The Informal Garden in High Summer

Late July on my bank

My north bank in high summer is where most of my native plants reside, along with some favorite hybrid cultivars. By July it is like an orchestra in perpetual warm-up. Colors start trumpeting their hues. Soon soft drumbeats of rhythm and bass notes gets the whole show going, ending with a chorus of anemones in a jubiliant finale. Each year the effect is slightly different, just as a musical score varies with every performance.

I’m a total pushover for this look, I must admit. I live for it all year long. To me, jazzy colors and intricate layers of texture are as uplifting as any piece of music. So what makes a garden invigorating as opposed to visual cacophony? Is it okay to mix annuals and perennials?

First let’s look at technique, then review the best performers.

Blazing Star for Wands of Color

There is nothing quite so spectacular as a meadow of blazing star, their colorful wands punctuating the air like so many exclamation points. Luckily you don’t need a meadow to grow them, and there are species for dry and wet conditions.

Whether you call it blazing star, gayfeather or liatris, this midsummer beauty makes a fun, bold statement no matter where it is — in a meadow, your garden, or a vase.

Liatris spicata species photo by Will Stuart, Blue Ridge Parkway

Liatris is native to North America and a member of the aster family with over fifty species. It blooms in mid to late summer. Most of these are wildflowers of course, most suitable for large gardens and semi-wild meadows. But several have been bred for use in flower gardens.