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Tour: 2020 Landscape Contest Winner

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2020 Contest Winner 1
Spreading Acacia
Blue Yucca
Eastern Redbud
Common Juniper
Spreading Acacia

Common name:Spreading Acacia
Botanical name:Acacia redolens

This is a fast, aggressive shrub or groundcover used frequently for embankments. It grows to 3'-5' tall and 10'-15' wide and can be used in large-scale plantings and in difficult situations. It is very hardy. Leaves are gray green with a vanilla fragrance when crushed. Light, creamy yellow flowers are borne in globular clusters in late winter. This plant is from Western Australia.

Blue Yucca

Common name:Blue Yucca
Botanical name:Yucca rigida

Evergreen treelike yucca grows at a moderate rate to 12' x 5'. Distinctive, blue gray leaves have sharp tips. Striking bluish color makes it a great accent. White clusters of flowers appear on tall stalks late spring to summer. Accepts full sun. Native to the Chihuahuan Desert in Mexico.

Eastern Redbud

Common name:Eastern Redbud
Botanical name:Cercis canadensis

This small, deciduous tree with a rounded head is covered with small flowers of a rose pink color in the spring before the appearance of heart-shaped leaves. It can grow to 25' tall with an equal spread. It has a low branching habit with a rounded form. Leaves turn yellow green in the fall.

Common Juniper

Common name:Common Juniper
Botanical name:Juniperus communis

A nice evergreen that has many forms and cultivars. Usually a low, shrub form. Blue gray, prickly foliage. Fruits about 1/4", bluish black, that may appear in fall. Drought resistant in deep, light soil. Depending on cultivar, plants may be 5-15' tall and 9-12' wide. Established plants are deer resistant, drought tolerant, useful for erosion control, tolerates air pollution and rocky, shallow soil.

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2020 Contest Winner 1
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Soils and Compost:

Physical weed control, including mulching, or hand removal protects the watershed from harmful chemicals.

Integrated Pest Management:

Remove irrigation water and fertilizer from areas where you don't want weeds to grow.