By
Gabriel Alexander
| When
the valley oak in Ken Puryear's yard fell
over, he decided to replace it with palm
trees found scattered throughout Tulare
County. Four jubaea palms in front of
his Visalia house in the Lakes came from
a farm in Dinuba. The shaggy, multitrunked
date palm worth thousands of dollars came
from a man in Tulare who said, "Get
that thing out of my yard." |
 |
And Canary palms were transplanted from rural
areas near Badger Hill and Springville.
In February, landscaper Steve Cox's arrangement
of the palms won the California Landscape
Contractors Association's annual landscaping
competition for "best entry for all residential
categories."
"It says this is the best landscape in
the state," says John Sassaman, communications
manager for CLCA, and organization of state
licensed landscapers.
Cox was shocked when he opened the letter
about the award.
"I almost fell over," he said. "We
compete will people in San Diego and the Bay
Area where they have dot-com people building
million-dollar mansions, so we are really
honored."
The judges chose Cox's landscaping for its
superior workmanship, Sassaman said.
"[Cox] came up with the stunning design,
and he built the stunning design," he
said.
Cox, of Plant Systems Inc., spent more than
a year on the one-acre yard of Puryear and
his wife Alicia Holland. Puryear told him
he wanted it to look like the Mirage hotel
in Las Vegas. But there was one problem: There
wasn't one palm tree on the property - just
a traditional lawn, redwoods and azaleas.
"At first we thought he was crazy,"
Dick Edminster said.
Edminster now owns a business, Pioneer Palms,
with Puryear, a retired dentist.
"We thought he'd do a little over here
and a little over there, but the place was
tore up," he said.
Cox thought there was too much open space.
The stamped-concrete driveway and the back
lawn sloping down to the lake needed to be
broken up, he said.
"I see a lot of areas that are just lawn,"
Cox said. "I'm a believer in usable space."
Cox put an island of palm trees in the driveway
and curved stone terraces in the lawn. Throughout
the yard, he interrupted the vista with sitting
areas, different elevations, and islands of
trees and plants.
"It brings the curiosity out in people
if they can't see what's ahead," Cox
said. "I want to draw people down a pathway."
Cox calls the palm-tree islands "bouquets
of color and texture." The 70 to 80 varieties
of palms and cycads range from towering canary
palms to short, squat sago palms used as shrubbery.
Colors range from the silvery blue fan of
the Mexican blue palm to the bright-red fronds
of the flamethrower palm. Every tree is labeled
with its botanical and common name.
Judges were impressed by steps Cox took to
protect "the stars of the landscape -
the palms," Sassaman said.
Cox creates microenvironments using larger
trees to protect the tropical varieties from
the extreme heat and frost of the Valley.
It's a microclimate that allows a king palm
native to Australia to thrive underneath Canary
and date palms.
"We have palm trees never planted in
this area before because people thought they
couldn't take the frost we get in the winter,"
Cox said. "Now people realize
,
wow, we can grow them here."
Digital moisture sensors protect other trees,
measuring the moisture in the ground.
"That's something you don't usually see
on a residential project," Sassaman said.
"It's the little attention to detail
that makes sure the landscape will look good
in 10 years opposed to dying off next year."
Sometimes the trees don't make it, Cox said.
But that's a risk he is willing to take.
"A lot of people tend to use what's safe,"
Cox said. "For me, I would get bored
if I had to use the same thing over and over."