Do you collect special succulents that you’d like to grow outdoors in your garden? If you’re in Southern CA, do visit the cactus and succulent garden at Sherman Library and Gardens in Corona Del Mar, CA. It showcases so many great tips and ideas!
Imagine…a dear friend who lives in LA had never been to Sherman Gardens! I’m in San Diego, so an Orange County botanical garden was the perfect place to meet to celebrate the fact that we’re finally the same age. (She’s a math teacher but kindly didn’t say that I’m six months older and always will be.) So on a bright early-spring day, Pat Roach and I became ladies-who-lunch at Sherman’s la-dee-dah garden cafe.
Initially a home that later became a nursery, Sherman’s 2.2 acres now are a venue for weddings and other events. It includes lathe houses, beds of annuals and roses, fountains, a koi pond and tropicals. It’s on busy Coast Highway, but once beyond the fence, you’re in a different world. Outdoor areas are themed and make smart use of every square foot.
Pat and I first met when she took my design class, so at Sherman we spent most of our time in the cactus and succulent garden, which beautifully blends specimen plants with rocks and boulders. Designer Matthew Maggio is a horticulturist knowledgeable about how the plants grow in habitat, which is always a boon to effective placement and cultivation. Matt redesigned and replanted the 1,200-square foot area 12 years ago, and continues to help it stay looking good.
One of its focal points would work in any size garden: a large, shallow terra-cotta pot set amid boulders. Burro-tail sedum and Senecio repens cascade out of it, and echeverias surround the lovely agave in its center. Photos I’ve taken of the pot over the years show a succession of agaves, each variegated to echo a Furcraea foetida ‘Mediopicta’ nearby.
My photos from earlier visits also show a large Dasylirion wheeleri midway down the garden’s long, narrow bed. It has since been replaced with bromeliads, aloes and agaves, perhaps so visitors can better appreciate how blue Senecio serpens forms a meandering river and visually unifies the bed’s diverse plantings.
Sherman Library and Gardens is at 2647 E. Pacific Coast Hwy, Corona del Mar, CA. Hours: 10 to 4 daily. Closed major holidays. Free parking. Adults $5.
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Succulent Design Ideas from Sherman Gardens
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