Indigenous trees for diverse gardens

This is how you can choose suitable indigenous trees for various garden sizes.

When planting a tree in your garden, there are several things to consider. First, planting a tree is at least a 20 years investment, and you need to do some careful research before digging that hole.

According to Life Landscapes, the best time to plant a tree in South Africa is during March/April or August/September. However, the trees you buy from reputable nurseries should grow whenever they are planted, provided that they are suited to your region. They may take a little longer to establish themselves at other times of the year.

Categories

Before making a choice, it’s essential to distinguish the different tree categories.

Questions to ask before choosing a tree

Composition

Every tree consists of roots, a trunk, branches, leaves, pods or fruits, flowers, and some might have thorns. All of these features can have a significant impact on a garden.

Some trees have fibrous roots, such as fig (ficus) trees, which lift paving and damage infrastructure. However, trees with tap roots – known as dicots – are more popular garden specimens.

Most trees have single stems. The smaller shrubs tend to have multi-stems, but many can be pruned to grow with a single stem.

Trees have adapted to produce different crowns, so your choice will depend on your aim.

Crowns come in these profiles:

Evergreen trees require less clearing of fallen leaves, whereas deciduous trees provide gorgeous autumn colours and free mulch for your soil. The indigenous Combretum species and pompom tree (Dais cotinifolia) are good examples of deciduous trees.

Flowers often make certain trees popular. Nectar-filled flowers attract sunbirds, and pollen packed blossoms bring bees to the garden.

Not all trees are fruit-bearing – some only bear seeds. Fruit trees will attract fruit-eating birds to the garden, but you may need to protect at least some of the fruit for your own use. Traditional fruit trees, like fig trees and lemon trees, are also useful in the garden.

Trees by region

Most indigenous trees can grow in parts of the country to which they are not endemic, but some are only suited to growing in certain conditions.

Suitable trees for frost affected areas include:

Drought-tolerant trees:

Trees suitable for winter rainfall areas:

Salt tolerant trees:

Colours

Plant Cape chestnut (Calodendrum capense) and river indigo (Indigofera jucunda) for a pink palette garden.

For a red garden, choose Erythrina species, Natal bottlebrush (Greyia sutherlandii) and tree fuschia (Halleria lucida).

For a white palette – or moon garden – forest elder, Transvaal gardenia (Gardenia thunbergia) and common rothmania (Rothmannia capensis) are ideal.

Create a purple palette landscape with Tree Wisteria (Bolusanthus speciosus ) and cork bush (Mundulea suberosa).

For a yellow-themed garden plant, Yellow tree bauhinia (Bauhinia tomentosa), African wattle (Peltophorum africanum), African teak (Pterocarpus angolensis) and wild laburnum (Calpurnea aurea).

Planting

Whichever tree you choose, when planting it, always dig a square hole and not a round hole. One of South Africa’s gardening experts, Keith Kirsten, advises that the hole should be at least 75 cm square and deep for most trees.

Then watch it grow into its new home.

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