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Old 17-02-2005, 10:34 PM
Lynda Thornton
 
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In article , Ornata Ornata.1kjuw
writes

My garden has the same aspect. For winter/early spring interest, how
about some bergenias? Go for a variety where the leaves turn
plum-purple in cold weather. Lots of plants will be happy in
part-shade. Tricyrtis formosana (toad lilies - purple spotted) and
Aconitum (monkshood - deep blue) provide flowers from late summer to
early autumn. Both can be ordered from J Parker (I'm guessing you're
thinking of ordering from there, as they misspelled the dicentra
peregrina). As you say the site is a bit windy, how about some grasses?
And don't forget ferns - the evergreen ones provide useful colour in
the winter months. Athyrium nipponicum pictum is deciduous, but it
does have beautiful silvery fronds. Dryopteris erythrosora (the autumn
fern) is evergreen and has lovely coppery new fronds. Also, add to your
stock of spring bulbs. Crocuses have the annoying habit of only opening
up their flowers in full sun, but they and most other bulbs are happy in
part shade. And fuchsias, of course, like shade and are fairly
wind-resistant (often planted as hedging in coastal districts).

Aquilegias will flower from May to July. The great thing with them is
that they hybridise freely, so each year your stock will increase, with
hopefully some interesting new colours.

A useful, if slightly quirky book about gardening in less than sunny
conditions is "Gardening in the Shade" by Margery Fish. As it was
written well before global warming started playing havoc with our
gardening calendar and our ideas about plant hardiness, her selections
should be suitable for a more exposed site.

Hope this helps.
Ornata


Hi

Thanks for the interest! I know bergenias but am not over keen - from
experience with them in a previous garden I don't like the large leaves
which sometimes get into a mess over the winter and in fact I don't
really like the flowers either - sorry! I had some toad lilies in a
shady part of my last garden but they were really puny and the flowers
very small so I didn't want them again either. I do like monkshood on
the other hand but I don't want to risk it with a young child running
around as they are extremely poisonous of course. There are ferns in
other parts of the garden, we have a lot of hedging and they grow
happily in the shade there, so I didn't want more of the same in my
perennial border. Bulb-wise I am putting in some allium of a type which
doesn't mind part-shade and am trying my luck with one agapanthus to see
if it manages! There are plenty of spring bulbs elsewhere in the garden
on the other side of the house and around the hedge boundaries. There
are also a lot of fuchsias elsewhere too, so I didn't want to put those
in. Sorry to sound so negative, I'm just giving my reasons as to why I
have decided against certain things, however, I have changed the list I
am getting, partly because after further research I think some plants
would not have thrived in the soil which is on the acid side or would
have wanted more sun.

I wouldn't be against grass as long as it didn't spread (I had some
stripy stuff in a previous garden that just took over a large area and
drove me mad). A small dainty well-behaved type would be welcome as
long as it didn't need full direct sun

The planting list now includes:

phygelius -semi-evergreen hopefully!
lilium regale
bellflowers
liatris (white)
foxglove (white with burgundy inside), again poisonous I know but not
quite as bad as aconite, it will be tucked behind other things!
achillea colorado red
echinops
hardy white geranium
cornus alba - winter colour
liriope muscari - evergreen
more hellebores including speckled lady and queen of the night
acanthus mollis
verbena bonariensis - I think it prefers full sun but I'm chancing it
echinacea purpurea - as above ...
gaultheria procumbens - evergreen hopefully with berries in winter, plus
birds apparently love it, another good point!
aquilegia

I am really hoping that this lot will mostly thrive and provide a good
range of colour and form in the summer and later summer too, plus a bit
of variety and colour going on through the colder months.

I've ordered plants from T&M, Parkers, plus ebay too! In the olden days
I would probably have grown lots from seed and I might put a few
nasturtium empress of india into pots to grow but I can't devote the
time like I could before. I've also moved a (very) dwarf rhododendron
into a corner from a temporary place so that will also provide a bit of
winter shape, plus I bought 2 small conifers over the weekend, a
chamaecyparis silver tipped one and a thuja rheingold, both of which I
don't think will get very big and are slow growing anyway, so they will
also help with winter colour.

I've just seen the weather forecast saying snow next week - I hope a
colder snap doesn't harm my poor new plants - we've already had a very
heavy frost yesterday and I delayed putting some of them in until today
which was much milder

Lynda