Dores Anyone Know What This Means...
Technology1 min ago
Please can someone suggest something that is fairly bright and cheerful to plant in my fairly dry area of woodland garden under the trees and shrubs. I am planting daffodils there and want something that the bulbs can push up through but keeps the ground elder at bay (I have spent all summer dealing with the ground elder). All the usual things seem boring. I want some colour and not too much height and evergreen. Too much to ask!!
Dont want: Ivy, Periwinkle, Hypercicum, Pachysandra
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Mullein, my garden is already a jungle and a wildlife haven!! I have half an acre divided into about four separate areas. Your idea is really good. Problem is with this particular area is that I need it to be low maintenance (must take care of myself now I am on my last legs, ha ha) and the shrubs and trees are so large now that there isn't much light. I have left them to grow large for the birds to nest and hide in, and want something to cover the bare earth that I have left below that had been overrun with ground elder. I do admit to loving 'opportunist' plants that seed all over the place.
We have another area which is a huge stinging nettle patch and full of old logs - great for butterflies and insects. I have cultivated my front garden (which is North facing and damp into quite a nice woodland garden with lots of shrubs with berries for the birds to eat.
Our back garden is dry and South facing and my dogs and cats are about out there so I don't do much to encourage birds in that area.
Where about to you live Mullein? I always think of Gunnera as a Cornish plant, but noticed them growing in our local wildlife nursery recently (North Norfolk) and they are quite large? My garden is too dry for them.
We haven't got a pond but my neighbours over the road have a two acre garden with a natural pond and it is beautiful, so natural. Their ducks visit my garden often.
We also have a very active community of moles!
Without sounding harsh, you'll need to deal with the ground elder first with a systemic herbicide such as roundup. After it is sorted, bluebells can be grown and a lovely little plant called epimedium. Also try Dryopteris or some polystichum ferns wich love dry shade. Heuchera will tolerate this as will some shrubs such as forsythia and some conifers Good luck |
Ajuga, also called Bugle Weed is a good ground cover, forming a dense carpet of foliage over the soil. This semi-evergreen plant grows rapidly by producing mats of foliage in rosettes.
The foliage grows about 4 inches high with upright clusters of blue flowers reaching 6 to 8 inches. The plant flowers in early May to mid-June. Ajuga will flourish in almost any soil with good drainage. It grows best in full sun, but also tolerates shade.
The foliage is deep green in color and partly evergreen, turning brown after severe freezing weather. Bronze and variegated varieties are also available. The extensive root system prevents soil erosion.
If established plants are set 12 to 15 inches apart in the spring, they will cover the soil in one growing season. Do not set the plants too deep. The crown should never be covered. In the spring or early fall, rooted "runner plants" can be dug from established plantings and replanted elsewhere.
Additionally, Blue Rug juniper plants and their relatives are sturdy evergreen groundcovers for sunny slopes. Using juniper groundcovers controls erosion and weeds, and also eliminates your having to mow steep slopes.
I have both of these and they do well, even in shadier areas... Good luck!
Hi FP - under a tree & therefore in a very dry & shady area in my garden I've got variegated periwinkle, bergenia & canterbury bells doing amazingly well with a few logs thrown down as well. You're the same as me, looking towards low maintenance - I don't have many of the perennials that need regular lifting anymore & tubs are great for moving around to give some changes & colour. My dry & sunny front garden was really hard work so last autumn I had it cleared & gravelled with a bed where I'm planting mostly herbs & silver plants that will relish the warmth. It was a tough decision but in light of how I've felt for a lot of this yr I'm so glad I did!
I have a bud globosa - you don't see them very often - I call it the bubblegum tree!