MAY30,2008ju§t|QVt|l7 Save the Water for the Slip 'n' Slide Ways to help your garden through Portland's dry summers ith the mid-May heat wave, gardens have been shocked out of their sleepy, cool slumber and into blazing heat we usually associate with August. I’ve had to drag out the hose earlier than 1 can recall. But sadly, I’ve watched the tender new growth on many plants shrivel up and flounder with the scorching sun. Yikes! There are a variety of things you can do to ensure your garden is set for Portland’s dry, warm summers. Here are a few: • Plan for it. Get those soaker hoses or drip irrigation in now. If you get them in early, the garden will grow up and around them, and no one will even know there are irrigation systems in there. Both soaker and drip irrigation deliver a slow, steady release of water, right where you want it: at the base of the plants. And even better? You plug and play—meaning you hook them up, turn them on and walk away. You can even design your drip irrigation to be set on a timer. Vacation? No problem. Your garden will still be taken care of. An excellent option for drought-tolerant planting is Cytisus Battandieri, also called Pineapple Broom. And when I say plan for it, I also mean plant for it. I’m always on the lookout for drought-tolerant or xeriscaping plants. This means they don’t need much, or any, supplemental summer watering. Examples of good choices for our area include many of the gorgeous salvias, like Purple Rain and Black and Blue, Agastache (also called hum­ mingbird mint), Lamb’s Ears and Sedum. A favorite in our garden is Cytisus Battandieri, also called Pineapple Broom. It’s not a horrible self-seeder like its naughty cousin, but with a lineage coming from the Mediterranean, it’s a perfect fit for our dry summers. It needs lit­ tle to no supplemental watering and is always a show-stopper. And flowers that drip with nectar and smell like pineapple? I love it. Are you still watering massive amounts of lawn? Time to throw in the towel and either embrace our dormant brown lawns in the summer or get rid of that stuff and plant a real garden. Lawns can be the most vicious consumers of water and chemicals, and in beauti­ ful, green Portland, you have so many other options. But if you’re still hooked on the crack, I mean lawn, know this: You don’t have to water every day. In fact, Metro’s online resources for natural gar­ dening recommend watering deeply but infrequently. In fact, they say your lawn only needs about an inch a week. • Mulch for it. A nice, thick mulch of garden compost on top of your beds locks in moisture and keeps the soil from drying out. Plus, it provides the extra rewards of hiding weeds. We’ve been getting our compost from Best Buy in Hillsboro, and its “Supreme Tillamook Com­ post” has the bonus of Tillamook manure, providing plenty of good nitrogen to our clay-based soil. Or, if you’re working on a smaller scale, Fred Meyer carries a nice selection of bagged compost. If you heed to pace yourself, no problem. Just know it pays off in the long run. • Water wisely. How to water: Don’t blast a hose over everything. Grab a beverage of your choice and relax your mind for a calm and reflective time with the hose. Slow and deep is the way to go, watering deeply to encourage roots to go deeper into the ground, not stay up at the surface. And watch that aim! Go for getting water to the very base of the plants, not on the foliage. Wet leaves can breed disease, and plants generally are getting their water intake from their roots, so you want to get as close to those as possible. Sprinklers on a garden? Really ineffective. When to water: Get up early this summer and do a little morn­ ing meditation as you water. It’s the best time of day to moisturize your garden, letting the water seep in before our hottest time of the day, which is actually 5 p.m. If you water in the middle of the day, be prepared to lose a lot to evaporation. Evening watering might be your only option; just try to aim for the roots, as described above. I once told a friend I was using soaker hoses and felt so much better not being tied to a hose every summer night. She said she’d never consider soakers or irrigation because she found watering by hose relaxing. I’ve laughed to myself many times about that con­ versation, because I can’t imagine hand-watering a garden the size of ours. With a little careful planning, our soaker hoses help out considerably and the hand-watering can be kept to minimum. That leaves more time to rest and relax and visit in the garden. Isn’t that why we built this garden, anyway? • L e A nn L ocher gardens like a fiend in her North Portland garden. She can be reached at sassy gardener^ gmail.com. 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