5 PLANTS TO MAKE YOUR WINTER GARDEN POP

The garden in winter can be rather dull and uninspiring. Summer flowers have faded and if you have completed the fall cleanup you may be left with tidy beds but no color or foliage until the plants reappear in the spring. There are various ways you can avoid this blank period as Dave from Growing the Home Garden website explains. His five plants light up the winter in different ways. Berries, stems, flowers and foliage are all featured as is bark on his sixth choice.

When you look out at your garden in the winter what do you see? Is it dull and drab with little or no interest? Or does it have something in it that pops and makes your garden standout in the neighborhood? What might be the difference between that boring winter landscape and the awesome winter garden is the plants. Winter garden plants can add a lot of impact to your landscape. Plants with berries, green foliage, or interest stems add the element of winter interest to the garden. What winter garden plants should you add for maximum impact? I?ll detail a few options for you.

Winter Garden Plants

Holly ? for the foliage and berries.

For the purposes of this post we can talk about two main types of holly deciduous and evergreen. Both are great for Snow-in-December-Holly-12-11-08winter color but are significantly different this time of year. Evergreen hollies like ?Foster? holly or ?Buford? holly have waxy green leaves and red berries which are a classic winter plant look. Deciduous hollies loose all their leaves but are full of berries which maximizes their impact. Hollies are dioecious which means either male or female and you would need one of each to actually get berry production.
 

Red Twig Dogwood ? for the stems.

Red twig dogwoods are one of my favorite winter garden plants. Their stems are bright red and look great against an evergreen backdrop. The older stems need pruned back every now and then to retain the bright red stems on the younger branches. Red twig dogwood flowers are not extremely showy like Cornus florida is but can still be of some interest in the summer garden.
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Image source: Michael MK Khor