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Old 23-02-2011, 01:30 AM
williammwill williammwill is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2011
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Originally Posted by Greggo View Post
Thanks for all the replies, much appreciated. I'm in Douglas, Isle of Man by the way. The garden is south facing :-)

First time buyer dealio with the local government means I'll lose a big chunk of change if I leave the flat within first ten years - so guess I'll be here a while!

Think I'm leaning towards the climber option...

So would I need to staple a mesh or something to the fence first, or would a climber just scale the fence regardless?

Which is the best climber? Don't like the sound of ivy getting out of hand, and I guess it would be good to have something that actually looks nice. Although the suggestion of just stapling temporary shading sounds like a quick fix that's within my limited capabilities!

While the fence thing is a necessary chore I have to deal with, growing vegetables/fruit in the garden, on the other hand, sounds like fun - something I've always wanted to do. Not too sure I want to dig up my new turf though so might invest in a veg box thingy :-)

Apologies if my garden banter is below par, as mentioned, I'm a complete novice.
Because of the gaps in your fence, most climbers wont need much support. Use 6ft by 6ft trellis (good quality) and you can raise the height of the fence by 3 foot. Because of the top beam on your fence you would have to attach the trellis on the other side of your fence, so you better cheack this doesnt upset any neighbours etc. Trellis will also offer excellent security.

Then plant evergreen clematis for screening (flowering feb/march) Its fast growing but will still take 3 to 4 years to screen well.
You can mix these with deciduous clematis (they wont add much screening and leaves will fall in winter) but will add extra summer flowering interest in summer.

many thanks

a href="http://www.progroundscare.co.uk/"Garden and Grounds Care/a