Site owner -- www.troublefreepool.com
Sean, we have oleanders around ours as well and they have done well. I think you are further south than me (Fort Worth). We have done well with red yuccas, agave cactus, lantanas, etc. Native Texas plants should do well. We have a sego palm as well. We had several palms last year but they did not survive the winter (they were still young and had a very cold snap last December which killed them). Our sego is still in the pot but is planted in the ground. When below freezing weather comes we will take it out of the ground and bring it in. Good luck in you plant selection!
Mike
Thanks. We usually only get a handful of nights that get below freezing, and then only for a couple of hours. I'll probably wrap them, but that's about it. I'll take a looks at those others you mentioned - except the Lantana. We had that in the front of our last house. It's pretty stuff, but grows like a weed and tends to take over whatever area it's planted in without regular pruning.
You aren't making tequila with that agave are you?![]()
Site owner -- www.troublefreepool.com
In lieu of oleanders, you may want to consider wax myrtles. They're evergreen and can be kept as a rather large shrub or limbed up as a small tree. The leaves have a bayberry scent when crushed. They do drop smallish leaves but near an equipment pad I don't think it would be a problem. We have 2 that are growing as large shrubs (about 6x8) here in north TX and also had a couple limbed up as trees to shelter/shade an a/c unit when we lived in NC.
Sandy
15,600 gallon, screened 15x30 IG plaster sport pool with 6x8 tanning area, Aquarite SWCG, Hayward cartridge filter, Polaris 280 cleaner
We just had the landscaping around our pool finished about 3 weeks ago. Want to get some pictures up here, but just haven't taken the time.
We had windmill palms put in. They are very cold tolerant. Don't know how cold you get there in your part of TX. The jelly palms are very nice looking also. We have oleander also. Love the look of them. The landscaper used some knockout roses throughout. I really like the look of them and they bloom from spring all the way through November here. They are easy to maintain, aren't prone to disease like most roses, stay full and bushy (not long and lanky like some), and give lots of color.
Good luck with your landscaping. It really polishes everything off after living with a bomb crater through most of the pool build process.
We also have wax myrtles around our equipment. We like them because they grow fast are very drought and cold tolerant. The NC Dept of Transportation plants them everywhere to landscape roadsides, so it is a hardy shrub. I was told the slight scent repels fleas and ticks (not sure about that is true but our dogs and cat don't seem to have a problem).
Here is my landscaping package, including sod all around the backyard . Budget 1500.00 here in Austin, TX.
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Yes I am a newbie
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Grecian 17'x33' Vinyl liner pool
ZeoBrite filteration
SWG Aqua-rite
Sta-Rite Dura-Glas 1.5hp pump.
SAM Light
21037.5 gallons
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