That could be it but why is my neighbour's garden a riot of hollyhocks? 
Good Morning Wednesday 29th April 2026
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Leafy and full of greenery! Hello all - hope you're enjoying a lovely sunny Sunday as we are up in the N.E. of England. I have a bare seating area in a sunny (south facing) corner and there is plenty of room to add some big pots so I would welcome suggestions for tall or smaller but fast growing patio plants. I have an Acer which is doing well and have just bought a palm of some sort but it's only maybe 3' in height and I'd like some taller plants with some movement when it's breezy. I don't post often but some of you advise me on caring for my first tomato plants last year and I had great success so my thanks for that 
Rose
That could be it but why is my neighbour's garden a riot of hollyhocks? 
Goodness knows
The Ile de Re has hollyhocks as its flower!! They were everywhere, and I decided to grow some, but I did neglect the poor things and they were victims to rust do I gave up.
To achieve a perfect looking patio you have to make sure it is not cramped with rubbish or waste. My parents weretrying really hard to have their back yard in order but it took them a few years to clear out all of unwated things they stored there. I, on the other hand, had to make one call and get fid if rubbish at once. I worked with this company, junkandgardening.co.uk/ very happy with their work.
We have just bought a Freda clematis and planted it (well DH planted it) hoping it will grow over an arch and look like yours rosesarered. There are already a couple of summer flowering ones there, so we're hoping they will climb through if he didn't damage the roots 
Our patio would be better if it was level - somehow the slabs seem to have found their own level (up a bit down a bit) and the man who laid some of it must have had a few ciders at lunch-time, it is on a gentle slope.
Beware of allowing clematis to climb up trees. I had to rescue my Amelanchier from a very robust Clematis Tangutica. The poor tree still lists a bit, but the Clematis had to go. I have a couple of alpine Clematis to plant out - a blue one and a white one - and the pyramids are ready for them today.
We were looking for Alpine Clematis when we bought Freda but, alas, not one to be found.
Just googled alpine clematis as I had never heard of it, and then realised that we were admiring one last week which was pouring over a fence out of someone’s garden into the lane at the back GS's school. There must have been as much of it on that side of the fence as the other! We both thought it was lovely but, sadly, it might be a bit vigorous for our garden. Having just got rid of tons of ivy and honeysuckle we are not doing vigorous anymore!
Hope it grows well Jalima you know the old saying about clematis 'first it sleeps, then it creeps then it leaps!' So, 3 years needed.We also have a Summer flowering clematis planted with it ( well, we did have two but one died -a Comtesse de Bouchard) the one we still have is The President, a lovely large purple flower, it's early this year and the big buds are already opening slightly!
gillybob you mentioned that you needed a clematis, but it would need to compete with honeysuckle.Which honeysuckles do you have?Because for instance I have one which is so vigorous that you couldn't grow anything else with it.Why not wait and see how the three honeysuckles look in a couple of years time?
I think my The President is as defunct as I wish a certain other president was. Nothing for it but to plant a montana
Each year I think our President is defunct but it manages to climb about 2 feet, produces a flower then gets very limp and gives in.
It clings to Nellie Moser.
My "Guernsey Cream" Clematis is looking good this year. I have been looking after it a bit more recently.
Gillybobs I do like your garden.
My garden is still WIP but I am getting there. I am just waiting for the wisteria to flower now.
That looks healthy Nelliemoser
Do you feed it?
We had one called Niobe which twined amidst a very dark coloured honeysuckle but it didn't survive being moved unfortunately.
Not sure what my new Honeysuckles are roses but I will check tonight when I get home. They do seem to be shooting up and I have started to train them along the back fence. I want them to eventually cover the fence if possible. You are right I should wait and see before I rush in and plant Clematis too.
I do have an abundance of Hydrangeas, some in large pots and some in the ground and they seem to do very well indeed putting up with the salty air and the cold wind that so often blows straight off the North Sea. My garden is very much a case of trial and error finding out what works and what doesn't.
My small garden is built on quite a steep slope so we have had to try and create two tiers (not sure if its obvious in the photos) My lawn is a few feet above the planted area and held up/back by a little wall. We did it all ourselves when we moved in as being a new build all we had was a pile of builders rubble with a sprinkling of top soil.
I'm thinking of growing a couple in a big pot on the patio to climb up trellis on the wall. Can anyone recommend a suitable clematis for pot growing?
Galen
I've got citrus trees and a couple of olives a fig and a eucalyptus on mine. Soon there will be loads of bright geraniums as well. A grape vine trained over old boat rigging gives shade and hanging baskets more colour. Pinks, lavender and my rambling rector give perfume. All I want at the moment is sun!
It looks awesome, I love it...
Tetrapanax - very large leaves. A bit like castor oil plant but more spectacular. I just searched on line to see whether it can be container grown. Some people say no but someone else said it would be OK in a large container. You'd need to protect it in the winter.
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