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#1
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Hello to All,
Firstly I apologise, first post and I'm asking for advice already..... I have a very small plot of earth at the front of the house about 3m x 2m which faces North East and due to walls etc gets very little direct sunlight. Any advice what would grow well in low light?? We wanted to plant miniature conifers with a mix of heathers but I have just read that heather likes lots of sunlight. Would heather stand any chance in low light, we just loved the almost luminous colours and texture etc of the heather. Thanks for any help you can offer. Regards |
#2
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Hostas, ferns, Begonia would be a good start
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#3
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latebloomer wrote:
:: Hello to All, :: :: Firstly I apologise, first post and I'm asking for advice already..... :: :: I have a very small plot of earth at the front of the house about 3m x :: 2m which faces North East and due to walls etc gets very little direct :: sunlight. :: :: Any advice what would grow well in low light?? We wanted to plant :: miniature conifers with a mix of heathers but I have just read that :: heather likes lots of sunlight. Would heather stand any chance in low :: light, we just loved the almost luminous colours and texture etc of the :: heather. :: :: Thanks for any help you can offer. All the heathers we had planted in a sunny position shrivelled up and died, I managed to salvage a few small pieces and planted them in total shade along with a few ferns and they are thriving, one or two fuschias along the same border grow OK too (but not fantastic), they do get flowers on them though and they are all below a North facing fence, meaning they get sunlight for about 20 minutes per day in high summer when the sun is setting. -- If God had intended us to drink beer, He would have given us stomachs. |
#4
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![]() "latebloomer" wrote in message ... Hello to All, Firstly I apologise, first post and I'm asking for advice already..... I have a very small plot of earth at the front of the house about 3m x 2m which faces North East and due to walls etc gets very little direct sunlight. Any advice what would grow well in low light?? We wanted to plant miniature conifers with a mix of heathers but I have just read that heather likes lots of sunlight. Would heather stand any chance in low light, we just loved the almost luminous colours and texture etc of the heather. Thanks for any help you can offer. Regards latebloomer have look at the shade FAQ : http://www.tmac.clara.co.uk/urgring/faqshade.htm Lots of ideas there, Jenny |
#5
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Any advice what would grow well in low light?? We wanted to plant
miniature conifers with a mix of heathers but I have just read that heather likes lots of sunlight. Would heather stand any chance in low light, we just loved the almost luminous colours and texture etc of the heather. ----------------------------------------------- Conifers also need good light; In my experience, a conifer planted in shade will at best not thrive and at worst start to die off. I can't think of any shade-lovers that would give you the colours and texture of heathers and conifers, but here are a few suggestions of plants that I know will do well in shade, including some plants with silver variegation, which can really light up a dark spot (although too many different ones in a small area would be a bit much). Sarcococca hookeriana var. digyna. I thought this would be a boring shrub, useful only for its winter fragrance, but in the colder months all the leaf margins turn a rosy pink and it looks very attractive. It has tiny but powerfully scented flowers. Fatsia japonica: huge, shiny evergreen leaves. Attractive cream flowerheads. In a small space, a large-leaved plant can work very well. For ground-cover, try Lamium cultivars. Lamium galeobdolon (silver-patterned leaves, yellow flowers) has turned out to be a thug, but there are other, slower growing and more attractive ones, such as 'Herman's Pride', 'White Nancy', 'Beacon Silver'. Pachysandra terminalis 'Variegata' is another pretty ground-cover plant. Many yellow-variegated plants, such as Euonymus fortunei cultivars, just go green in shade, but the white-variegated ones, such as 'Harlequin' and 'Silver Queen' do very well in dense shade under shrubs in my patio. They will also work well as climbers if planted against a wall. For walls: Parthenocissus henryana - a deciduous, self-clinging climber. It has purple-backed leaves (new growth also purple) with silver veining, and turns red in autumn. Variegated ivies (again, not the yellow ones) can look stunning. |
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