Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
Article Image Alt Text
  • Article Image Alt Text
  • Article Image Alt Text
    Border columns are like large mounted baskets placed in front of the historical style home. PHOTOS BY NORMAN WINTER
  • Article Image Alt Text
    Flowers are the key to curb appeal and it doesn’t deplete the budget. Plant flowers in pockets of color close to your entrance.

Dripping Gardening

Flowers: A curb appeal that doesn’t deplete the wallet

‘Plant flowers’ was the answer given when the mayor asked a friend of mine in the nursery industry how best to improve the image of the small but growing city. Your first thought might be this would be the obvious answer from someone in the greenhouse industry as they would stand to benefit from this beautification endeavor.

If you do an internet search on curb appeal however, planting flowers is one of the consensus opinions no matter what the source, magazine, tv or industry. It is not only one of the most economical solutions for the pocket book but has one the most immediate returns on the home’s perceived value.

Several years ago, Mississippi State University participated in a multistate project which was quantifying the value of a landscape and included a survey of homeowners. Survey responders were shown an image of a home with a base value of $192,000 with the viewers having the opportunity to evaluate several landscape additions.

In almost every scenario, landscapes with 20 percent annual color added a $1000 value. Homes with landscapes combining evergreens, deciduous, color, and hardscape. brought the homes perceived value to $215,147 an increase of 12.7 percent. This is quite a return for investment.

What would be your definition of curb appeal? Merriam-Webster gives the real definition “the visual attractiveness of a house from the street”.

We want to strive for that special curb appeal that simply makes life more enjoyable. Assuming that you have evergreen plant material in place, that you mow regularly, prune and replenish mulch on an annual basis we then come to the aspect of color.

Remember, in the survey it was just 20 percent color that added a $1000 value in the mind of the consumer. This may represent one of the best returns for the dollar spent and most likely put a spring into your step too!

The most obvious place for pockets of color would be near the front door, porch, patio or deck and in areas where friends and relatives might gather to visit and that location where your visitors park, at the end of the drive.

Long ago the pineapple was the symbol that said welcome to friends, family and visitors. While the pineapple is hardly used today, we convey that same welcoming spirit when we decorate the steps with colorful flowers.

The Garden Guy created front porch flanking containers with Superbells Pomegranate Punch, and Grape Punch calibrachoas along with Lemon Coral sedum with its hundreds of tiny yellow blossoms. This was a really showy display of what we call triadic harmony.

Window boxes, baskets and mixed containers and a new feature called border columns make it easy. It is so simple to put up a coconut coir line window planter actually under a window or a porch railing. My son James, a color guru for a large firm in Columbus created border columns in front of a modern but historical looking home.

The look was really Victorian and each of the large columns featured Supertunia Bordeaux Supertunia Vista Silverberry, Diamond Frost euphorbia and Truffula Pink gomphrena. They fit the client and home perfectly and created that needed curb appeal seen from the street. You won’t have to dig and shovel in the tight compacted soil to have beautiful flowers as you will have your containers filled with rich fertile organic planting mixes.

The end of the drive is an area we have all thrown our hands up in the air in exasperation, of what to do. Remember what the mayor was told, ‘Plant Flowers’. The Garden Guy did just that last October, planting Supertunia Vista Bubblegum, Supertunia Vista Silverberry and Supertunia Vista Paradise along with Hydrangea paniculata, Limelight Prime, Hydrangea Firelight Tidbit as well as Pugster and Miss Molly buddleia. It was stunning in November, survived the winter and dazzling today. Welcome guests!

Dripping Springs Century-News

P.O. Box 732
Dripping Springs, Texas 78620

Phone: (512) 858-4163
Fax: (512) 847-9054