Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
OT ? - Gardening in the Dordogne ???
Hello all,
Just come back from visiting English friends in the Dordogne. Of course the subject of gardening came up......... Question 1: The conditions there seem difficult. It's hot and dry in the summer but can get down to minus 15 on occasions ! The soil in my friends garden is on a very steep hillside with only very little poor quality topsoil over a layer of rock and clay. Water just runs of and it's hard to get things established. I was wondering whether any URGler's : have experience of gardening in the Dordogne or have friends there who might be able to help or know of any specialist books on the subject Question 2: ATM she is looking for a plant to cover the top of a bank (cut away to make room for extending the house) The plant needs a good root system to hold the earth in place + hanging quality to drape over the raw edge (she does not want a retaining wall or whathaveyou) Evergreen would be good too.......... Any thoughts gratefully received :~)) Jenny |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
JennyC wrote:
snip... :: Question 2: :: ATM she is looking for a plant to cover the top of a bank (cut :: away to make room for extending the house) The plant needs a good :: root system to hold the earth in place + hanging quality to drape :: over the raw edge (she does not want a retaining wall or :: whathaveyou) Evergreen would be good too.......... I'd be very wary of leaving a raw edge like this, especially with no form of retention and on such a steep incline, If she goes ahead with this, she can expect a mudslide and other bigger problems after that....you don't see anything like this in nature and there's a good reason for that :rainwater. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Użytkownik "JennyC" napisał w wiadomo¶ci ... | Hello all, | | Just come back from visiting English friends in the Dordogne. Of course the | subject of gardening came up......... | | ATM she is looking for a plant to cover the top of a bank (cut away to make room | for extending the house) The plant needs a good root system to hold the earth in | place + hanging quality to drape over the raw edge (she does not want a | retaining wall or whathaveyou) Evergreen would be good too.......... Try creeping juniper, ivy, cotoneaster. All tried out in a colder climate than Dordogne's:-) Regards, B. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Jenny wrote ...."ATM she is looking for a plant to cover the top of a bank
(cut away to make room for extending the house) The plant needs a good root system to hold the earth in place + hanging quality to drape over the raw edge (she does not want a retaining wall or whathaveyou) Evergreen would be good too.........." What about Ivy? will grow down as well as up. -- David Hill Abacus nurseries www.abacus-nurseries.co.uk |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
"JennyC" wrote in message ... Hello all, Just come back from visiting English friends in the Dordogne. Of course the subject of gardening came up......... Question 1: The conditions there seem difficult. It's hot and dry in the summer but can get down to minus 15 on occasions ! The soil in my friends garden is on a very steep hillside with only very little poor quality topsoil over a layer of rock and clay. Water just runs of and it's hard to get things established. I was wondering whether any URGler's : have experience of gardening in the Dordogne or have friends there who might be able to help or know of any specialist books on the subject Question 2: ATM she is looking for a plant to cover the top of a bank (cut away to make room for extending the house) The plant needs a good root system to hold the earth in place + hanging quality to drape over the raw edge (she does not want a retaining wall or whathaveyou) Evergreen would be good too.......... I smell trouble. How high is the edge? How steep is it? What kind of soil is it? Has she spoken to anybody with knowledge of the stability of banks in the vicinity? Any thoughts gratefully received :~)) Franz |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Lots of people replied
"JennyC" wrote Question 2: ATM she is looking for a plant to cover the top of a bank (cut away to make room for extending the house) The plant needs a good root system to hold the earth in place + hanging quality to drape over the raw edge (she does not want a retaining wall or whathaveyou) Evergreen would be good too.......... The slope if densely covered with grass, shrubs, small trees etc. It's been there a long time. There was a similar overhang before, the excavation have just moved the place where the original overhang was. I've posted a picture in alt.binaries.pictures.gardens (same thread name) The slope is the one running out from the house (parallel to it). It hasn't ever 'slipped' before.......... Jenny |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
On 7/9/04 18:21, in article , "JennyC"
wrote: Lots of people replied "JennyC" wrote Question 2: ATM she is looking for a plant to cover the top of a bank (cut away to make room for extending the house) The plant needs a good root system to hold the earth in place + hanging quality to drape over the raw edge (she does not want a retaining wall or whathaveyou) Evergreen would be good too.......... The slope if densely covered with grass, shrubs, small trees etc. It's been there a long time. There was a similar overhang before, the excavation have just moved the place where the original overhang was. I've posted a picture in alt.binaries.pictures.gardens (same thread name) The slope is the one running out from the house (parallel to it). It hasn't ever 'slipped' before.......... Whatever I type in, I can't pull up a picture. But you did say that it needs a good root system to hold the earth in place. If that is NOT in fact such an issue, I recommend Rosmarinus 'Severn Seas' or any of its cousins for ornamental planting only. I also recommend evaluation by a surveyor or structural engineer, frankly! It might cost a couple of hundred pounds and save a few hundred thousand, eventually. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove the weeds to email me) |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Nice clear picture, even if posted 3 times .
The bank looks to be about 6ft high, so shouldn't pose any great threat. I think it might be worth planting Helichrysum petiolare, this would mask the bank and should prove to be perennial I grew a 30 ft run of it outside ere in South Wales for around 5 years before I moved away from it. -- David Hill Abacus nurseries www.abacus-nurseries.co.uk |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
"David Hill" wrote in message ... Nice clear picture, even if posted 3 times . Sorry ! Slip of the keyboard........... The bank looks to be about 6ft high, so shouldn't pose any great threat. I think it might be worth planting Helichrysum petiolare, this would mask the bank and should prove to be perennial I grew a 30 ft run of it outside ere in South Wales for around 5 years before I moved away from it. Good idea, I'll pass it on. Jenny |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
New gardening series needs your gardening DIY disasters + dishevelled sheds | United Kingdom | |||
NOT OT "Gardening or not gardening posts" | United Kingdom | |||
concrete block farming/gardening; pallet farming/gardening; asphalt roofshingles mulch | Plant Science | |||
Gardening in the media -- was: big gardening magazines | Gardening |