February 16, 2013
'Perennial Diva' recommends garden showstoppers
Little Lanterns and Pink Lanterns are shorter varieties of columbine.
Amsonia Bluestar is a sun lover.
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All gardeners want their flowerbeds to put on a show. Like any Broadway production, that requires some star attractions.

Stephanie Cohen calls those "plants with bling." And the good news, she says, is that plenty of easy-care native plants have that kind of star power.

Cohen is an author and educator who calls herself the Perennial Diva.

"You gotta have a few stars in your garden every season" -- plants with outstanding attributes like color or form that demand attention, Cohen said. They add to a garden what the right scarf or jewelry adds to a basic black dress.

For the divas to stand out, a garden also needs filler plants, which she likened to the chorus. Otherwise your garden would be a little like Beyoncé, JLo and Mariah Carey performing an ensemble version of the national anthem. They'd all be clamoring for attention.

Now that it's garden-planning season, I thought I'd share a few of my favorites from Cohen's list. Prepare to be wowed.

  • Velvet Queen wild ginger (Asarum shuttleworthii var. Harperi'Velvet Queen,' sometimes categorized by the genus name Hexastylis). This plant's dark green leaves with silver markings make for a stunning ground cover.
  • Unlike more common ground covers, however, wild ginger isn't evergreen. "Get over it," Cohen said. Who looks at ground cover in the winter, anyhow?

  • Little Lanterns or Pink Lanterns columbine (Aquilegia canadensis'Little Lanterns' or 'Pink Lanterns'). Both are shorter columbines -- little lanterns with red and yellow flowers, pink lanterns with pink. These spring bloomers prefer light shade, but Cohen has seen them thrive in full sun.
  • But beware: "They are promiscuous," she said. They'll cross-pollinate and develop new colors, which she counsels her audience to just accept and enjoy.

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