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	<title>Cohasset &#8211; Land Design Associates</title>
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		<title>The Case for Edible Landscaping: Beyond the Vegetable Patch — A South Shore Guide from Land Design Associates</title>
		<link>https://landdesignassociates.com/the-case-for-edible-landscaping-beyond-the-vegetable-patch-a-south-shore-guide-from-land-design-associates/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sarah Casey]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Jun 2026 19:07:21 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Landscape Design and Planning]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://landdesignassociates.com/?p=7600</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Edible landscaping is one of the fastest-growing trends in residential design — and it goes far beyond raised beds. Land Design Associates shows South Shore homeowners in Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury how to make their entire property beautiful and productive.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There&#8217;s a quiet revolution happening in residential landscape design, and it&#8217;s showing up in some of the most beautiful gardens on the South Shore. Homeowners in Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury are asking a new question when they sit down with their landscape designer: what if my property could be both stunning and productive? What if the plants that shape my garden, line my walkways, and anchor my borders could also feed my family?</p>
<p>Edible landscaping — the practice of integrating food-producing plants into designed residential landscapes — is one of the fastest-growing trends in the industry. And at Land Design Associates, we&#8217;ve been watching it evolve from a niche interest into a genuine design movement on the South Shore. This post makes the case for edible landscaping, explains why it goes far beyond the raised vegetable bed, and shows you what&#8217;s possible when a professional landscape designer applies real design thinking to the concept of a productive, beautiful property.</p>
<h2>What Is Edible Landscaping — and What It Isn&#8217;t</h2>
<p>Let&#8217;s start with a clarification, because the term &#8220;edible landscaping&#8221; can conjure images of a cluttered backyard full of staked tomatoes and wire cages. That&#8217;s not what we&#8217;re talking about.</p>
<p>True edible landscaping is the intentional design of a residential landscape in which food-producing plants — fruiting shrubs, culinary herbs, berry-producing groundcovers, ornamental vegetables, fruiting trees — are treated as first-class landscape elements. They&#8217;re chosen for their form, texture, flower, color, and seasonal interest just as any ornamental plant would be. The fact that they also produce something edible is an additional benefit, not the primary visual driver.</p>
<p>The best edible landscapes don&#8217;t look like gardens in the traditional sense. They look like beautifully designed properties that happen to produce blueberries, figs, herbs, and serviceberries — because that&#8217;s exactly what they are. For South Shore homeowners who take pride in the aesthetic of their Hingham, Cohasset, or Duxbury property, this distinction matters enormously.</p>
<h2>Why Edible Landscaping Makes Sense on the South Shore</h2>
<p>The South Shore&#8217;s climate, soil, and character make it an ideal environment for edible landscaping — arguably more so than many other regions. Here&#8217;s why.</p>
<p>First, the USDA hardiness zone for most of the South Shore is Zone 6b to 7a, which means a wider range of edible plants are viable than many homeowners realize. Figs, which require winter protection in colder zones, grow successfully in sheltered spots in Cohasset and Hingham. Blueberries — a native plant of coastal Massachusetts — thrive in the region&#8217;s naturally acidic, well-drained soils. Serviceberry, quince, and dwarf apple trees all perform reliably in the South Shore&#8217;s climate.</p>
<p>Second, the South Shore aesthetic — relaxed, coastal, naturalistic but polished — is genuinely compatible with edible plants. Blueberry bushes have beautiful spring flowers, spectacular fall foliage, and winter branch structure. Serviceberry is a native tree with four-season interest. Herb borders of rosemary, lavender, and thyme look as refined as any ornamental planting while performing beautifully in coastal conditions.</p>
<p>Third, the values of South Shore homeowners have shifted. Sustainability, environmental stewardship, and a connection to local food are priorities for many families who call Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury home. An edible landscape is a tangible expression of those values — visible every day, integrated into the beauty of the property rather than hidden in a utilitarian backyard plot.</p>
<h2>Blueberries: The South Shore&#8217;s Perfect Edible Landscape Shrub</h2>
<p>If there&#8217;s a single edible plant that should be in virtually every South Shore landscape, it&#8217;s the highbush blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum). This native shrub does everything a great landscape plant should do: it has beautiful white urn-shaped flowers in spring, spectacular red and orange fall foliage that rivals any ornamental shrub, and clean branch structure in winter. And from late June through August, it produces generous crops of blueberries that South Shore families can harvest straight from the garden.</p>
<p>Blueberries are perfectly adapted to the South Shore&#8217;s naturally acidic soils, which means they actually thrive where other plants struggle. They&#8217;re also reliably cold-hardy, salt-spray tolerant enough for most coastal properties, and available in a wide range of sizes — from compact varieties suited to a front foundation border to large, multi-stem specimens that can anchor a mixed shrub bed or create an informal privacy screen.</p>
<h3>Designing with Blueberries in Hingham and Cohasset Gardens</h3>
<p>At Land Design Associates, we often use blueberry shrubs as mid-layer plants in a mixed border, pairing them with ornamental companions that extend the display beyond fruiting season. Catmint, coreopsis, and native grasses complement the blueberry&#8217;s fine-textured foliage beautifully while keeping the border looking designed and intentional. In formal settings, a pair of blueberry shrubs flanking a garden gate or entry path makes a sophisticated, quietly unconventional statement.</p>
<h2>Serviceberry: The Native Tree That Earns Every Season</h2>
<p>Amelanchier canadensis — serviceberry, also called Juneberry — is one of the most underused trees in residential landscape design, and one of our strongest recommendations for edible landscapes on the South Shore. It&#8217;s a native small tree or multi-stem shrub that delivers extraordinary value across all four seasons: clouds of white flowers in early spring, sweet purple-red berries in June, brilliant orange and red fall color, and attractive smooth gray bark in winter.</p>
<p>The June berries (which give the tree its common name &#8220;Juneberry&#8221;) are genuinely delicious — sweet, with a mild almond-like flavor — and beloved by birds, making the fruiting period a wildlife event as well as a culinary one. For families in Duxbury and outer South Shore properties with larger lots, a grove of serviceberries makes a naturalistic focal point that connects the designed garden to the surrounding landscape while producing an abundance of fruit.</p>
<p>Serviceberry is also one of the most ecologically valuable trees you can plant on a South Shore property — it supports over 120 species of native caterpillars, making it a keystone plant for bird habitat. For homeowners who want their landscape to do double or triple duty — beautiful, productive, and ecologically meaningful — serviceberry is a cornerstone plant.</p>
<h2>Espalier Fruit Trees: Edible Landscaping as Fine Art</h2>
<p>For homeowners who want an edible landscape element that is truly design-forward, espalier — the centuries-old practice of training a tree flat against a wall, fence, or freestanding trellis in a formal pattern — is perhaps the most dramatic option available. An espaliered apple or pear tree against a stone wall or cedar fence is a breathtaking sight: architectural, geometric, and alive in a way no inert structure can be.</p>
<p>Espalier requires patience — a mature espaliered tree takes several years to develop — and some ongoing attention to pruning and training. But the investment pays dividends that last decades. For properties in Hingham and Cohasset where stone walls are part of the landscape character, an espaliered fruit tree transforms a simple wall into a living design element that also produces fruit each fall.</p>
<p>Land Design Associates can design and install espalier systems using cordon, fan, or Belgian fence patterns, selecting rootstocks and variety combinations appropriate for South Shore growing conditions. It&#8217;s one of the most requested edible landscape services we offer, and the results never fail to make an impression.</p>
<h2>Herb Borders: The Easiest Entry Point into Edible Landscaping</h2>
<p>If you&#8217;re new to edible landscaping and want to start somewhere accessible, an herb border is the perfect entry point. Culinary herbs — rosemary, lavender, thyme, sage, and catmint — are among the best-performing plants available for South Shore garden borders. They&#8217;re drought-tolerant, salt-spray tolerant, deer-resistant, pollinator-friendly, and visually beautiful, with diverse textures, colors, and flower forms that hold their own in any mixed planting.</p>
<p>An herb border along a kitchen path or patio edge is a sensory as well as visual experience — the fragrance of rosemary and lavender brushed as you pass, the texture of sage foliage underfoot near a seating area, the hum of bees on catmint blooms. It integrates the landscape into daily life in a way that a purely ornamental border rarely does.</p>
<p>For Cohasset and Hingham homeowners with formal garden zones, a structured herb parterre — geometric planting beds of clipped herbs separated by stone or gravel paths — creates a classic European kitchen garden aesthetic that fits beautifully into the coastal New England character of South Shore properties.</p>
<h2>Fig Trees: Unexpected and Extraordinary</h2>
<p>Nothing generates more conversation in a South Shore garden than a well-grown fig tree. Ficus carica — the common edible fig — is more cold-hardy than most homeowners realize. With appropriate siting (a warm south-facing wall or sheltered corner) and winter protection for the first few years, figs grow successfully in Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury, producing large, luscious fruits in late summer.</p>
<p>Beyond the fruit, fig trees are remarkable ornamental plants. Their large, deeply lobed leaves create a bold tropical texture that&#8217;s unexpected and theatrical in a New England setting — a design contrast that makes them memorable. In a sheltered courtyard or against a south-facing fence, a mature fig is a true statement plant that also produces one of the most prized summer fruits.</p>
<h2>Designing Your Edible Landscape: The Land Design Associates Approach</h2>
<p>At Land Design Associates, our approach to edible landscaping begins exactly where our approach to any residential landscape begins: with the site, the homeowner&#8217;s vision, and the question of how the property can best express both beauty and function.</p>
<p>We don&#8217;t treat edible plants as additions to an existing ornamental design. We integrate them from the beginning — as specimen trees, border anchors, groundcovers, and vertical elements — alongside ornamental companions that extend the seasonal display and reinforce the overall aesthetic. The result is a landscape that looks intentionally designed (because it is) and also happens to produce food.</p>
<p>For South Shore homeowners in Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury who are curious about what an edible landscape could look like on their specific property, we offer design consultations that begin with a site assessment and result in a planting plan that you can implement in phases at whatever pace suits your budget and timeline.</p>
<p>To explore the full range of what&#8217;s possible for your outdoor space — from edible landscaping to entertaining areas to seasonal plantings — visit our <a href="https://eb97b41fe218ebe2f772cad9eadefaf2.claudemcpcontent.com/outdoor-entertaining-space-summer-south-shore-guide" target="_blank" rel="noopener">summer outdoor entertaining guide</a> and our <a href="https://eb97b41fe218ebe2f772cad9eadefaf2.claudemcpcontent.com/june-blooming-plants-south-shore-gardens-hingham-cohasset-duxbury" target="_blank" rel="noopener">June plant spotlight</a> for South Shore gardens.</p>
<hr />
<h2>Frequently Asked Questions</h2>
<h3>What is edible landscaping?</h3>
<p>Edible landscaping is the practice of integrating food-producing plants — fruiting shrubs, culinary herbs, berry-producing groundcovers, and fruiting trees — into a designed residential landscape so that the property is both beautiful and productive. Unlike a traditional vegetable garden, edible landscaping treats edible plants as full design elements chosen for their form, texture, seasonal interest, and ornamental value.</p>
<h3>What edible plants grow well on the South Shore of Massachusetts?</h3>
<p>The South Shore&#8217;s Zone 6b–7a climate and naturally acidic coastal soils support an impressive range of edible plants, including highbush blueberries, serviceberry (Juneberry), espalier apples and pears, fig trees (with winter protection), culinary herbs like rosemary and lavender, and alpine strawberries as groundcover. Land Design Associates can advise on the best selections for your specific Hingham, Cohasset, or Duxbury property.</p>
<h3>Can edible landscaping look as beautiful as a traditional ornamental garden?</h3>
<p>Yes — when designed by a professional landscape designer, an edible landscape is indistinguishable from a purely ornamental one in terms of aesthetic quality. Blueberry shrubs have exceptional fall color; serviceberry rivals any flowering tree in spring; herb borders are as refined as any perennial planting. The key is integrating edible plants for their design value as well as their productivity.</p>
<h3>Does Land Design Associates design edible landscapes in Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury?</h3>
<p>Yes — edible landscape design is a growing specialty at Land Design Associates, serving homeowners throughout the South Shore including Hingham, Cohasset, Duxbury, and surrounding communities. Contact us to schedule a consultation and explore what&#8217;s possible for your property.</p>
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		<title>What&#8217;s Blooming Now: A June Plant Spotlight for South Shore Gardens — Hingham, Cohasset &#038; Duxbury</title>
		<link>https://landdesignassociates.com/june-blooming-plants-south-shore-gardens-hingham-cohasset-duxbury/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Sarah Casey]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Jun 2026 18:58:42 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Landscape Design and Planning]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://landdesignassociates.com/?p=7597</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Discover what's blooming now in South Shore gardens. Land Design Associates shares a June plant spotlight for Hingham, Cohasset, Duxbury &#038; coastal Massachusetts.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If you&#8217;ve driven through Hingham, Cohasset, or Duxbury in June, you already know what we know: this is the month the South Shore garden earns its place. After a long New England winter and a tentative spring, June delivers a reward. Borders burst into color. Hydrangeas swell with buds. Native perennials light up the edges of coastal properties. And homeowners who planned thoughtfully with their landscape designer are rewarded with something that feels, genuinely, like magic.</p>
<p>At Land Design Associates, June is one of our favorite times of year — not just to design and plant, but to walk through gardens we&#8217;ve created and watch them hit their stride. This month&#8217;s plant spotlight is our curated guide to what&#8217;s blooming right now on the South Shore, why each plant earns its place in a well-designed garden, and how you can use these performers to elevate your own Hingham, Cohasset, or Duxbury property.</p>
<h2>Mountain Laurel: The South Shore&#8217;s Native Star</h2>
<p>If there&#8217;s one plant that defines a New England June, it&#8217;s Kalmia latifolia — mountain laurel. This native broadleaf evergreen puts on a spectacular show from late May through mid-June, producing dense clusters of pink, white, or bicolor blooms that look intricate enough to be handcrafted. In the dappled light under a coastal oak canopy, mountain laurel in full bloom is simply stunning.</p>
<p>Mountain laurel is an ideal plant for South Shore properties for several reasons beyond its beauty. It&#8217;s native to Massachusetts, which means it&#8217;s perfectly adapted to the soil, moisture, and temperature conditions found in Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury. It&#8217;s also reliably deer-resistant — a significant advantage for properties on the outer South Shore where deer pressure is heavy. Once established, it requires minimal supplemental water, making it a sustainable choice for homeowners who want a lower-maintenance landscape.</p>
<h3>Where to Use Mountain Laurel</h3>
<p>Mountain laurel thrives in part shade to full shade with well-drained, acidic soil — conditions that match the woodland edges and understory zones common on many South Shore properties. Use it as a foundation planting beneath mature trees, as a naturalistic hedge along a property line, or as a transitional plant between a manicured garden zone and a more naturalistic area. Land Design Associates often pairs mountain laurel with oakleaf hydrangea and native ferns for a layered woodland garden that looks spectacular in June and provides year-round structure.</p>
<h2>Hydrangeas: The Icon of South Shore Summer Gardens</h2>
<p>No plant is more synonymous with South Shore garden style than the hydrangea. From the classic blue mopheads that line historic streets in Cohasset to the blush-pink panicle hydrangeas anchoring new landscapes in Duxbury, hydrangeas are a foundational element of the regional aesthetic — and June is when the first varieties begin their show.</p>
<h3>Endless Summer and Bigleaf Hydrangeas</h3>
<p>The Endless Summer series of bigleaf hydrangeas (Hydrangea macrophylla) is among the most asked-about plants we work with at Land Design Associates. These reblooming varieties open their first flush in June and continue producing blooms all the way into September — an extraordinary performance for a single plant. In the South Shore&#8217;s naturally acidic coastal soils, the blooms often lean toward the blue end of the spectrum, which is deeply appealing to homeowners who associate blue hydrangeas with the classic New England summer look.</p>
<p>Bigleaf hydrangeas perform best in morning sun with afternoon shade — a condition easily created on South Shore properties with the right siting. They prefer consistently moist soil, so mulching heavily around the root zone helps them through dry July and August spells.</p>
<h3>Little Lime Panicle Hydrangeas</h3>
<p>For sunnier spots or more structured settings — along a driveway, flanking an entry, or in a formal mixed border — the Little Lime panicle hydrangea is one of our top recommendations for Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury gardens. It opens in late June with chartreuse-white blooms that deepen to pink and burgundy as the season progresses, giving you months of evolving color from a single, compact, extremely tough plant. Unlike bigleaf hydrangeas, panicle hydrangeas bloom on new wood, meaning late-season pruning or winter dieback won&#8217;t sacrifice next year&#8217;s blooms.</p>
<h2>Catmint: The Workhorse You Didn&#8217;t Know You Needed</h2>
<p>Catmint (Nepeta) doesn&#8217;t get the same attention as hydrangeas or roses, but among landscape designers, it&#8217;s considered one of the most reliable, versatile, and beautiful perennials available for South Shore gardens. In June, Nepeta &#8216;Walker&#8217;s Low&#8217; and &#8216;Six Hills Giant&#8217; produce cascading waves of soft lavender-blue flowers that pair beautifully with almost everything — roses, salvia, ornamental grasses, and the silvery foliage of coastal plants.</p>
<p>Catmint checks every box for the South Shore conditions: it&#8217;s drought-tolerant once established, salt-spray tolerant, deer-resistant, and beloved by pollinators — particularly bumblebees and native bees. Cut it back by one-third after the first flush fades in late June, and it will rebloom generously in late summer.</p>
<p>At Land Design Associates, we frequently use catmint as an edging plant along stone pathways and patio borders in Hingham and Cohasset gardens. Its soft, billowing habit softens hard edges and creates that effortlessly romantic quality that characterizes the best coastal New England gardens.</p>
<h2>Salvia: Blue Spires for Pollinator Gardens</h2>
<p>Salvia nemorosa &#8216;May Night&#8217; is one of the strongest-performing perennials in the South Shore landscape palette. Its deep indigo-purple flower spikes open in late May and continue through June, creating a vertical accent that pairs especially well with the rounded forms of hydrangeas and the sprawling habit of catmint. Salvia is fully hardy in USDA Zone 6 (which encompasses most of the South Shore), deer-resistant, drought-tolerant, and an outstanding pollinator plant.</p>
<p>For homeowners in Duxbury and the outer South Shore who want to support native bees, hummingbirds, and monarch butterflies, incorporating generous drifts of salvia into a mixed border is one of the most impactful things you can do. Land Design Associates often pairs salvia with ornamental grasses and native coneflowers to create pollinator corridors that provide interest and habitat value from June through October.</p>
<h2>Climbing Roses: Vertical Drama for Pergolas and Fences</h2>
<p>June is the primary bloom month for most climbing roses, and a well-established climbing rose on a pergola or garden fence is one of the most breathtaking sights in a South Shore garden. For coastal properties, rose selection matters — you want varieties that have proven disease resistance and can tolerate coastal humidity without succumbing to black spot or powdery mildew.</p>
<p>At Land Design Associates, we favor the Knock Out and Drift rose families for lower-maintenance applications, and disease-resistant climbers like &#8216;New Dawn,&#8217; &#8216;Climbing Iceberg,&#8217; and &#8216;Fourth of July&#8217; for structures and fences. All of these perform reliably in the South Shore&#8217;s climate, require minimal spray programs, and put on a spectacular June show.</p>
<h3>Pairing Roses with Clematis for Extended Bloom</h3>
<p>One of our favorite design moves for Cohasset and Hingham pergolas is pairing a climbing rose with a late-season clematis. The rose carries the show through June; as it fades, the clematis (which blooms July through September) takes over on the same structure. It&#8217;s an elegant succession planting strategy that delivers near-continuous bloom with no additional footprint.</p>
<h2>Black-Eyed Susans: Native Brightness for Mid-June</h2>
<p>Rudbeckia hirta — the black-eyed Susan — is one of the most cheerful and reliable native perennials for South Shore gardens. Its golden-yellow daisy flowers with dark centers begin appearing in mid-June and continue through August, providing a warm contrast to the cool blues and purples of catmint and salvia. It&#8217;s native to Massachusetts, meaning it&#8217;s perfectly adapted to local conditions, supports a wide range of native insects, and requires no supplemental irrigation once established.</p>
<p>Black-eyed Susans naturalize freely in sunny borders, making them an excellent choice for the drier, sandier soils common in parts of Duxbury and the outer South Shore. Use them in generous drifts — three, five, or seven plants together — for maximum visual impact, and allow some to self-seed at the border&#8217;s edge for a naturalistic feel.</p>
<h2>Planning for Next June: What to Do Now</h2>
<p>The best June gardens don&#8217;t happen by accident — they&#8217;re the result of decisions made in late spring that set the stage for peak-season performance. If your garden isn&#8217;t delivering the June impact you want, now is actually the right time to start planning changes.</p>
<p>A mid-summer planting consultation with Land Design Associates allows us to assess what&#8217;s working in your Hingham, Cohasset, or Duxbury garden, identify gaps in your bloom sequence, and develop a planting plan that ensures next June looks spectacular. We can specify the right plants for your light conditions, soil type, deer pressure level, and maintenance preferences — and handle the installation so everything is ready for spring establishment.</p>
<p>We also recommend a seasonal review of your existing plantings each June. Take notes on what&#8217;s performing well and what has gaps, what&#8217;s outgrown its space, and where additional color or structure would improve the composition. These observations, made at peak season, are invaluable input for a fall planting session that sets you up for an even better garden next year.</p>
<h2>Ready to Bring These Plants into Your South Shore Garden?</h2>
<p>Land Design Associates has been creating beautiful, sustainable landscapes for South Shore homeowners in Hingham, Cohasset, Duxbury, and surrounding communities for years. Whether you&#8217;re starting from scratch or refining a garden you love, we bring deep knowledge of the plants, soils, and microclimates that define South Shore outdoor living.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;d like to talk through what&#8217;s possible for your property this season, contact us to schedule a consultation. And if you&#8217;re just getting started on your outdoor space, take a look at our guide to <a href="https://eb97b41fe218ebe2f772cad9eadefaf2.claudemcpcontent.com/outdoor-entertaining-space-summer-south-shore-guide" target="_blank" rel="noopener">prepping your outdoor entertaining space for summer</a> — it&#8217;s the perfect companion to this plant spotlight.</p>
<hr />
<h2>Frequently Asked Questions</h2>
<h3>What plants bloom in June on the South Shore of Massachusetts?</h3>
<p>June bloomers for South Shore gardens include mountain laurel, Endless Summer hydrangeas, catmint, salvia, climbing roses, and black-eyed Susans. These are all well-suited to the coastal climate conditions in Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury.</p>
<h3>Are hydrangeas good for coastal Massachusetts gardens?</h3>
<p>Yes — hydrangeas are one of the most reliable and beloved plants for South Shore gardens. Bigleaf (mophead) hydrangeas thrive in the region&#8217;s acidic soils and often produce the classic blue blooms associated with coastal New England. Panicle hydrangeas like Little Lime are even tougher and more versatile for sunnier exposures.</p>
<h3>What native plants bloom in June in Massachusetts?</h3>
<p>Native June bloomers for Massachusetts gardens include mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia), black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta), wild blue indigo (Baptisia australis), and native roses. These plants support local pollinators and wildlife while requiring minimal maintenance once established.</p>
<h3>Does Land Design Associates offer planting consultations in Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury?</h3>
<p>Yes — Land Design Associates serves homeowners throughout the South Shore including Hingham, Cohasset, Duxbury, and surrounding communities. Contact us to schedule a planting or landscape design consultation for your property.</p>
<hr class="rule" />
<h2><b>Schedule Your Landscape Design Consultation Today</b></h2>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">If you are planning a project and need </span><b>landscape design in Walpole, MA</b><span style="font-weight: 400;"> or </span><b>landscape design in Hingham, Duxbury and Cohasset, MA</b><span style="font-weight: 400;">, working with the right team makes all the difference.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Land Design Associates is ready to help you design and build an outdoor space that is functional, durable, and built around your lifestyle.</span></p>
<p><b>Start with a design consultation:</b><b><br /></b><a href="https://landdesignassociates.com/design-build-form/"><span style="font-weight: 400;">https://landdesignassociates.com/design-build-form/</span></a></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Or explore our work here:</span><span style="font-weight: 400;"><br /></span><a href="https://landdesignassociates.com/featured-projects/"><span style="font-weight: 400;">https://landdesignassociates.com/featured-projects/</span></a></p>
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		<title>Mid-Year Landscape Audit: 6 Things to Check Before July &#124; South Shore MA &#124; Land Design Associates</title>
		<link>https://landdesignassociates.com/mid-year-landscape-audit-6-things-check-before-july-south-shore-hingham-cohasset-duxbury/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Land Design Associates]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Jun 2026 03:45:45 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[Before July arrives, run this 6-point landscape audit. Land Design Associates shares what South Shore homeowners in Hingham, Cohasset &#038; Duxbury should check now.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">June is the month South Shore gardeners wait all year for. After the slow green build of May, the landscape finally commits — borders fill out, shrubs reach peak bloom, and the combination of long days, warming soil, and the first real heat of summer pushes everything into full expression simultaneously. If you&#8217;ve ever driven through Hingham Center when the mountain laurels are at their peak, or walked the coastal paths near Cohasset when the rugosa roses are in flower, you understand exactly what we mean. June on the South Shore is extraordinary.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">At Land Design Associates in Walpole, we spend June doing two things: admiring what&#8217;s blooming in the landscapes we design for clients across Hingham, Cohasset, Duxbury, and the South Shore, and making notes on what to add to future designs. This month&#8217;s plant spotlight is our curated list of what&#8217;s performing beautifully right now — the plants worth knowing, planting, and celebrating in a coastal Massachusetts garden.</p>
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<h4 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">Catmint (Nepeta): The Workhorse of the June Border</h4>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">If we had to choose one plant that defines the look and feel of a well-designed South Shore perennial border in June, it would be catmint. The long, arching stems covered in small lavender-blue flowers are unmistakable, and the soft gray-green foliage provides contrast and texture long after the bloom period ends.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Catmint is extraordinary not because it is flashy — it isn&#8217;t — but because it does so many things exceptionally well. It blooms prolifically from late May through June, then again in late summer if cut back after the first flush. It is drought tolerant once established, which matters enormously on the sandy coastal soils of Duxbury and Cohasset. It is largely unbothered by deer, which is an increasingly significant consideration for South Shore properties. It cascades beautifully over the edges of stone walls and patio borders. And it attracts bees and other pollinators in extraordinary numbers.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Our go-to varieties for South Shore landscapes include &#8216;Walker&#8217;s Low&#8217; — which, despite the name, grows two to three feet tall and wide and creates a spectacular billowing mass effect — and &#8216;Six Hills Giant&#8217; for larger borders where volume and impact are the priority. Both perform admirably in the salt air and coastal wind conditions of Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Plant catmint in full sun with good drainage. It will forgive almost everything else.</p>
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<h4 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">Mountain Laurel: New England&#8217;s Native Crown Jewel</h4>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Mountain laurel is technically peaking in late May and early June across Massachusetts, but on the South Shore, where the season runs slightly warmer, it often holds its bloom well into the second week of June. When it&#8217;s at its best, there is nothing more stunning in the New England landscape.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">This is a true Massachusetts native — found naturally in woodland edges, rocky hillsides, and the transitional zones between forest and open land that characterize much of the inland portions of Hingham, Duxbury, and the South Shore&#8217;s back roads. The clusters of white to pale pink buds open into intricate, geometrically perfect flowers that look almost too refined to belong to a wild shrub. They do.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Mountain laurel thrives in the partial shade of a woodland edge or beneath a high tree canopy. It requires acidic, well-drained soil — conditions that are extremely common on the South Shore, where sandy and loamy soils naturally lean acidic. It is slow-growing and long-lived, meaning a well-sited mountain laurel planted today will be a significant landscape feature within five years and a mature specimen worthy of a garden focal point within fifteen.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">For South Shore gardeners with partially shaded woodland areas, a mass planting of mountain laurel is one of the most beautiful and ecologically appropriate choices available. It supports native pollinators, requires minimal maintenance once established, and delivers a bloom show that stops people in their tracks every June.</p>
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<h4 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">Rugosa Rose: The True Coastal Classic</h4>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">No plant says South Shore summer quite like the rugosa rose. Walk any coastal path in Cohasset or Duxbury in early June and you will encounter it — sprawling over rocky outcroppings, threading through chain-link fences, perfuming the salt air with one of the most evocative scents in all of horticulture.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Rugosa rose is not a delicate plant. It is tough, insistent, and spectacularly beautiful in the way that only truly coastal plants can be. The flowers — large, single or semi-double blooms in deep pink, pale pink, or white depending on the cultivar — appear over a long season from June through August. The hips that follow are among the largest and most ornamental of any rose species, turning the plant into an autumn focal point long after bloom ends.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">In designed landscapes, rugosa rose performs best when it has room to express its naturally arching, spreading habit. It makes an exceptional informal hedge, a textural mass planting at the edge of a property, or a wild-looking element in a coastal naturalistic garden. It is virtually maintenance-free — it does not need deadheading, spraying, or fussing — which makes it one of our most-recommended plants for South Shore properties where low-maintenance performance is a priority.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Selected cultivars we specify regularly include &#8216;Hansa&#8217; (deep pink, intensely fragrant), &#8216;Blanc Double de Coubert&#8217; (white, fragrant, semi-double), and the straight species Rosa rugosa for maximum wildlife value and coastal toughness.</p>
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<h4 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">Baptisia (False Indigo): The Native You Should Know</h4>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Baptisia australis is one of those plants that landscape designers love and the general public is only now beginning to discover. If you are not growing it, you should be — and June is the moment that explains exactly why.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">In full June bloom, baptisia produces tall, stiff spikes covered in indigo-blue flowers that recall lupines but with a cleaner, more architectural quality. The plant itself is a substantial clump-forming perennial — three to four feet tall and wide at maturity — with blue-green foliage that remains attractive and dense all season long, even after the bloom has faded to the dramatic inflated seed pods that rattle satisfyingly in autumn wind.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Baptisia is a native plant with deep roots — literally. The taproot system goes down several feet into the soil, making it extremely drought tolerant once established and an excellent choice for the fast-draining soils common in Duxbury and the sandy margins of Cohasset properties. It is long-lived, largely pest and disease free, and unbothered by deer. Once established, a baptisia clump will be with you for decades.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The one thing to know: baptisia is slow to establish. It may look modest in its first and second years. By year three, it begins to fill out. By year five, it is spectacular. Plant it with that timeline in mind, and it will reward patience in ways that few other perennials can match.</p>
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<h4 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">Allium: Drama on a Stem</h4>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">If you want to understand why allium has become one of the most talked-about plants in contemporary garden design, go find a &#8216;Globemaster&#8217; or &#8216;Ambassador&#8217; allium in full bloom in the first week of June. The eight-to-ten-inch diameter spherical flower heads on tall, clean stems — rising above lower-growing companion plants in saturated purple-violet — create a visual effect that is simultaneously playful and sophisticated.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Alliums are ornamental onions, and they bring to the garden border the qualities that make their vegetable relatives so useful in the kitchen: absolute reliability, ease of culture, and a long season of interest. The bloom period peaks in early to mid-June on the South Shore. After bloom fades, the seed heads dry in place and continue to provide architectural interest through summer and into fall.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Deer do not eat alliums. This makes them particularly valuable in Hingham and Duxbury, where deer pressure on residential gardens has intensified significantly in recent years. Mass plantings of allium in the mid-border, combined with catmint and salvia at the front, create a June display that is both beautiful and genuinely deer-resistant — a combination that has become something of a signature in our South Shore planting designs.</p>
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<h4 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">Salvia &#8216;May Night&#8217;: The Pollinator&#8217;s Favorite</h4>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Salvia nemorosa &#8216;May Night&#8217; blooms in May and — confusingly, despite its name — continues blooming well into June on the South Shore, where the slightly moderated coastal climate extends the performance of early-summer plants. The deep violet-indigo flower spikes are among the most intensely colored things in the June garden, and they draw pollinators with a consistency that has made this plant a keystone species in pollinator-focused landscape design.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">&#8216;May Night&#8217; is compact — twelve to eighteen inches tall — which makes it ideal at the front of the border, along patio edges, or as a mass groundcover element in a larger planting. It combines beautifully with catmint, allium, and the silvery foliage of artemisia or lamb&#8217;s ear. Cut it back hard after the first flush of bloom and it will typically rebloom in late July or August.</p>
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<h4 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">Siberian Iris: Early June Elegance</h4>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The Siberian iris peaks slightly earlier than most of this month&#8217;s spotlight plants — often in the last week of May through the first two weeks of June — but it earns its place on this list because few plants offer its combination of refined beauty, toughness, and landscape versatility.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The flowers — in shades of purple, blue-violet, white, and yellow depending on cultivar — have an almost orchid-like refinement that looks extraordinary against the casual richness of a naturalistic South Shore planting. After bloom, the upright, grass-like foliage remains clean and attractive through the entire growing season, providing strong vertical texture in the border.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Siberian iris tolerates wetter conditions than most perennials — an important characteristic for some of the lower-lying gardens and coastal margin properties in Duxbury and along the South Shore&#8217;s estuaries. It is also fully winter hardy, disease resistant, and virtually maintenance free once established.</p>
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<h4 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">Hardy Geranium &#8216;Rozanne&#8217;: The Season-Long Performer</h4>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">In a post about what&#8217;s blooming in June, &#8216;Rozanne&#8217; deserves special mention because it is one of the few plants that genuinely blooms from June through frost without a significant rest period. The flowers are a clear blue-violet with a white center — not flashy, but relentlessly cheerful — and the habit is a loose, spreading mound that works beautifully as a groundcover, a border filler, or a cascading element over low walls.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">&#8216;Rozanne&#8217; has become one of the most-planted perennials in the world for good reason. It is easy, attractive, adaptable to a wide range of coastal soil conditions, and virtually never needs dividing or fussing. For South Shore clients who want continuous color from early summer through October with minimal maintenance commitment, &#8216;Rozanne&#8217; is almost always on our plant list.</p>
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<h4 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">Planting for June: What Hingham, Cohasset &amp; Duxbury Gardens Need</h4>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Understanding the specific conditions of South Shore gardens is essential to getting the most from June-blooming plants. Hingham&#8217;s heavier loam soils and partially shaded woodland lots favor mountain laurel, Siberian iris, and baptisia. Cohasset&#8217;s rocky, lean coastal soils suit rugosa rose, catmint, and allium exceptionally well. Duxbury&#8217;s fast-draining sandy soils are ideal for salvia, catmint, and drought-tolerant natives like baptisia and seaside goldenrod.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Across all three communities, salt air tolerance is a factor worth considering even for properties set back from the immediate shoreline. Plants stressed by salt exposure show leaf scorch and reduced vigor — subtle signs that the planting palette needs refinement. All of the plants featured in this spotlight have demonstrated reliable salt tolerance in our South Shore projects.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">For more on selecting plants appropriate to your specific site conditions, the <a class="underline underline underline-offset-2 decoration-1 decoration-current/40 hover:decoration-current focus:decoration-current" href="https://ag.umass.edu/plant-diagnostics" target="_blank" rel="noopener">UMass Extension Plant Diagnostic Laboratory</a> is an excellent resource for Massachusetts gardeners.</p>
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<h4 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">How to Use the June Plant Spotlight in Your Own Garden</h4>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The plants featured here are not just beautiful — they are practical. Every one of them has been chosen based on field performance in South Shore landscapes, proven reliability in coastal Massachusetts conditions, and the kind of low-maintenance longevity that makes a planting investment worthwhile.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">If your garden is missing the blue-purple punch of catmint and salvia, the architectural drama of allium, or the native soul of mountain laurel and baptisia, June is the moment to make note. Fall planting — September and October — is the ideal time to install most of these plants, giving them a full season of root establishment before they face their first South Shore summer.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Land Design Associates provides planting design services for residential clients throughout Hingham, Cohasset, Duxbury, and the South Shore. If you are thinking about redesigning an existing border, adding pollinator-friendly plantings, or building a new garden from scratch, we would love to help. Contact us to schedule a design consultation.</p>
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<h4 class="text-text-100 mt-2 -mb-1 text-base font-bold">Frequently Asked Questions</h4>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]"><strong>What plants are blooming in June in Massachusetts?</strong> In June, Massachusetts gardens feature mountain laurel, catmint, Siberian iris, baptisia (false indigo), rugosa rose, allium, salvia, and hardy geraniums. On the South Shore, coastal-tolerant natives like beach rose, bayberry, and seaside goldenrod also come into their own in early summer.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]"><strong>What are the best plants for a coastal garden in Hingham, Cohasset, or Duxbury?</strong> The best plants for South Shore coastal gardens include rugosa rose, beach plum, bayberry, little bluestem grass, catmint, baptisia, and seaside goldenrod. These natives and near-natives thrive in salt air, sandy soils, and coastal wind conditions common in Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury, MA.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]"><strong>What perennials bloom in June in New England?</strong> June-blooming perennials for New England gardens include catmint (Nepeta), salvia &#8216;May Night&#8217;, Siberian iris, baptisia, hardy geranium &#8216;Rozanne&#8217;, allium, peonies, and astilbe. Many of these are also excellent performers in the coastal conditions of the South Shore.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]"><strong>Which June-blooming plants attract pollinators on the South Shore?</strong> Top pollinator plants blooming in June on the South Shore include catmint, salvia, baptisia, allium, rugosa rose, and mountain laurel. These plants support native bees, bumblebees, and butterflies and are well-suited to the coastal Massachusetts climate in Hingham, Cohasset, and Duxbury.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]"><strong>Can Land Design Associates help me choose plants for my South Shore garden?</strong> Yes. Land Design Associates in Walpole MA provides planting design services for residential clients throughout Hingham, Cohasset, Duxbury, and the South Shore. We specialize in plant palettes tailored to coastal New England conditions — selecting plants that perform beautifully season after season with minimal maintenance.</p>
<hr class="rule" />
<h2><b>Schedule Your Landscape Design Consultation Today</b></h2>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">If you are planning a project and need </span><b>landscape design in Walpole, MA</b><span style="font-weight: 400;"> or </span><b>landscape design in Hingham, Duxbury and Cohasset, MA</b><span style="font-weight: 400;">, working with the right team makes all the difference.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Land Design Associates is ready to help you design and build an outdoor space that is functional, durable, and built around your lifestyle.</span></p>
<p><b>Start with a design consultation:</b><b><br /></b><a href="https://landdesignassociates.com/design-build-form/"><span style="font-weight: 400;">https://landdesignassociates.com/design-build-form/</span></a></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Or explore our work here:</span><span style="font-weight: 400;"><br /></span><a href="https://landdesignassociates.com/featured-projects/"><span style="font-weight: 400;">https://landdesignassociates.com/featured-projects/</span></a></p>
<a href="https://landdesignassociates.com/maintenance-intake-form/" class="button primary" style="border-radius:18px;">
		<span>Book a Free Consultation</span>
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