Friday, August 13, 2021

My Beach Themed Patio | Hiding in the Shade | 7 Plants for Shade


Photo:  Jeanette Hyden
I am currently working on three container pots to lighten a corner on the patio. So, this is a post about not just shade plants, but the process of dressing the entire patio. As several people in our area are painting their houses to give them a fresh look I am fighting that urge and trying to work with the terra cotta and burnt sienna brick shades. Terra cotta pots, small teak tables, and a copper patina glaze on the cigar shaped pots are some of the colors I am using for a beach themed palette. The beach theme is perfectly suited to our weather this spring!




Seven Plants for Shade

Pot 1: Caladum, pink impatens, Euphorbia "White Manaus", and Silver Falls™ - Dichondra argentea

Pot 2: Dusty miller "New Look", Heuchera 'Carnival watermelon",  Lamium "White Nancy"

Pot 3: (incomplete) 
beginning to emerge Purple spiderwort  (tradescantia pallida 'Purple Heart', aka.  scadeant pallida ), Sweet potato, native violet

Beach Theme on this Patio

  1. edMore on NYTimes.com
The blue and green shades used in South Beach, Florida on a sign from our Galveston trip. 
I found this at the At Home store (as well as the 2 cigar pots). They have an entire beach themed section.  The green cigar pots give color as well as height to the corner and should add interest, whether planted or not.  

My patio style, bâtons de bord de mer

Raiding the remnant bin at Calico Corners, Yes! What is old is new again and at half the price. I draped the fabric over the back of a bench.  I made three pillow covers from the larger floral fabric, noting the "living coral" (Pantone color of the year 2019) splashes on the flower petals. I will try to create a palette at the bottom of this post. 

Ordered earlier this year is a section of fencing to hide the barbecue equipment and provide a white canvas for the oranges and greens. A bit kitsch? Nothing is kitsch if you give it a French name, "Beach Kitsch' in french is, "beach kitsch"; "Patio Kitsch" in french is "patio kitsch"; "Seaside tacky" is bâtons de bord de mer. My patio style is bâtons de bord de mer, "practical", trying very hard to be artistic. Someone let me know if this translates into something torrid as an idiom.

My beloved grabbed two lovely five gallon Kimberley ferns. I have staged one in a terra cotta pot, as yet to be planted in a permanent location.

Color Palette
Pulling the turquoise, aquamarine, teal, cobalt blue, terracotta, and hot pink (think Lily Pulitzer) from mid-century modern, Bohemian, Morocaan, Miami's South Beach,  or southwest color palettes I hope to blend a pleasing color palette to harmonize the patio with the natural environment. I found the designer justina blakeney, and she uses a Bohemian style and her color palette is full of the right shades. She incorporates ferns, tropical plants and succulents in her designs.

Letschipit    put in a picture with a color scheme you love and they match it with paint chips (with color names from Shrrwin Williams).  Love this,! by kelseyinfosilk hues


Turquoise and coral color palette - absolutely gorgeous! Abstract Wall Art - Foter


Long-legged Wadders Populate the View
Looking out from our "beach" are larkspur, abelia, and oak. We, in our neighborhood, have been following six Yellow-crowned Night-herons and a heronry/rookery/aviary of egrets and herons. Below is a nest with a parent sitting patiently and rising to stretch. In a few days we should hear babies chirping. Stay tuned. Also, flying around the neighborhood are white egrets. This is not the first time I have seen them. It is a very interesting spring.





Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, (Nycticorax violacea) on nest
Cornell Lab of orthhinology, Yellow-crowned Night-Heron


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