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#1 |
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Hi!
I have been busily digging up sod in our backyard to finally start a perennial garden! Last year was the Hosta garden...this year its everything else! So, I'm hoping some people would be willing to share photos of their perennial gardens with me. I especially need tips on layout. happy gardening! Christine |
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#2 |
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#3 |
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Well, its a little bit of everything except shade....no wait it has some of that too (but I filled it with Hostas...hostas...and more hostas)
Its a long narrow garden (3-5 feet wide). A large section is full sun, but there are other sections that get sun until around 2, then shade. Its up against a fence as well. Mostly, I'm just looking for inspiration...and being a little bit nosy :P |
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#4 |
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Will it be against a fence or the house? If so, I would think about growing a vining type plant towards the back and shorter plants in the front. Add a trellis if against the house. Also, think about bloom time when planning your perrenial bed. I like to have something in bloom at all times during the Spring, Summer, and Autumn months. And don't forget about bulbs. Love it when the hyacinths and crocus bloom in the Spring.
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#5 |
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I don't dare show my garden...it has been neglected this year.
I would recommend flowers and bulbs that will span the bloom season. Pick a color scheme and pay attention to mature plant height, bloom time and size. Taller plants to the back. Get it so that you always have something in bloom from early spring bulbs to fall asters. I am partial to having interesting foliage as well when the plant is not in bloom. Do you have favorite flowers...always include your favorites. My garden starts with some diminutive bulbs that bloom as soon as he snow recedes. They are followed by daffodils, then tulips. Peonies and iris are the next to bloom and a couple of poppies which leads into the summer bloomers...daylilies, lupines, verbena, delphiniums, fox glove, cone flowers, there are so many beautiful summer bloomers. for late color think asters, mums and monkshood. I always wanted to plan a garden that changes color schemes with the season but that didn't work out too well... |
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#11 |
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Someone has a nice front yard.
I tried combining pole beans w/ sweet peas to camouflage the fence in the back. It ended up as a woodchuck pitstop. Total disaster. Growing white eggplant against black bamboo looked interesting last year. This year, back row of Canna phasion, front row of Rainbow 'chard. Five years ago when we went for landscape/curb appeal project, I moved a minimum of 70 tons of various aggregates and landscape material. Projects can grow overnight by themselves sometimes. |
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#12 |
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#16 |
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#17 |
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Dot, I see some perfect places for Cyps in there...especially "easy ones" like reginae, pubescens, kentuckiense, and some of the vigorous hybrids.
Southern Japan's climate is really peculiar - winters similar to Atlanta, GA and summers more like Miami, FL. The weeds are beyond rank. If I don't pull on a regular basis then all I have are weeds. This is a shot from a couple years ago showing the backyard, well, honestly, the only yard! Constant maintanence required. ![]() |
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#18 |
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#20 |
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bump
I may of read that 1/3 of landscape should be evergreen. When I decorate, I do not favor annuals over perennials or vice versa. I know, easy to say when one is w/o children or pets. Zone 6 1/2-7 here. The fence will be covered in a dark bamboo in the spring, right after a new coat of paint. The empty space on fence on left of center pine is woodchuck damage. ![]() ![]() |
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