Thread: Revamped Border
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Old 10-10-2008, 11:45 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Sacha[_3_] Sacha[_3_] is offline
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Default Revamped Border

On 10/10/08 22:08, in article , "Mel"
wrote:

Hello, All. It's been a long time since I've looked at this newgroup - I
vaguely recall all kinds of shennanigans a while ago - but I'm back with a
question, actually 2 questions:

I want to revamp my mixed border to make it less mixed and more perennial
flowers. As a novice, I planted shrubs never believing they'd grow as big
as they have, so my small garden is now swamped with viburnum tinus,
lonicera nitida, rhododendron, hydrangea, ribes, weigela, and the like. The
shrubs are lovely, but there's no room for flowers as my border is only
about 3 or 4 feet deep at the most.

So, my first question - could I prune the shrubs right down to the ground,
which will give me a few years "breathing space" to grow flowers, or is it
best to simply dig them up completely and get rid of them?

Second question - whatever I do, is it best to do now or in the spring? I'd
like to tackle it now, but I'd be looking at a bare garden all winter.

Many thanks in anticipation of replies.





If your borders are that size you're going to be pushed to find enough room
to let herbaceous perennials grow, too. Could you make e.g. an island bed
for those or grow them in pots? Or mimic the shape of your shrub borders
within the lawn and cut a square or oval bed in which you can put the
flowers but leave paths through it into a patch of grass which can be mown
or otherwise be planted with some low growing herbs, like thyme or a clump
of rosemary, or have a small fountain and tub in the centre? It sounds as
if you've got some nice shrubs there and if you can, take off their lower
branches and plant spring and autumn flowering bulbs underneath them. Keith
Wiley who used to run The Garden House called this "lifting their skirts"!

Or......you could have a square of paving with a water feature in it and
pots around the edges with flowers in them, all of differing heights so that
you create a little garden within a garden and so forth.
--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon
(new website online)