Mar 21 2025
News from Kruse: March 2025
By Karen King
Intermingling, the act of combining different flower shapes, adds diversity for plants and insects alike, according to Kathryn Deery, Head Horticulturalist of Lurie Garden in Chicago. She advises planting grasses along with flowers helps diversify root types, improving soil structure for all. For example, coneflowers have long linear roots as opposed to grasses fibrous roots.
Plant densely, using groundcover plants to cover soil until other plants mature.
Consider “temporal sequencing”. What blooms, when?
Repeating plant designs, “block planting,” throughout the space, gives continuity and cohesion and is visually restful. The “thriller, chiller, spiller” method is not just for pots. It can be the foundation for the block planting repeated throughout the space.
These design principles are evident even at this time of year at the Kruse Garden. The bones of this garden are so well thought out, even before the growing season gets going full speed, a walk through is enjoyable.
Everyone is welcome to visit and walk through Kruse Garden or come on gardening work days: Wednesdays at 9am, and 2nd Saturday of the month from 9-11:30am.
Get ideas you can use in your own garden, get to know other WCGC members, and help maintain the beautiful garden at the Kruse House.
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