Yellow Bells for 2000
Tecoma stans 'Gold Star', (Esperanza, Yellow
Bells, Yellow Alder)
Heat
and sun loving tropical with golden-yellow bell shaped flowers from
late spring till frost.
Zone 9.
Exposure: Full sun
Size: Three to four feet as an annual.
Blooms: Lightly fragrant, golden yellow, spring till frost.
Uses: Container, specimen, bedding, xeriscape, etc.
Notes: Remove seed pods to promote faster rebloom. Texas native. 1999
Texas A&M CEMAP promotion.
If you have a desire to experience hell on earth, take
a trip to South Texas during a hot Texas summer. One might be inclined
to think that no man nor plant could survive down there. But survive
they do.
As a matter of fact, some even thrive.
It's a common horticultural misnomer to think that
all plants want to grow in the cool damp climates of England. There
are, however, a great number of plants that don't grow well under
mild conditions. These are the plants Texas gardeners should be growing.
Instead of growing plants native to cool, moist temperate zones, we
should stick to plants native to Texas,
Mexico, and Tropical America. We all have similar climates, either
too hot, too wet, or too dry. Nothing else. When was the last time
you stuck your head into the garden and said, "Perfect gardening conditions!"?
Doesn't happen very often, does it?
Within those Texas tough plants, there's an even fiercer
group. Believe it or not, there are plants that don't even THINK about
performing until they see others cooking. That's right, there are
plants that LIKE one hundred degree temperatures. Think of them as
popcorn, if you will. If
it's cool they do nothing. But when it gets hot, look out! And guess
what? They can't even grow these in Europe and the North. Their loss,
our gain!
One of the tops on the heat tolerant Texas performers
is a plant known in South Texas and Mexico as "Esperanza". Esperanza
is Spanish for "hope". I HOPE you're paying attention.
Esperanza (Tecoma stans) is a member of one
of my favorite families, the Bignoniaceae. This family contains other
proven Texas performers including Trumpet Creeper, Crossvine, Catalpa,
Desert Willow, and Cape Honeysuckle. All of these are known for big
showy flowers on rugged plants.
Tecoma stans is native from West Texas down
to Mexico and the tropics. The West Texas forms (Tecoma stans angustata)
tend to be more cold hardy with smaller flowers and leaves while the
tropical forms (Tecoma stans stans) are know for their larger
flowers and leaves.
To be quite honest, I have never seen an Esperanza that wasn't pretty,
though like most gardeners I tend to prefer those with larger more
profuse flowers. This led to a trial, about ten years ago, comparing
the showiest Esperanzas I could locate.
'Gold Star' Esperanza is a wondeful selection I made
from a private garden in San Antonio while Director of Research and
Development at Lone Star Growers (now Color Spot Nursery). 'Gold Star'
was selected because it was the earliest blooming Tecoma stans trialed.
Previously, Esperanza was difficult to sell as it didn't produce blooms
in the container until late
in the season. 'Gold Star' actually produced them as a liner.
This particular selection is intermediate in all characters
between the West Texas Tecoma stans angustata and the tropical
Tecoma stans stans. Although grown as a shrub and a perennial
in San Antonio, South Texas, and Mexico, Esperanza works best in most
gardens as a tropical container plant, similar to Hibiscus, Bougainvillea,
and Mandevilla. It is generally
sold in one gallon or three gallon containers.
Esperanza is generally pest free in the landscape.
To keep the plants tidy and continuously blooming, however, it is
best to cut off the clusters of seed pods ("green beans").
Although new plants can be grown from the ripened dried seeds, they
won't necessarily be identical to the
original plant. They root easily however with warm conditions under
mist.
All selections of Tecoma stans are uniquely adapted
to hot sunny Texas summers. 'Gold Star' provides more blooms, more
often*something all gardeners hope for. 'Gold Star' Esperanza was
selected as a 1999 Texas Superstar by the Texas A&M CEMAP program.
For more information on these and other adapted plants
for Texas landscape
see the following websites:
SFA: http://www.sfasu.edu/ag/arboretum/
TAMU: http://aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu/cemap/
Greg Grant is a lecturer for Stephen F. Austin University in Nacogdoches
and co-author of The Southern Heirloom Garden (Taylor Publishing,
1995).