• Letters from CAMP Rehoboth
    • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
    • Advertising Information
    • Where Can I Get Letters?
    • The Write Stuff
  • Events
    • Featured Events
    • Past Events
    • Current Classes + Events
    • Women's FEST
  • Programs
    • Arts & Culture
    • Education & Advocacy
    • Health & Wellness
    • Community Building
    • CAMP Facilities
  • About Us
    • Membership
    • Volunteers
    • Board of Directors
    • CAMP Rehoboth Staff
    • Reports and Financials
    • History
    • Employment Opportunities
    • Press
  • Resources
    • Beach Guide Directory
    • LGBTQ Resources
    • LGBTQ Providers
    • LGBTQ Delaware Data
    • Trans & Nonbinary Resources
    • BIPOC LGBTQ Resources
    • LGBTQ Local and National Resources Guide
  • Contact
  • Shop
close× Call Us 302-227-5620
close×

Search form

March 19, 2021 - The Real Dirt by Eric W. Wahl

Our Evolving Landscapes

 

I often get asked to design a low-maintenance garden, sometimes even a no-maintenance garden. Truth is, no man-made garden is maintenance-free. In fact, most of the landscapes where we live, work, and play require at least some level of upkeep. 

Most of our residential landscapes include lawn cover as the majority of the green space that surrounds us. This is not because it is the least or cheapest to maintain—it is because it’s the easiest to maintain. If you have a lawn mower, or are able to hire a person with one, voilà, you have a manicured landscape.

But having a garden takes planning, patience, and work in order to create and keep the desired results ongoing. This is because all landscapes are in a perpetual cycle of evolution. They are always trying to get to the next stage. This journey is also called succession. The point at which we want that cycle to stop requires maintenance to do so.

Take for example an ephemeral wetland, which I recently helped to design as part of a storm water management system. By its definition, ephemeral means transitory or quickly fading. Therefore, an ephemeral wetland is temporary and seasonal. The plants that inhabit and bloom are site-specific and put on showy displays only at certain times, usually when rain is plentiful and before the trees leaf out. 

However, when creating a wetland of this type, we need to maintain it so that it keeps providing the same level of storm water control for which it was intended. As previously mentioned, landscapes evolve and strive to succeed to their next stage. A farm, for instance, wants to be a forest, and if left to its own devices, will reach that stage over many decades and even centuries. It will go through numerous phases. The same holds true for created landscapes. 

When an ephemeral wetland is created, it does not have a canopy cover of tall trees, so much more sun reaches the ground during all times of year. This provides a much different plant palette than a shady wetland. That old adage I’ve written about before comes back full-circle: the right plant for the right spot. If left unattended, the plants that creep in will take advantage of the full-sun and wet conditions of the site. Woody shrubs will grow on the perimeter such as buttonbush and winterberry. Trees will eventually make their presence known too, like red maple, willow, and certain types of oaks. With the trees, come shade and the entire groundcover mix of plants will change.

Plants can be categorized as ephemeral too. Bluebells, trilliums, and some native orchids are a few of the more recognizable. Ephemeral plants have a very short life cycle. Bluebells, a spring woodland ephemeral, whose leaves will emerge very early followed by the blooms, will turn yellow and die back completely to the ground, usually by June.

There are also desert ephemerals which are adapted to the narrow, wet season that many arid regions experience. For a very short time after rain events, the plants will bloom and create magical displays across the landscape like a painter’s brush washing over the sandy canvas. I am sure you have seen images from the American southwest, as well as the paintings those inspire.

I hope this information sparks a reason to do more research into the many different types of landscapes that exist, and how their maintenance or non-maintenance are sculpting the land we call home.

Stay safe, and let’s garden together.

Eric W. Wahl is a landscape architect at Pennoni Associates, and President of the Delaware Native Plant Society

‹ March 19, 2021 - Historical Headliners by Ann Aptaker up March 19, 2021 - We Remember ›

Past Issues

Issues Index

  • December 17, 2021 - Issue Index
  • November 19, 2021 - Issue Index
  • October 22, 2021 - Issue Index
  • September 24, 2021 - Issue Index
  • August 20, 2021 - Issue Index
  • July 16, 2021 - Issue Index
  • June 18, 2021 - Issue Index
  • May 14, 2021 - Issue Index
  • April 16, 2021 - Issue Index
  • March 19, 2021 - Issue Index
    • March 19, 2021 - Cover to Cover with Issuu
    • March 19, 2021 - The Way I See It by Beth Shockley
    • March 19, 2021 - In Brief
    • March 19, 2021 - Out In Delaware by David Mariner
    • March 19, 2021 - Intentionally Inclusive by Wesley Combs
    • March 19, 2021 - CAMP News
    • March 19, 2021 - A Shot In the Arm by Ed Castelli
    • March 19, 2021 - Community News
    • March 19, 2021 - It's My Life by Michael Thomas Ford
    • March 19, 2021 - Who's That?... That's CAMP! by Anita Broccolino
    • March 19, 2021 - CAMP Houses by Rich Barnett
    • March 19, 2021 - Health and Wellness by Marj Shannon
    • March 19, 2021 - Health & Wellness Classes & Events
    • March 19, 2021 - Guest Column by Clarence Fluker
    • March 19, 2021 - Dining Out by Fay Jacobs
    • March 19, 2021 CAMPShots Gallery 1
    • March 19, 2021 - Out & About by Eric C. Peterson
    • March 19, 2021 - Out & Proud by Stefani Deoul
    • March 19, 2021 - Straight Talk by David Garrett
    • March 19, 2021 - LGBTQ+ YA Column by Barbara Antlitz
    • March 19, 2021 - Looking at the Score by Matty Brown
    • March 19, 2021 - Spotlight on the Arts by Doug Yetter
    • March 19, 2021 - Booked Solid by Terri Schlichenmeyer
    • March 19, 2021 - Historical Headliners by Ann Aptaker
    • March 19, 2021 - The Real Dirt by Eric W. Wahl
    • March 19, 2021 - We Remember
  • February 19th, 2021 - Issue Index

Follow Us

Follow us on Social Media!

RECEIVE WEEKLY EMAIL

Information

  • Letters
  • Events
  • About Us
  • CAMP Center

Support CAMP

  • CAMP Membership
  • Volunteer
  • Contact Us
  • Donate
Copyright © CAMP Rehoboth, 2022
  • p. 302-227-5620
  • info@camprehoboth.com
  • 37 Baltimore Avenue, Rehoboth Beach, DE 19971