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Old 31-01-2005, 04:28 AM
pandora
 
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"Christopher Green" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 23 Jan 2005 19:58:52 -0800, "pandora"
wrote:

Hi,

I'm new to this newsgroup but I have a question.

A couple of springs ago, I planted several small daisy shrubs along the

side
of my house.. I was told they didn't get more than 2 - 3 feet tall and

2 -3
feet across. I have, now, shrubs that are 4 feet across and 4 feet tall.
Of course, the blooms are profuse and a lovely yellow but they are simply
way too huge for the area I planted them in.

My question. What did I do wrong? Why are they so huge?

Anyone?

Marg


Nothing you did wrong. The plants are just thriving a little more
enthusiastically than you hoped for.


Indeed they are!

Hard to say just what sort of shrubby daisy you have without more
info. Where I am (Southern California), Euryops is common and can grow
to about 6 feet; it's easily kept smaller by pruning. Marguerites, on
the other hand, don't take to hard pruning and are so short-lived that
you will be replacing them in a season or two anyway.


I could hope I have the latter but think I bought the former. Sigh....
And my name is Marguerite so I guess that's karma for ya.

Just a thought: if yours is the Euryops with dark green foliage, maybe
take half of them out and head the remaining ones back to side
branches. In the gaps left behind, put in some Dusty Miller for a
quick and dramatic contrast.


I'll try that. I absolutely HATE to cut back something that is thriving so
well, BUT, it's impeding my walkway. I had thought I was planting something
that would stay relatively small and civilized. Apparently, it's not.
Thanks for the suggestion.

Marg

--
Chris Green