Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Cicada Plague is a Bust in McLean, North Arlington, Vienna and Great Falls




If you are like most people, you have been dreading the pending onslaught of cicadas. For months, news reports have been lamenting the eventual plague of cicadas which was to befall Northern Virginia. When the articles prophesied the cicada plague, they failed to mention that we are in the northern most reaches of Brood II territory. To view a map displaying Brood II’s territory, click here.

As a landscape company, we obviously think about these types of issues in regards to how they will affect us and our customers. The cicada problem affects landscape companies in a few different ways. First, the obvious problem is that you have crews out building patios, cutting lawns and installing plant material while actively dealing with the infestation. There’s nothing we as a company can do to get ready for that, other than to know that when the cicadas come, it will have some effect on our productivity. The not-so-obvious effect the cicada forecast has had on our business, is that we have had customers who have chosen to postpone planting jobs until the Fall due to the fear that the cicada would adversely affect their new plant material. On the surface, this concern seems somewhat rational, but as you take a closer look, you’ll see that the delay may have caused more harm than good. First off, the cicadas do minimal damage to plant material. They don’t bother evergreens and for the most part they leave shrubs and perennials alone. They do, however, burrow their eggs into the terminal branches of deciduous trees. This has a marginally negative affect on small to mid-sized trees such as Dogwoods, River Birch, Eastern Red Bud and Crepe Myrtles. With the exception of the Dogwood, the rest of those plants have such high growth rates that the plant quickly outgrows what little damage was caused. The unforeseen problem that some homeowners will encounter that chose to delay planting, is that we will be getting the plants from a nursery which may have been affected by Brood II. So if we had purchase the plants in the spring and installed them, they would have summered safely here inside the Beltway, free from the effects of the cicadas. Now this Fall, we will be buying plant material which was grown further south and will potentially have some of the tip damage associated with cicadas.


If you were looking forward to the cicadas, just remember that good things come to those who wait. Northern Virginia, including McLean, North Arlington, Vienna and Great Falls, is well within the boundaries of Brood X which made it’s last appearance here in 2004, and will return in 2021. To see a map displaying the footprint of each of the broods in the Mid Atlantic, click here.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Why does everyone in McLean, Virginia love Knockout Roses?



I have been in the residential landscape design and install business for 22 years and in all that time our footprint of work has stayed constant. We work in McLean, North Arlington, City of Falls Church, Vienna and Great Falls. When I meet with a potential client for a landscape design consultation, we work through the various categories of landscape install. As the conversation focuses on plant material, almost without exception the client gives a list of criteria that they want their planting job to meet. The top three things on that list are always 1) lots of color, 2) low maintenance, and 3) hardy. The Knockout Rose gets an A+ in each of those categories. 

Other than needing a significant amount of sunlight, the Knockout Rose is foolproof. It's inexpensive, it grows quickly and produces an enormous amount of color from Memorial Day to Thanksgiving. I cannot think of another plant which produces more color over a longer period of time. The Knockout Rose comes in 7 different varieties, ranging in color from dark red through violet to pink, and there's even a yellow Knockout Rose.  

After 15 years of cross-breeding, in 1988 William Radler created the Knockout Rose. It was not until 2000 that the Knockout Rose started to gain recognition, and since then it has become the most popular rose and one of the most popular landscape plants among all plant material. Regarding the Knockout Rose, William Radler himself said, "Despite the great possibilities for failure, the burdensome work, and the lack of glamour, my hobby became a passion. Even with successes, it didn't take me long to realize that growing roses would be more fun if it entailed less work."