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    Sweet Carolina Medusa Green creates a stunning hanging basket partnership at the Young’s Plant Farm 2021 Garden Tour in Auburn AL. Here it is combined with Rocapulco Coral Reef impatiens and Summer Wave Large Violet torenia in dazzling fashion.
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    Sweet Caroline Medusa Green ornamental sweet potato with its seven lobes creates architectural weeping look similar to a Japanese Maple yet mystical looking similar to bamboo in this mixed container.
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    Illusion Midnight Lace has won 108 awards with its habit and deep dark purple foliage. Here the contrast is dramatically partnered in a container with a golden western arborvitae.

Sweet Caroline Medusa Green Award Winning Architectural Form

Sweet Caroline Medusa Green is an architectural plant of the first order. I know what you are thinking, isn’t that a sweet potato? The answer is, a-hearty yes and AMEN, thank you! Sweet Caroline Medusa Green is like no other sweet potato.

Let’s chase a rabbit for a second. Do a Google search and ask what is an architectural plant and you will see there is no consensus? In fact, it is really a fun read. But two plants that got a fair share of suggestions were bamboo and weepers like Japanese maples.

I furthered my questioning of Google and asked what are some architectural plants for walls. I have a long rock wall in the backyard and I am always thinking about just the right look. My question was answered with plants that had exotic foliage up against the wall, but there was one suggestion for using Silver Falls dichondra to drape over a wall. So, I contend if Silver Falls could qualify under the moniker of an architectural plant, then certainly a sweet potato could.

This really got started the other day when I stopped to look at Sweet Caroline Medusa Green in a container at my front entry. Oh My Gosh it looked like an elegant weeper, maybe a bamboo, maybe a Japanese Maple. The structure presented from the seven lobed leaves is unmatched in elegance and beauty. Then I went to look at those I had planted along the wall and found the same. I had been too busy to stop and smell the roses if you catch my drift.

So, I proceeded to ask my color design guru son James why aren’t you using Sweet Caroline Medusa Green sweet potato. He said Dad we don’t want to plant things that cause us to make extra efforts to maintain or cut back. BINGO I win, these have such a compact habit you will not need to. We can only hope that more colors will be added forming a ‘Medusa Group’.

Sweet Caroline Medusa Green is typical in sweet potato height but only spreads to about 30 inches. It makes for incredible mixed baskets too!

When I visited the Young’s Plant Farms 2021 Garden Tour in Auburn AL there it was a glorious basket with Sweet Caroline Medusa Green combined with Rockapulco Coral Reef rose form impatiens and Summer Wave Large Violet Torenia. That is the wake-up call, if a busy place like Young’s Plant Farm can do it, we can too! Better yet probably Young’s Plant Farm will grow a gazillion to sell to your local nursery and you can buy it and then act like you put it together.

So, by now you’ve got it and that is Sweet Caroline Medusa Green is the best ever ornamental sweet potato and has already won dozens of awards. Well hold your horses, and keep in mind Illusion Emerald Lace and Illusion Midnight Lace. They have the same tight habit eliminating the constant maintenance. Both have won over 100 awards.

Like all ornamental sweet potatoes Sweet Caroline Medusa Green likes fertile, well-drained soil, and that’s especially true in the landscape. This usually means incorporating 3 to 4-inches of organic matter into heavier clay soil. A container with potting soil is like a dream come true.

Plant your Sweet Caroline Medusa Green transplants at the same depth they are growing in the container, spacing 12-18 inches apart, expecting 10-12 inches in height with a spread of 30 to 36-inches. These really are in the category of easy to grow and tough-as-nails. Even at that plan on giving them water during those hot dry periods. The sweet potato grows back quickly if you need to trim to manage its look in mixed baskets and containers or if it has outgrown its allotted space as a ground cover.

Even though it is the end of July you got a lot of time to enjoy these sweet potatoes should you see some at the garden center. You could not choose a better late summer pick me up for beds or containers. Follow me on Facebook @NormanWinterTheGardenGuy for more photos and garden inspiration.

Dripping Springs Century-News

P.O. Box 732
Dripping Springs, Texas 78620

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