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#1
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Winter flowering plants for very large shallow containers
This year I have grown tomatoes and cucumbers in plastic bags - wide and
shallow - and they have done O.K. I am now left with these containers for the winter. I can just leave them, empty them (leaving a blot on the back garden where they sat), or find a nice winter flowering bedding plant to cheer them up until spring. Not having that much success, though. Do pansies and primroses flower through the winter? Is there anything else obvious and 'off the shelf' which would do? Cheers Dave R |
#2
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Winter flowering plants for very large shallow containers
On 14/10/2013 17:35, David.WE.Roberts wrote:
This year I have grown tomatoes and cucumbers in plastic bags - wide and shallow - and they have done O.K. I am now left with these containers for the winter. I can just leave them, empty them (leaving a blot on the back garden where they sat), or find a nice winter flowering bedding plant to cheer them up until spring. Not having that much success, though. Do pansies and primroses flower through the winter? Is there anything else obvious and 'off the shelf' which would do? Cheers Dave R Never grown or even bought one, and they aren't exactly flowers, but what about those ornamental cabbages? They aren't cheap, though. -- Jeff |
#3
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Winter flowering plants for very large shallow containers
On 14/10/2013 18:04, Jeff Layman wrote:
On 14/10/2013 17:35, David.WE.Roberts wrote: This year I have grown tomatoes and cucumbers in plastic bags - wide and shallow - and they have done O.K. I am now left with these containers for the winter. I can just leave them, empty them (leaving a blot on the back garden where they sat), or find a nice winter flowering bedding plant to cheer them up until spring. Not having that much success, though. Do pansies and primroses flower through the winter? Is there anything else obvious and 'off the shelf' which would do? Cheers Dave R Never grown or even bought one, and they aren't exactly flowers, but what about those ornamental cabbages? They aren't cheap, though. If you look around you might find bare rooted wallflower plants, it's a good time to plant them now. Much better than small container/transplants. |
#4
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Winter flowering plants for very large shallow containers
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 18:07:34 +0100, David Hill wrote:
On 14/10/2013 18:04, Jeff Layman wrote: On 14/10/2013 17:35, David.WE.Roberts wrote: This year I have grown tomatoes and cucumbers in plastic bags - wide and shallow - and they have done O.K. I am now left with these containers for the winter. I can just leave them, empty them (leaving a blot on the back garden where they sat), or find a nice winter flowering bedding plant to cheer them up until spring. Not having that much success, though. Do pansies and primroses flower through the winter? Is there anything else obvious and 'off the shelf' which would do? Cheers Dave R Never grown or even bought one, and they aren't exactly flowers, but what about those ornamental cabbages? They aren't cheap, though. If you look around you might find bare rooted wallflower plants, it's a good time to plant them now. Much better than small container/transplants. Will they flower between now and February? |
#5
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Winter flowering plants for very large shallow containers
On 14/10/2013 17:35, David.WE.Roberts wrote:
This year I have grown tomatoes and cucumbers in plastic bags - wide and shallow - and they have done O.K. I am now left with these containers for the winter. I can just leave them, empty them (leaving a blot on the back garden where they sat), or find a nice winter flowering bedding plant to cheer them up until spring. Not having that much success, though. Do pansies and primroses flower through the winter? Is there anything else obvious and 'off the shelf' which would do? Cheers Dave R I am concerned that this mere 'plastic bag' is not going to offer frost protection for your plants. If you could put the compost in a tub or trough raised off the ground, then I think you have a chance. I would start with a smallish Skimmia (often sold for just this purpose), as it offers modest evergreen structure. I would underplant with as many hyacinths as you can cram in (for later Spring interest), then cover the remaining bare earth with either polyanthus,bellis or pansies (which ever is best at the time). Whilst planting these, I would also tuck in as many early-flowering crocuses as possible. The good thing about the bulbs as that they carry their own food store, so will cope with the impoverished compost. Most, if not all, of these plants can go in the garden later, so there will be very little wastage. -- Spider. On high ground in SE London gardening on heavy clay |
#6
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Winter flowering plants for very large shallow containers
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 19:23:57 +0100, Spider wrote:
On 14/10/2013 17:35, David.WE.Roberts wrote: This year I have grown tomatoes and cucumbers in plastic bags - wide and shallow - and they have done O.K. I am now left with these containers for the winter. I can just leave them, empty them (leaving a blot on the back garden where they sat), or find a nice winter flowering bedding plant to cheer them up until spring. Not having that much success, though. Do pansies and primroses flower through the winter? Is there anything else obvious and 'off the shelf' which would do? Cheers Dave R I am concerned that this mere 'plastic bag' is not going to offer frost protection for your plants. If you could put the compost in a tub or trough raised off the ground, then I think you have a chance. I would start with a smallish Skimmia (often sold for just this purpose), as it offers modest evergreen structure. I would underplant with as many hyacinths as you can cram in (for later Spring interest), then cover the remaining bare earth with either polyanthus,bellis or pansies (which ever is best at the time). Whilst planting these, I would also tuck in as many early-flowering crocuses as possible. The good thing about the bulbs as that they carry their own food store, so will cope with the impoverished compost. Most, if not all, of these plants can go in the garden later, so there will be very little wastage. Thanks - however (although I didn't make it clear) the 'paddling pools' of compost ARE the garden - nowhere to plant out afterwards. This is a short term exercise for November to February/March just to pretty up three areas of compost instead of leaving them bare or removing them to leave bare earth underneath. So bulbs are probably out. This is why I was looking at winter bedding as something which could be discarded before Easter. Frost, torrential rain, long term snow - all these are likely. I guess you could regard these as temporary raised beds with regards to frost. Cheers Dave R |
#7
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Winter flowering plants for very large shallow containers
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 20:56:13 +0100, Chris Hogg wrote:
On 14 Oct 2013 16:35:03 GMT, "David.WE.Roberts" wrote: This year I have grown tomatoes and cucumbers in plastic bags - wide and shallow - and they have done O.K. I am now left with these containers for the winter. I can just leave them, empty them (leaving a blot on the back garden where they sat), or find a nice winter flowering bedding plant to cheer them up until spring. Not having that much success, though. Do pansies and primroses flower through the winter? Is there anything else obvious and 'off the shelf' which would do? Cheers Dave R Browse this lot; You should find something to suit. http://tinyurl.com/lw39bz6 O.K. - looks as though pansies and violas may be up to the job. Now to locate somewhere that sells them by the yard :-) |
#8
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Winter flowering plants for very large shallow containers
On 14/10/2013 19:40, David.WE.Roberts wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 19:23:57 +0100, Spider wrote: On 14/10/2013 17:35, David.WE.Roberts wrote: This year I have grown tomatoes and cucumbers in plastic bags - wide and shallow - and they have done O.K. I am now left with these containers for the winter. I can just leave them, empty them (leaving a blot on the back garden where they sat), or find a nice winter flowering bedding plant to cheer them up until spring. Not having that much success, though. Do pansies and primroses flower through the winter? Is there anything else obvious and 'off the shelf' which would do? Cheers Dave R I am concerned that this mere 'plastic bag' is not going to offer frost protection for your plants. If you could put the compost in a tub or trough raised off the ground, then I think you have a chance. I would start with a smallish Skimmia (often sold for just this purpose), as it offers modest evergreen structure. I would underplant with as many hyacinths as you can cram in (for later Spring interest), then cover the remaining bare earth with either polyanthus,bellis or pansies (which ever is best at the time). Whilst planting these, I would also tuck in as many early-flowering crocuses as possible. The good thing about the bulbs as that they carry their own food store, so will cope with the impoverished compost. Most, if not all, of these plants can go in the garden later, so there will be very little wastage. Thanks - however (although I didn't make it clear) the 'paddling pools' of compost ARE the garden - nowhere to plant out afterwards. This is a short term exercise for November to February/March just to pretty up three areas of compost instead of leaving them bare or removing them to leave bare earth underneath. So bulbs are probably out. This is why I was looking at winter bedding as something which could be discarded before Easter. Frost, torrential rain, long term snow - all these are likely. I guess you could regard these as temporary raised beds with regards to frost. Cheers Dave R Oh dear. Well, that really does only leave bedding. I do understand that you want something pretty to look at, but even the most floriferous winter bedding will only flower during peaks of better weather. The sort of weather you predict will inhibit, batter and drown, then bury your flowers :~(. If you can foresee some dryer, sunnier breaks in this forbidding gloom and tempest, then by all means plant some polyanthus and walk around whistling with your fingers crossed. I suspect you will see some flowers, but I doubt it will be a heart-warming display. A better idea would be to use your garden to feed the birds. I find it hard to peel myself away from the window once I've put food out. It can make a most cheering site. It isn't cheap (cheep!), but both you and the birds will enjoy it. -- Spider. On high ground in SE London gardening on heavy clay |
#9
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Winter flowering plants for very large shallow containers
On 14/10/2013 19:40, David.WE.Roberts wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2013 19:23:57 +0100, Spider wrote: On 14/10/2013 17:35, David.WE.Roberts wrote: This year I have grown tomatoes and cucumbers in plastic bags - wide and shallow - and they have done O.K. I am now left with these containers for the winter. I can just leave them, empty them (leaving a blot on the back garden where they sat), or find a nice winter flowering bedding plant to cheer them up until spring. Not having that much success, though. Do pansies and primroses flower through the winter? Is there anything else obvious and 'off the shelf' which would do? Cheers Dave R I am concerned that this mere 'plastic bag' is not going to offer frost protection for your plants. If you could put the compost in a tub or trough raised off the ground, then I think you have a chance. I would start with a smallish Skimmia (often sold for just this purpose), as it offers modest evergreen structure. I would underplant with as many hyacinths as you can cram in (for later Spring interest), then cover the remaining bare earth with either polyanthus,bellis or pansies (which ever is best at the time). Whilst planting these, I would also tuck in as many early-flowering crocuses as possible. The good thing about the bulbs as that they carry their own food store, so will cope with the impoverished compost. Most, if not all, of these plants can go in the garden later, so there will be very little wastage. Thanks - however (although I didn't make it clear) the 'paddling pools' of compost ARE the garden - nowhere to plant out afterwards. This is a short term exercise for November to February/March just to pretty up three areas of compost instead of leaving them bare or removing them to leave bare earth underneath. So bulbs are probably out. This is why I was looking at winter bedding as something which could be discarded before Easter. Frost, torrential rain, long term snow - all these are likely. I guess you could regard these as temporary raised beds with regards to frost. Cheers Dave R You don't say where you are. Wallflowers are spring flowering was always the thing to pull the wallflowers out after flowering to plant summer bedding. You say you only want something there till Feb? Why so early? "Winter" bedding will come into it's best early spring March/April/May If you only want something with colour November to Feb then I'd look at artificial flowers that you can remove Feb, pack away and use again next year. |
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