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Buried soak-away cover: planting suggestions please
I'm turning a patch of lawn into a shrub bed. At one point I've
unearthed (literally) the concrete cover of a soak-away. I think it takes the run-off from the house roof. It's about 4 ft square and buried say 4 - 6 inches down. During the summer, this area of grass always dried out and went brown long before the rest. Now I know why. I imagine that in winter it probably becomes waterlogged fairly quickly due to the lack of drainage. I'm after suggestions for lowish-growing evergreen flowering shrubs (say 2 - 3 ft in height) to plant over it, that will tolerate a root-run restricted in depth, likely to be wet to waterlogged in winter but which dries out completely in summer. As if that wasn't enough, it also has to withstand salt-laden gales, although frost-hardiness is not an issue as we're on the coast and seldom get frosts below -2 or -3C, and then only overnight. The soil is mildly acid. The current plan is to put a layer of fine gravel directly onto the concrete cover to help the drainage in winter, before re-covering with soil and then to plant either low-growing rosemaries and/or lavenders to cope with the summer dryness. -- Chris E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net |
#2
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Chris Hogg wrote in message . ..
I'm turning a patch of lawn into a shrub bed. At one point I've unearthed (literally) the concrete cover of a soak-away. I think it takes the run-off from the house roof. It's about 4 ft square and buried say 4 - 6 inches down. During the summer, this area of grass always dried out and went brown long before the rest. Now I know why. I imagine that in winter it probably becomes waterlogged fairly quickly due to the lack of drainage. I'm after suggestions for lowish-growing evergreen flowering shrubs (say 2 - 3 ft in height) to plant over it, that will tolerate a root-run restricted in depth, likely to be wet to waterlogged in winter but which dries out completely in summer. As if that wasn't enough, it also has to withstand salt-laden gales, although frost-hardiness is not an issue as we're on the coast and seldom get frosts below -2 or -3C, and then only overnight. The soil is mildly acid. The current plan is to put a layer of fine gravel directly onto the concrete cover to help the drainage in winter, before re-covering with soil and then to plant either low-growing rosemaries and/or lavenders to cope with the summer dryness How is your liking for Ericas. I think they fit most of the requirements, Acidity, dryness, gales, lowish habit. |
#4
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"Chris Hogg" wrote in message ... I'm turning a patch of lawn into a shrub bed. At one point I've unearthed (literally) the concrete cover of a soak-away. I think it takes the run-off from the house roof. It's about 4 ft square and buried say 4 - 6 inches down. During the summer, this area of grass always dried out and went brown long before the rest. Now I know why. I imagine that in winter it probably becomes waterlogged fairly quickly due to the lack of drainage. I'm after suggestions for lowish-growing evergreen flowering shrubs (say 2 - 3 ft in height) to plant over it, that will tolerate a root-run restricted in depth, likely to be wet to waterlogged in winter but which dries out completely in summer. As if that wasn't enough, it also has to withstand salt-laden gales, although frost-hardiness is not an issue as we're on the coast and seldom get frosts below -2 or -3C, and then only overnight. The soil is mildly acid. The current plan is to put a layer of fine gravel directly onto the concrete cover to help the drainage in winter, before re-covering with soil and then to plant either low-growing rosemaries and/or lavenders to cope with the summer dryness. Or you could forget planting directly over the concrete. Plant something at the edges that will happily grow a few feet sideways- the low cotoneasters, f'rinstance. -- Anton |
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