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Despite poison, highway location, oleanders make great yard plantings
by
Xiong, Nzong
in
Hood, Sam
2007
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Despite poison, highway location, oleanders make great yard plantings
by
Xiong, Nzong
in
Hood, Sam
2007
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Despite poison, highway location, oleanders make great yard plantings
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Despite poison, highway location, oleanders make great yard plantings
2007
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Overview
\"For the most part, they're doing just fine,\" says Ed Hibbs, a landscape architect for Caltrans, which oversees the freeway medians, and a Fresno County Master Gardener in Clovis. \"We're not typically bringing in any new ones. Most of the oleanders on 99 have been there a long time. They've been there at least maybe 40 years. You can grow them in a mass planting to have lots of color, \"but typically, I've seen them used as a background plant if you do layers,\" says Mariette Olsen, a landscape designer and owner of Olsen Consulting in Fresno. \"I've also seen them used to line driveways. It's like you're in a tunnel. It's a cool effect.\" \"All the oleanders tend to want to be a bush form, so it's all in the training and forming,\" Olsen says. \"They get suckers, like roses, and if you don't remove them, they will get more bushy.\" Prune in the fall after they finish blooming.
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Tribune Content Agency LLC
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