SAN JOSE, Calif. — With the popularity of succulents and cactuses at an all time high, many people are bringing their passions inside with succulent dish gardens. Alice Kitajima, who has a degree in forestry and has spent most of her career working at botanical gardens, says she’s never seen the public fall so in love with succulents.
Kitajima, program director at Walnut Creek’s Ruth Bancroft Garden, knows some of the reasons succulents are hot. They come in a huge variety of types, sizes and shapes, and they are extremely forgiving, making them good “starter” plants for beginners.
If you can’t get to their garden shop to buy yours, here’s all you need to know to create your own — and maybe a few more for holiday gifts.
A Succulent Dish Garden
Materials
• Ceramic dish with a drainage hole (shallow pots are recommended, and the drainage hole is essential)
• Roll of drywall tape
• Potting soil for succulents and cactuses
• An assortment of succulents, perhaps including cactuses
• Chopsticks or skewers
• Top dressing (usually a light-colored gravel)
Directions
Cover the drainage hole with a piece of drywall tape, which will keep the soil from spilling out, but let excess water drain.
Fill the dish about two-thirds full of potting soil.
Remove plants from their plastic pots and gently remove any soil that clings to the roots and plants.
Arrange the plants, keeping in mind the design elements of fillers, spillers and thrillers. You want something in the foreground, the middle and the background that are focal points. Taller plants (thrillers) often go in the back, while plants that might grow or drape over the side of the pot (spillers) go in the front. Fillers go in the center and to fill in bare spots. Use your chopsticks to help in placing the plants just so.
Once you’re happy with the design, fill the rest of the pot with soil, leaving space for the top dressing, and tamp down the plants so that they are securely in place.
Add the top dressing, which will help keep the soil from drying out and provide a nice contrast for your plants.
Add a holiday ornament, if you like, which can be changed out to reflect the season or holiday.
Water well and place near a window that gets lots of light or in your yard.
— Ruth Bancroft Garden, www.ruthbancroftgarden.org