I have some of those Liaise
They are still about 2cms high and haven't flowered yet.
Beginning to think I have not inherited my Dad's green fingers
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Gardening
My 3 new gardening rules
(78 Posts)My DH has many attributes but gardening isn't really one of them. When he retired 7 years ago he offered to take over gardening duties. Over time the garden has become really overgrown.
We went to see his brother recently and we were both bowled over by his neat and pretty garden.
Therefore, I have been on a mission. I've decided like it or not (I don't really like gardening) I have to get involved. Lots of people I known like the crammed full look, but I don't. I like each plant to have its own space. To this end I've made 3 rules we are going to follow:
1) Don't let anything grow higher than 2/3rd up the fence
2) No growth to overhang the edge of the border
3) Don't let plants intermingle. Close is fine.
Do others work to certain restraints.
You can't go wrong with Erigeron. (sounds like a tv advert!) Have you got it in a sunny spot jalima?
Thanks for the suggestions - we do have a couple of raised beds with brought in soil. Maybe we'll grass over some beds, and just have some pots.
The only good thing about our place, OH dug out a very large pond years ago (with a digger) and as it is blue slip clay, he didn't have to line it. We just had a big hole which filled with rain water gradually, and has stayed there, the wildlife love it.
Well, they were seeds planted in a pot, yes in a sunny spot.
It sounds like something you take for constipation.
Glad you are getting a grip on your garden OTH... YAY!
I only have a courtyard garden, half patio and back half two raised rail sleeper beds. One has a water feature, the other an olive tree (getting big!) They are filled in with cobbles, with just a few containers in them. All round the sleeper edges and on the ground gravel surrounding them I have containers. Masses of them. Most have evergreen plants or mini-shrubs. Don't want the mess of leaf drop in a small area, except for a wee acer by the water feature.
Am posting because I got fed up with snails/slugs and found that zonal geraniums in almost every pot and trough do well, as do the small waxy begonias. Fuschias do well too, am surprised they are not bothered by slugs... but it seems to be after they are mature plants.
The best thing about all three of these supposed annual bedding plants is that here in the southwest (Bristol), I just cut them down to stubs by Sept/Oct and leave them. And they come back next year.
I also have troughs in the patio area (and on the extension roof) that have the begonias and geraniums and beneath them are bulbs for mini-daffodils, so once I cut all down, tidy the surfaces, I just wait for spring and the daffs. After that, I cut the daff fronds (even though you are supposed to wait till they fall over, I don't) then by May the 'annuals' start growing again. I get about 3 years out of them before having to replace the zonals... the begonias seem to go on and on. Fuschias are more fussy, but return most of the time.
Saved tonnes of cash this way. Pics (roof not shown)... mesh is to keep debris and DGC from venturing through the railings to basement courtyard!
Sorry for long post, but this works for me as I have had a bad back and surgery. I do not lift these pots, and for the big ones I am changing over to the moulded plastic when the present ones crack from root spread. Much easier for OH to help me as well.
If you look at Beth Chatto's online site you'd find lots of help as she garden s on soil like yours.
Good luck
Liaise, I am fond of Erigeron too, they flower their socks off for months!
Mypennyfarthing, not sure if you were talking to me about Beth Chatto? If so, thanks. I know her lovely and inspirational garden, have been going there for over 30 years, and have several of her books ... and she does have some very heavy clay banks. But she has lots of helpers and access to materials to lighten it, compost, gravel etc.
We also have an area of old concrete, some has been taken up, but too much left to remove it all. We are thinking of making a dry garden on top of it, like Beth Chatto has done with her old car park. There is also a dry garden at RHS Hyde Hall which I want to visit.
Lewlew, I love your courtyard garden, very pretty, and am envious of your lovely high wall, a real suntrap I should imagine.
I live very close to the sea and am gradually learning which plants can tolerate the salty air. My gardening technique is called hitty-missy and it seems to work okay. I have been here (new build) for 5 years now and have lost count of how many tons of topsoil we have bought to fill our garden with anything like enough. I have my own beehive compost bin and I am gradually improving the soil quality. I would love to take a gardening course, just for fun and can't wait to get my little lean-to greenhouse. Then there will be no stopping me.
Have you told the plants and weeds about the garden rules? Good luck. ?
Lewlew I leave my fuschias (mostly planted in the ground) and they often carry on flowering for weeks well into the autumn, then usually chop them down in March. They survive (mostly), one thing that does grow in our garden.
Sometimes in a mild winter the zonal geraniums and fuschias in large pots will survive, other years I have to replace them, but they always give a good show of colour because the flower borders are very hit and miss (more miss than hit this year).
Yours all look lovely (better than mine
)
oh, just checked Beth Chatto's garden, too far away
hitty-missy
that sounds like mine gillybob
Lewlew your courtyard garden looks lovely. Do you find the watering a chore with your bad back? I have lots of pots and baskets around my back patio and there hasn't been enough rain to fill the water butt. I therefore have to traipse backwards and forwards to the outside tap at the front of the house, using either cans or hose. I shouldn't hope for rain but the veg plot needs it too.
I checked it out too Jalima and sadly too far for me too. A shame, as there are some fab short course I would love to attend.
Lewlew - I wish we had a garden like that - it's sensible but pretty.
Where we live the climate is almost tropical in the spring, summer and autumn. We have very fertile clay soil, so the combination produces masses of growth, especially giant weeds.
We still have quite a good veg. plot, husband does most of the work. But no-one grows flowers in beds here, they're all in pots, lots of geraniums and surfinia. And things like lavender and santolina do well.
My main rule is to do as little as possible heavy work. Grass needs cutting at least once a week from March to Oct.inclusive.I do most of that, we have a siton. And look after the flowers in pots. Otherwise, just sit and admire 
I am very
of that lovely wall Lewlew
I was looking around the garden this morning and the verbena bonariensis is looking good. It seeds itself and would probably be a good plant for those having problems. You only have to buy one plant. I give mine the Chelsea chop which make it a bit shorter. The same goes for phlox. The crocosmia Lucifer has increased and I have moved bits around. It glows red and makes a spot of colour here and there.
I have lost my echinaceas, rudbeckias, helleniums, Veronicas and others which is infuriating. I think I will stick to the ones that grow in this garden and save myself money.
gillybob TriciaF shysal Jalima seacliff Thank you all for the compliments...
The garden sort of evolved. That huge shed was my way of getting OH's tools and stuff out of our too small flat! So lost some garden there, and had a rethink. Before I had way too many containers of large shrubs which don't do well over time. Vine weevil is my enemy and I have to treat twice a year.
Yes, we live in Bristol and the garden is pretty sheltered, so that is an advantage to annuals surviving. I still cut them down hard. This happened by accident as I had my back surgery in the spring, and the autumn before was not able to do anything, so OH cut all back so at least the bulbs would come, and when they did, I sent him up (post op) to trim the fronds and he reported that the geraniums were leafing out.
So he let them go, and only watered when needed, added liquid fertilser, and when I saw them a month later going strong, I did a mental happy dance as I didn't know how I was going to plant up the containers having just had the operation in April. This has made life much easier!
The wall on the right by water feature is the one crumbing from ivy creeping over, the mortar is like crumbly sand. The other wall is the double one that I still get ivy creep from but not as bad.
We have a hosepipe out back for the last dozen years or so, we didn't at the beginning and although that was before back trouble, it was awful watering. I didn't show you the roof of the extension which also have troughs of zonals on it. That was horrid taking the watering can up to.
I have one of those X-Hoses and they are amazing and don't take up any room. I have one on the roof, too, that hangs down through the gutter outlet to the downpipe, so it is tucked behind it. When I water the roof, I un-hitch the ground level hosepipe and switch over to the roof one, then pop up and water all.
Really recommend X-Hose and get a good one... they are so much lighter and you don't have to coil them up again.
Someone mentioned lavender... I have some of that too, it's the only thing the bees come to now. Where have they all gone? 
We don't have so many bees nowadays although they do like the lavender.
A neighbour suggested a 'bee house' - apparently quite easy to make out of an old cupboard filled with different size tubes.
Something like this (other makes are available or you could construct your own)
www.coopersofstortford.co.uk/src/gbase/coopers-of-stortford-bee-house-prodst10294i/?LGWCODE=10294;103993;5253&gclid=CICZ-5jQvM4CFcIV0wodrKgHkg
and we need to plant the right plants as some are sterile and no good for bees.
I have been out all day. I haven't been sensible.
#strawberryknickerboc
Bought some more plants though. 
I have been out all day as well - strawberry Creme brûlée for me. Did walk for an hour to walk lunch off though. No plants for me - they are on order. 3 more roses - going to go with a white and yellow bed so climbers Wollerton Hall, Claire Austin and Teasing Georgia are on order.
Yes. But was your strawberry creme brûlée on top of fish and chips? Mine was.
#winner
My iPad mini did those fancy things on 'brulee'. All by itself. It's cleverer than me!
I was tempted by a rose. Lovely pale pink. Resisted.
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