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GARDEN PRODUCT HOME
1.GARDEN CONTAINERS?
2.PAST AND PRESENT
3.PLACES FOR POTS
4.CONTAINERS UNLIMITED
5.SOIL MIXTURES
6.DAY CARE
7.GERANIUMS GALORE
8.TUBEROUS BEGONIAS
9.SPLENDID FUCHSIAS
10.PETUNIAS
11.ACCENT AND SCREENING 12.HERBS AND VEGETABLES
13.BEAUTIFUL POT PLANTS
14.WINDOW BOXES
15.HANGING BASKETS
16.ROOFTOP GARDENS
17.PLANTERS
18.PLACES OF BUSINESS
19.CITY BEAUTIFICATION
RESOURCES
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3. Places for Pots and Planters
Nearly every house and garden presents numerous attractive settings for container plants. Suburban gardens, estates, small city backyards, and summer cottages—all can be enhanced by this type of gardening. A few of the seemingly endless possibilities include entranceways, steps, courtyards, walls, rooftops, balconies, patios, breezeways, lawns, driveways, walks, sundecks, windowsills, porches, summer houses, even tree stumps.
Let us start with the entrance, a focal point for every house. A simple arrangement consists of similar container plants at each side of the doorway. H the house is informal, painted tubs will make a cheerful note, while urns or ornamental pots are more appropriate if the architecture is formal. The arrangement, however, need not be symmetrical, since a single container at either side, particularly if the doorway is off-center, is pleasing. A large specimen can be balanced by a grouping of small pots, and various other interesting combinations can be worked out. Sometimes, the front entranceway can qualify as a summering-out place for house plants, especially if they are not exposed to strong sun and wind.
Side and rear entrances can also serve as backgrounds for pot plants in casual groupings. For sunny steps, consider tubs of petunias, or dwarf dahlias, or boxes of herbs to be used in cooking. Tuberous begonias, fuchsias, patient Lucy, and fragrant nicotiana solve the problem of what to grow in shade.
Porches and Patios
Porches or verandas, traditional or contemporary in style, offer numerous settings for pots, window boxes, and hanging baskets. Indeed, the entire container garden can be concentrated there so that plants can be easily cared for. If the porch is open on three sides, it will afford exposures to suit a variety of specimens.
The patio or terrace, beside or beyond the house, where family and friends gather to eat or rest, is an ideal location. If it is formal, select clipped evergreens and arrange pots in symmetrical rows, perhaps lined up against the house or along the edge of the terrace. If the site is informal, make casual groupings of one or two tall plants with smaller ones in front. Either way, allow for a few large plants in tubs or boxes for accent and height.

ILLUSTRATION IX
Potted tree heliotropes and geraniums on the picturesque well head in the small city garden of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Townsend of Beacon Hill, Boston.

ILLUSTRATION X
Tree fuchsia and potted pink geraniums on the balcony and terrace of the courtyard of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Townsend on Boston's historic Beacon Hill.
Walks and Driveways
Container plants may line walks and paths that lead to the house, garage, or garden. They can rest on paved areas along fences and walls and on driveways where they are not in the way. If the driveway adjoins the foundation of the house, plant containers may be placed there. In their small city lot, Mr. and Mrs. Moses Alpers of Salem, Massachusetts, closed off their driveway with two three-foot wooden, custom-made planters and joined them with a low picket gate that serves as an entrance. The driveway area beyond, transformed into a summer terrace, is decorated with pots of geraniums, heliotropes, passion plants, and tomato vines. Lounge chairs are stored in winter in the unused garage, which also provides storage space for the planters which have wheels.Tops of Walls
Tops of garden or terrace walls are ideal places, too. Put small pots and boxes on tall, narrow walls and large containers on low, broad surfaces. Hanging plants of ivy geraniums in the sun and fuchsias in the shade will cascade from walls, as they do in the patios of Spain, Portugal, and Italy. On Rhodes, I recall a fifteen-foot wall topped with a row of thirty gleaming green tin cans full of roses and other flowers.Rooftops and Sundecks
Think of what you can do with rooftops and sundecks where considerable space is usually available. Here sun-loving plants, like geraniums, most annuals, cacti, and succulents can be grown, but, again, include large specimens for height to give a garden feeling. A few large boxes and planters for trees and shrubs are sufficient but be sure to include some evergreens for year-round green.In Flower Borders
Some gardeners like to insert container plants in flower borders to introduce unusual specimens, such as tropicals in the North. Large tubs can be set at the corners and small pots may be scattered among the permanent flowering plants. One gardener keeps a supply of potted pink Fiat Enchantress geraniums on hand to fill bare spots in her wide borders, moving them about as needed. Most of the geraniums are in four-inch clay pots, but there are larger specimens for the center of each grouping. To make them secure, pots are sunk a few inches into the ground.

ILLUSTRATION XI
Double white petunias and pink geraniums in a white window box attached to the yellow house of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. B. Hal-vorson. The same flowers are repeated in the clay pots below.