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• #9577
Ajuga/Heuchera are don't grow tall and have coloured winter leaves/flowers.
For summer Geranium have a lot of colours to pick from and there are many groundcover ones, they do go brown in winter I think.
Maybe that works?
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• #9578
Ajuga/Heuchera
I'd also like some herbs in there, so that could be nice and the colours should go with the irises.
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• #9579
Before.
1st pic is the large corner bed.
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• #9580
Depending on how much work you want: Thyme is low and pink flowering (needs sun/draining soil), lavender is herb-ish (the white / pink ones don't do as well according to my mum but they exist if you want a non purple one), sage/chives also do wee flowers.
After that you end up with annuals and more work.
A rosemary becomes a big shrub/bay trees so not really a bedding thing anymore. Mint is easy to grow but rather...invasive.
That's a pretty big front garden! Lots of options :)
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• #9581
Oh Nasturtium are not seen as herbs, but fully edible. Only red/yellow/orange hues though, so unless you want a yellow/purple clash maybe not for you?
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• #9582
Japanese knotweed
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• #9583
Ajuga/Heuchera
..Gesundheit!
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• #9584
Here is the nearly completed.
Current thinking is the flag irises either side of the path with some other stuff mixed in. Probably try and take a cutting of the fushua on the right and mirror it on the left (I know you can't really see it).
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• #9585
Anyway the question of where to find inspiration still stands.
Luckily it's not exactly the time to plant stuff so we have time to plan.
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• #9586
That's a pretty big front garden!
I know, but it needs to provide for 2 cars (ours and guest rather than golf club) and my motorbike.
But there are effectively 3 x 90cm wide beds for plants. So still plenty of greenery and not just a giant paved surface.
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• #9587
I like Nasturtiums but they are messy and can spread.
I probably should have said I'd like some fragrant plants. I have a very tight knit lemon thyme which I'd quite like to find again as it would give nice ground cover.
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• #9588
It is hiding on you? ;)
We have a lemon balm in the Cavehill Castle Herb Garden, it smells lovely. So far it doesn't seem to be as bad as the tea-mint which really does spread... but it is more shrubby than ground cover.
Lemon Verbena also smells great but it is a shrub again. Jasmine also smells great shrub-wise, a few people have it nearby and in the evening it smells lovely.
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• #9589
the question of where to find inspiration
6 months of Gardens Illustrated magazine plus a free book or hand rake for just over £20 here
https://www.buysubscriptions.com/print/gardens-illustrated-magazine-subscription
It's the best gardening magazine and although like most of them it mostly features enormous, spectacular gardens you can still find plenty of planting inspiration for a normal garden
Book or rake can be regifted as a Christmas present, meaning the subscription is essentially free
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• #9590
Looking at hedges I would -love- a Camillea.
We have red clay soil which I think is acidic, but how picky are they?
As the drainage isn't so great, so I was going to get compost but that is "neutral".
I do see them in front gardens of neighbours, but don't know if they changed up their soil or not. -
• #9591
Would probably be cheaper to buy a soil pH testing kit and a few bags of ericaceous compost to dig in, than to find that your new camelia hedge is dying because the soil was too limey?
Camelia hedges look incredible - great idea
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• #9592
Tx!
Yes an expensive option, I'll get some testing kits.
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• #9593
I got a pack of 10 of ebay super cheap.
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• #9594
EBay is surprisingly good for plants, got lots of seeds on it already.
Will get Clivia in rare colours next year for the house on there.
A long as there is floor space more house plants can fit, right? ;)
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• #9595
Any suggestions for a bulb planter thing? Tried a cheapo one from Amazon and this happened the second hole I tried to do.
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• #9596
Get a decent widger. Won't put the bulb in, like, but won't fold like cheap suit either.
I have this one: https://cpc.farnell.com/kent-stowe/70100182/ss-widger/dp/SI19609?
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• #9597
Is the green handle meant to be telescopic?
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• #9598
Yep, the whole thing allegedly opens out to deposit the plug of dirt you have removed. As illustrated, it won't and they're made of cheese....
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• #9599
they're made of cheese....
Presumably the Miche branding is on the reverse side?
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• #9600
They would fail the rigorous quality control standards of Miche.
Cheers all. I should have said that the leylandii will be going in spring when we've decided what is going in the borders instead (Hydrangea petiolaris at the back but haven't decided on the sides). Just didn't see the point in ripping out the greenery now when nothing will be replacing it for a few months.
I was more wondering if anything could be done to make the lawn less crappy between now and spring so it's less of a mud pit. It's been knackered all year and I never got round to sorting it because we were using it too much and then the hosepipe ban came along but I have plans to level it and and put down new turf or seed early next year.
@lemonade it gets used quite a bit for sitting out in and kid playing so don't really want to make it much smaller, it's also nice to have a shaded area to sit in because the rest of the garden gets the sun for most of the day.