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#1
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Plant advice please.
Hi,
Can anyone advise me on a plant that will do well in a tub, standing in front of a North-ish facing wall? I planted fuschias last year, which seemed to do ok, if not great, but now I'm thinking something a little taller, evergreen and semi-permanent. The tub is next to my front door, near a corner of the house. The front faces NNW. This spot will only get any sun in late afternoons, although it's open to the sky so it's quite bright. I was thinking Euonymus Fotunei 'Green/gold' but some sources say partial shade and some say full sun. What do you think? Any other choices? I'd prefer not to have a conifer. Thanks, John |
#2
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Euonymus fortunei cultivars are generally happy in shade - I have
plenty of different, even heavily variegated ones (such as 'Blondy', 'Silver Queen' and 'Harlequin') in quite deep shade by a house wall and under tall shrubs. However, in too much shade most yellow variegation will turn light green. If it's getting afternoon sun, that might be enough to retain the yellow coloration. I've a feeling 'Emerald 'n' Gold' will only get to about 3 feet tall, though, unless given the support of a wall or fence to climb (I could be wrong). I've seen taller, established examples of other Euonymus fortunei cultivars in people's gardens, though. If you can keep the compost lime-free, how about a Pieris (there are dwarf varieties) or a Camellia? My camellia flowers very well in a position with no direct sunlight, so it should certainly do well with just some sun in the afternoon. Or for big, dramatic foliage, Fatsia japonica? |
#3
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Ornata wrote:
Euonymus fortunei cultivars are generally happy in shade - I have plenty of different, even heavily variegated ones (such as 'Blondy', 'Silver Queen' and 'Harlequin') in quite deep shade by a house wall and under tall shrubs. However, in too much shade most yellow variegation will turn light green. If it's getting afternoon sun, that might be enough to retain the yellow coloration. I've a feeling 'Emerald 'n' Gold' will only get to about 3 feet tall, though, unless given the support of a wall or fence to climb (I could be wrong). I've seen taller, established examples of other Euonymus fortunei cultivars in people's gardens, though. If you can keep the compost lime-free, how about a Pieris (there are dwarf varieties) or a Camellia? My camellia flowers very well in a position with no direct sunlight, so it should certainly do well with just some sun in the afternoon. Or for big, dramatic foliage, Fatsia japonica? Excellent, thanks Ornata. I'll check on Pieris and Camellia, but a Fatsia would be too big and spreading. Euonymus seemed ideal for the spot so I might give that a go, esp. as I have two small plants that I grew from cuttings. Just looked 'em up on the RHS site... Pieris, it says, needs S, W, E aspect, whereas Euonmymus and Camellia are ok with any aspect. I like Camellia for the flowers but I might go ith Euonymus because it's attractive all year. Actually I might get a Camellia for somewhere else. ;-) Thanks again, John |
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