reasons. One, they are gorgeous alone and against the millet and two, putting the impatiens on the side will cover even more space horizontally which is better for the space. I also experimented with 2 millet in one container which I won't do again. I lost the vertical element without adding significant screening. By the end of the summer it just looked crowded.


Using several containers to create a plant combination can add height, drama and texture to your landscape. Use them as focal points, camouflage or to cover large areas.

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