Thread: What to do?
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Old 02-09-2019, 09:42 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Roger Tonkin[_2_] Roger Tonkin[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2012
Posts: 459
Default What to do?

Thank you for the responses.

A couple of answers first.

The fence is about 30ft long (along side the lawn anyway) and
about 20ft wide at the widest point.

Strimming right to the fence is a possibility, but I've found
does not leave an even finish with the rest of the lawn.

I am not convinced about climbers, I've found they do tend to
thicken quite a lot and overhang. We have a Jasmin against the
garage wall, and it is about 3ft wide towards the top.

Honeysuckle does not seem to grow well here, I suspect it needs
to snuggle between other plants. Ivy is definitely a NO, we
have bits all over the place that keep coming up! Perpetual
sweet pea does attract, but not sure about outward spread and
width of the bed needed.

Any suggestions for perennial flowers of about 2-3ft that will
grow close to a fence and not spread/fall outwards!

Many thanks




In article -
september.org, says...

I have replaced my fence with my neighbour, and we have had
feather boarding put on both sides. The fence was also moved
slightly at one end (3") to make the line straight.

Now I have a problem:

I can not mow right up to the fence, as the mower catches on
the feather boarding, and I'm wondering what to do.

One suggestion was to dig out a narrow strip of the lawn and
replace is with gravel/stones. We do have this elsewhere but I
find the stones get onto the grass and could damage the mower.

The alternative, preferred by swmbo, is to make a narrow (max
9"-12"). But what to grow in it that will not expand into the
mower area/ The fence is 6ft+ high and faces W.N.W. There are
houses on all the other sides, so the bed would only get
limited summer sun from about 1pm to 5pm.

Swmbo would like something tall to mask the plainness of the
fence, but I'm not sure that anything tall would stay upright
and not expand sideways?

Any ideas please?




--
Roger T

700 ft up in Mid-Wales