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Old 16-02-2003, 10:35 AM
Willow
 
Posts: n/a
Default Low Light, Low Water Plants

Thanks. I should have asked about plants that tolerate low light & are
drought tolerant.

--
Wanda
aka Willow
The missing and definitely not to be taken seriously under any circumstances
garden gnome
http://www.2000cn.com.au/~willow

~~faeries are able to fly because they take themselves lightly~
silvasurfa wrote in message
. ..

"Willow" wrote in message
news
Hi

I finally got someone in to fix the retic in my enclosed garden today.

The
soil is in bad shape, it's grey sand & is water repellant, & the garden

is
in a position where it gets a little direct sunlight on summer mornings

&
no
direct sunlight the rest of the year.

I started today by cleaning out the leaf litter & bricks, attacking the

soil
with soil wetter & tomorrow will dig composted mulch and a mix of

different
animal poos into the soil. I might put the mostly well composted leaf

litter
back on top once this is done... not sure yet.

Does anyone have any suggestions as to the kinds of plants that might do
well in the garden? It's already got a couple of medium sized umbrella

trees
but that's it. Because this garden is visible from the bath, I would
eventually like to put some lights in the garden & so I guess some nice
looking foliage would be the go... I was thinking of maybe some Clivia

or
fishbone ferns in the front to cover the view of the paving...

How would grasses & Yucca go in this kind of environment? I'm not all

that
fussed about flowers & leafy green foliage.

--
Wanda
aka Willow
The missing and definitely not to be taken seriously under any

circumstances
garden gnome
http://www.2000cn.com.au/~willow

~~faeries are able to fly because they take themselves lightly~



No Yucca... it likes sun sun and more sun. Mondo grass might survive.

Spider plant? Looks nice for the first couple of years if you keep water

up
to it, but eventually gets icky.

Periwinkle? A really bad weed in shaded wet areas, but in an enclosed

area
this is not a problem.

You could go with the water theme and put in a pond with small fountain

and
goldfish.

If I were you I'd probably get a few nice large pots to put amongst the

less
fancy permanent plantings, and also get a small hand trolley to shift them
safely. Then you can rotate nice stuff into view and give the plants a
holiday on your back verandah when they get tired.