Allergy-Free
Options for Your Landscape
By Jana S. Mercado,
UC Master Gardener Intern
I have just returned from a visit to the allergy-free garden located
at Mill Creek Park in Visalia. What I expected to be boring, bland
and bare of flowers was, to my surprise, beautiful, bountiful and
offered some of my favorite blooms. As one who struggles with seasonal
allergies, I was excited and encouraged to see the options for landscaping
with allergy-free plants, trees and shrubs.
My excitement led to curiosity. Which plants are allergy free? To
learn the answer to this question I began some research. Since the
pollen produced by plants, trees and shrubs causes the unpleasant
allergic reaction, it seems logical that plants low in pollen production
are good choices for an allergy-free landscape. And that's true. But
which plants are low in pollen production? More research.
Plants achieve pollination in several ways. Some species of plants
are pollinated by insects, birds and bees and some plants rely on
wind pollination. Wind pollination is less reliable so plants that
utilize this method of reproduction produce large quantities of pollen
to ensure reproductive success. With such large amounts of pollen
being produced, wind-pollinated plants are prime sources of allergens.
Wind-pollinated plants can be identified by their profusion of small
inconspicuous flowers. Another key is to avoid trees and shrubs that
are in bloom when the leaves are absent or are just beginning to grow.
Also avoid plants that have a large number of catkins, or blooms that
hang in dangling inflorescences. Wind-pollinated trees that cause
the worst allergenic reactions in the greatest number of people are
mulberry, olive, sycamore, almond, and walnut. Alder, birch, elm,
maple, oak, poplar, sweetgum, and willow also cause allergies, but
generally less of a reaction or in fewer people.
What can be planted in place of these trees? Some excellent suggestions
can be found in The Birds and Bees Guide to Allergy Free Living by
Scott E. Seargeant of Visalia. He offers the following alternatives
for some of the above listed trees. In place of the graceful willow,
try the equally elegant mayten tree. To achieve the gorgeous fall
colors that the sweet gum displays, plant a brilliant Chinese tallow
tree. And, as a final suggestion
(there are so many more!), replace the stately sycamore tree with
the beautiful blooms of the tulip tree.
Grasses and weeds also produce an abundant amount of allergy-inducing
pollen. The best way to reduce their pollen is to minimize their presence
in the landscape. Eliminate weeds from garden beds and keep up with
the weekly mowing of the lawn, especially if it is common bermudagrass,
the worst allergen. In the active growing season, bermudagrass sends
up spikes of flowers that contain the dreaded pollen. Through regular
mowing, these flowers are cut down, reducing the amount of pollen
released into the air. Weeds that are particularly troublesome to
allergy sufferers are pigweeds, johnsongrass, lambsquarters, plantain
and certain members of the daisy family, like ragweed. Keep your landscape
as weed-free as possible to aid in eliminating these pollen producers.
Contact allergies can also be irritating. It may require trial and
error on each individual's part to determine those plants that are
the cause of such allergies. It seems that as I grow older, I am more
sensitive to turf grass. I have always had a nasty reaction to nettles.
And, although I have never allowed myself the experience, I am certain
that I would find poison oak quite irritating. (I have to mention
my friend who ate poison oak thinking it would make him immune. He
definitely had a close contact allergic reaction from that experience!
Wouldn't recommend trying it. It didn't work.)
While I initially thought an allergy-free landscape would be boring
and bloom-free, I have learned that it is possible to have a pleasant
garden that is also healthier for allergy sufferers. Seargeant's book
actually lists some of my favorite plants as allergy-free options
for the landscape.
These include glossy abelia, azalea, bougainvillea, butterfly bush,
Japanese camellia, forsythia, hydrangea, lantana, cape plumbago, western
redbud tree, crape myrtle, jacaranda tree, saucer magnolia, coastal
redwood, dichondra, periwinkle, peony, ranunculus, tulips and pansies,
as well as many more. So if you struggle with allergies, do some research,
assess your landscape and see if there are some allergy-free options
that you might also enjoy.
August 24, 2000
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