By October21
Northamptonshire, United Kingdom
I am looking for some plants/flowers/bulbs for my front garden that will look nice all year round. something that will flower in spring summer and remain as foilage for the rest of the year. any ideas? many thanks.
- 25 Sep, 2010
Answers
Thank you. I actually have a small border so are the above that you mentioned able to be planted in this way? and i need something that possibly doesnt spread much. thanks
25 Sep, 2010
I'd say both those mentioned will be too large in a small border, october21. How small are we talking in terms of length and width, and how much sun does the area get? Is the border immediately behind a wall?
25 Sep, 2010
Viburnum tinus 'variegatum', if you can find it, is quite a slow growing shrub - the plain green one might be too vigorous for you. Same with the Choisya if the border isn''t wide. Can you tell me the measurements, please?
Look at Heucheras, definitely, as they're colourful all year round. I really would think about some bulbs, too.
25 Sep, 2010
Posted at same time, Bamboo. :-)
25 Sep, 2010
it is probably roughly 1 metre long by about 10 inches in width, it is directly infront of a garden wall. Many thanks.
25 Sep, 2010
Is it sunny there, and how high is the wall?
25 Sep, 2010
yes it is in an area where there is alot of sun, the wall is probably half a metre high.
25 Sep, 2010
That's a very small area to plant and the problem you have is that evergreen small shrubs often don't flower - larger ones will get too large, and will need enough space for a spread widthways of 4 feet or more which, obviously, fills the space available and more. I'd imagine the wall shades the bed, so although the garden is sunny, the immediate area behind the wall up to the height of it isn't, it'll be shady. You could try the larger lavenders (Dutch lavender), but a mix of plants there which flower is difficult because of limited space. If the wall is only 2 feet, I'd be inclined to use Dutch lavender and possibly Euonymus microphyllus for variegated evergreen colour.
25 Sep, 2010
Sorry my ideas are too big for that area, October. I should have asked you the size available before I suggested anything. :-(
25 Sep, 2010
What about things like heathers, hebes or minature rhods/azaleas?
27 Sep, 2010
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Rule out bulbs, then - they flower and then the leaves fade over a few weeks. You could grow some in pots for some spring colour, and remove them later, though.
Herbaceous plants appear in the spring, flower, and then need cutting back ready for reappearance in the spring...so they're not what you want, either. There are evergreen perennials - look at Heucheras with very attractive leaves.
What you're after too is a flowering evergreen shrub. Try Viburnum tinus - there's also a variegated one which I think is prettier. Then there's Choisya ternata.
25 Sep, 2010