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Gardening

Fleeting glory!

(33 Posts)
wildrose Fri 21-Jun-19 16:14:50

Hello. I have managed to get the lovely full border I aimed for a couple of years ago but am wondering what I could put amongst these early Summer plants. As you'll no doubt know, they all flower together throughout May/June and then my border gets cut back and looks too bare. Is it a case of dashing to the garden centre for annuals to fill the spaces?

Coolgran65 Mon 24-Jun-19 04:20:25

I use pots to fill a temporary space. Violas can cope with the rain better than pansies

lmm6 Sun 23-Jun-19 21:50:53

Mollyplop, I love your door and plants against a white wall. Looks so attractive and welcoming.

SpringyChicken Sun 23-Jun-19 21:06:45

Though not fashionable at the moment and fairly hard to fine, try hardy garden chrysanthemums, e.g Mrs Jessie Cooper or Emperor of China. Very late flowering. Alstroemerias and Scabious Kudo will also flower into autumn.

gillybob Sun 23-Jun-19 20:36:27

I’ve pulled my little garden to bits today. Got rid of a few things to leave a bit breathing space for others . I would love a bigger garden but so happy to have an outside space that many others don’t have.

Loads of things seem to be in the wrong place so I have decided to take a few pictures and the move bits around in the autumn ready for next year.

Sadly our Sorbus tree ( 7 years in our garden so possibly about 10-12 years old) is looking a bit poorly with brown outline on the leaves . I will be so upset if we loose it . Almost everyone where I live have paved their gardens .

Ooeyisit Sun 23-Jun-19 20:01:27

Marigolds are a splash of orange and flower until the end of Summer .They reseed themselves too

Greyduster Sun 23-Jun-19 08:22:25

Geums are great for giving height and colour to a border. Bright red ‘Mrs Bradshaw’ seems to go on forever and there are lots of other shades. Perennial red lobelia, coreopsis, salvia ‘hotlips’, rudbeckia and echinacea purpurea (cone flowers) will give you height and colour. Erysimum Bowles Mauve is lovely if you want something shrubby, but you will have to be stern with it or it will take over.

Whitewavemark2 Sun 23-Jun-19 07:59:45

What a lot if blue there is in our gardens.

This shows some of the Delphiniums I grow and behind is Paul’s Himalayan Musk. On the garden arch is the acid green of a hop, and clematis Lady Diana. The Rose is Harlow Carr. The rose peeping out above the clematis is The Generous Garden, one if the best smelling roses I think.

Grammaretto Sun 23-Jun-19 07:47:04

This thread is like GQT with pictures.
I'm waiting for the perennial pea to flower in my riot cottage garden border. There's a fuschia too.
Nowadays, I've reluctantly planted shrubs in half of the long border for ease of care. They do grow huge and I must remember to prune them when the time comes - especially the hebes.

janeainsworth Sun 23-Jun-19 07:28:47

This was my sunny border a couple of evenings ago.

The geums will carry on all summer and into the autumn.
At the moment it’s geraniums, foxgloves, mallow, the loosestrife just coming out, and later it will be montbretia, Japanese anemones and a tall yellow daisy thing that came from my Mum’s garden. Sedums too - the leaves provide a good contrast to other things and then their flowers appear in late summer.

Mollyplop Sun 23-Jun-19 07:19:48

I use pots and then I can fill gaps as they appear

Mollyplop Sun 23-Jun-19 07:17:27

Barmeyoldbat what flowers did you put in your wildflower patch ?

lemongrove Sat 22-Jun-19 13:51:14

wildrose a lot of those plants will go on flowering anyway,
But what we do is to plant all sorts of things in pots and move them around to fill gaps.Pelargoniums and dahlias will flower well into the autumn.

cc Sat 22-Jun-19 13:41:51

Barmeyoldbat I'd love to see a photo of your flowering bank, sounds like the perfect solution.

cc Sat 22-Jun-19 13:38:46

It looks lovely wildrose.
I wouldn't bother with annuals, just smaller perennials. Your geraniums will flower again if you cut them back, I'd also go for Astrantia (pink, claret, white) and smaller anemones (such as White Swan), smaller penstemon (all colours), veronica spicata (pink, blue, mauve). There are lots of slightly taller campanulas in blue or white such as campanula persificolia ("fairy bells") though they may be a bit tall for what you want. I particularly like the little daisy with silver leaves called Anthemis punctata subsp. cupaniana - bit of a mouthful but it always looks fresh, you just deadhead to keep it going and chop it back to stop it getting too wide.
None of these get fungal problems in my garden, unlike some of the others such as achillia or phlox.
If you go to one of the large online plant sellers like Crocus you can choose plants by flowering month, colour and size. That would give you ideas, though obviously you could buy them locally.
If you want bits of annual to fill gaps I'd always go for some sort of small violas rather than the big pansies.

Daisymae Sat 22-Jun-19 13:20:40

Aster are good, together with monarda and some of the smaller grasses. Neither of mine are flowering yet, but they go on well into the autumn. I also can never resist a repeat flowering rose.

farview Sat 22-Jun-19 12:15:53

Cosmos are a lovely filler.go on and on flowering till winter if you deadhead them..

missdeke Sat 22-Jun-19 11:57:42

You've all got such lovely gardens, mine is much more wild or scruffy, call it whatever, but I do get lots of wildlife. I can't bring myself to buy achillea though as I still think of it as yarrow and it grows wild in my lawn.

That could be one of the Carpenter Bees.

Bijou Sat 22-Jun-19 11:21:52

Erigeron will continuously flower if dead headed.. calendula. Potentilla shrub flowers continuously. Many species of hebe too.

Barmeyoldbat Sat 22-Jun-19 10:10:13

My back fence came down, yet again, two years ago. We have never put another one up. The end of the garden is higher than the rest of the garden and the house over the back is the same. Instead we have joined together and established a wonder bank of wild flowers. So now we have a wonderful view instead of a fence, we can chat and talk and yet still have our privacy. My son calls it a community garden. The flowers this year have been just out of this world and we hope for the same next.

CyclingKnitter Fri 21-Jun-19 21:14:15

Wow aggie, that’s beautiful- really lovely against the white wall.

aggie Fri 21-Jun-19 19:17:55

another fan of Rozanne , it will stand a bit of cutting back if it gets tatty and come up again like new . The last picture was last year , just taken a new snap

CyclingKnitter Fri 21-Jun-19 17:32:58

wildrose, it's taken me more than 15 years to get to this - I've had so many disasters and re-starts and think-agains. Some of it my fault - not knowing how big things would grow, not bothering to divide perennials (or knowing how!), not thinking about how much or little water things will need. It's definitely ongoing learning. I agree with the comment about Geranium Rozanne - they're amazing, lasting for ages.

shysal Fri 21-Jun-19 17:25:48

Geranium Rozanne flowers until September, unlike some of the other varieties. Also Osteospermum went on through the last winter for me. I have recently planted a new bed and am most pleased with the giant Alliums and Foxgloves for height, but they will only last for a few more weeks. I tried to grow some Verbena Bonariensis from a packet of seeds, but they came through as Nicotianas! I am also fond of Heuchera which have evergreen foliage of every colour imaginable, plus spikes of flowers early on.

wildrose Fri 21-Jun-19 17:17:57

Oooh I've not seen a bee like that either!

wildrose Fri 21-Jun-19 17:17:15

Lovely pics too CyclingKnitter - I've noted your suggestions. I hope to have things blooming in smooth succession as I suppose all do and it's a real learning curve. Enjoying the lessons though!