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Brandyball 07-02-2014 12:44 PM

Help please
 
1 Attachment(s)
Hi I have a corner of my garden that I want to change to low maintenance I would appreciate any ideas that could help me Thank you

David Hare-Scott[_2_] 07-02-2014 09:35 PM

Help please
 
Brandyball wrote:
Hi I have a corner of my garden that I want to change to low
maintenance I would appreciate any ideas that could help me Thank you


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Filename: garden pic.jpg |
Download:
http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=15931|

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There are no instant general answers to such a question.

Where are you and what is your climate? In what way is the present planting
high maintenance? What is its aspect? Does the wind often blow strongly,
if so from which direction? What do you want to do with the space? What
style is the rest of the garden?

Also keep in mind that 'low maintenance' is a relative term. If you want
something that requires no watering, prunning, weeding or mulching then
plant concrete.

David


Higgs Boson 08-02-2014 06:08 AM

Help please
 
On Friday, February 7, 2014 1:35:17 PM UTC-8, David Hare-Scott wrote:
Brandyball wrote:

Hi I have a corner of my garden that I want to change to low


maintenance I would appreciate any ideas that could help me Thank you






+-------------------------------------------------------------------+


Filename: garden pic.jpg |


Download:


http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=15931|


+-------------------------------------------------------------------+




There are no instant general answers to such a question.



Where are you and what is your climate? In what way is the present planting

high maintenance? What is its aspect? Does the wind often blow strongly,

if so from which direction? What do you want to do with the space? What

style is the rest of the garden?



Also keep in mind that 'low maintenance' is a relative term. If you want

something that requires no watering, prunning, weeding or mulching then

plant concrete.



David


Or mulch. In my area (So. Calif coastal), water is very expensive, so the City encourages xeriscaping. It even offers rebates for type conversion.

Over the years, as I walk around the neighborhood, I see more people covering the ground with a thick layer of wood mulch -- the larger pieces -- with just a few well-placed succulents, cacti, and grasses.

This can look quite nice, if properly designed, and requires little or no
maintenance. Plus, of course, little water.

Poster's objective may not be directly related to water usage, but succulents and cacti are definitely low maintenance. There are hundreds, if not thousands of varieties to choose from.

HB

Brandyball 08-02-2014 01:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Higgs Boson (Post 998362)
On Friday, February 7, 2014 1:35:17 PM UTC-8, David Hare-Scott wrote:
Brandyball wrote:

Hi I have a corner of my garden that I want to change to low


maintenance I would appreciate any ideas that could help me Thank you






+-------------------------------------------------------------------+


Filename: garden pic.jpg |


Download:


http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=15931|


+-------------------------------------------------------------------+




There are no instant general answers to such a question.



Where are you and what is your climate? In what way is the present planting

high maintenance? What is its aspect? Does the wind often blow strongly,

if so from which direction? What do you want to do with the space? What

style is the rest of the garden?



Also keep in mind that 'low maintenance' is a relative term. If you want

something that requires no watering, prunning, weeding or mulching then

plant concrete.



David


Or mulch. In my area (So. Calif coastal), water is very expensive, so the City encourages xeriscaping. It even offers rebates for type conversion.

Over the years, as I walk around the neighborhood, I see more people covering the ground with a thick layer of wood mulch -- the larger pieces -- with just a few well-placed succulents, cacti, and grasses.

This can look quite nice, if properly designed, and requires little or no
maintenance. Plus, of course, little water.

Poster's objective may not be directly related to water usage, but succulents and cacti are definitely low maintenance. There are hundreds, if not thousands of varieties to choose from.

HB

Thanks very much for both replies I'm in Donegal Ireland and it gives me other options to think about
Brandyball

brooklyn1 08-02-2014 02:38 PM

Help please
 
Brandyball wrote:

I have a corner of my garden that I want to change to low
maintenance I would appreciate any ideas that could help me


Patio.


Jeff Thies[_2_] 08-02-2014 03:23 PM

Help please
 
On 2/7/2014 7:44 AM, Brandyball wrote:
Hi I have a corner of my garden that I want to change to low maintenance
I would appreciate any ideas that could help me Thank you


+-------------------------------------------------------------------+
|Filename: garden pic.jpg |
|Download: http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=15931|
+-------------------------------------------------------------------+



Depending on your climate, the indestructables that I have are sedum,
rose of sharon (may have trouble with it spreading) and some of the
herbs. If you have rainfall to get it established, perhaps oak leaf
hydrangea. And a variety of bulbs. I have a low sun location and these
work for me with little care.

I like the patio idea. Less is more.

Jeff

David Hare-Scott[_2_] 08-02-2014 09:54 PM

Help please
 
Brandyball wrote:
Higgs Boson;998362 Wrote:
On Friday, February 7, 2014 1:35:17 PM UTC-8, David Hare-Scott
wrote:- Brandyball wrote:
-
Hi I have a corner of my garden that I want to change to low-
-
maintenance I would appreciate any ideas that could help me Thank
you-
-
-
-
-
-

+-------------------------------------------------------------------+-
--
Filename: garden pic.jpg
--

--
Download:--
--
http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=15931|--
-

+-------------------------------------------------------------------+-



There are no instant general answers to such a question.



Where are you and what is your climate? In what way is the present
planting

high maintenance? What is its aspect? Does the wind often blow
strongly,

if so from which direction? What do you want to do with the space?
What

style is the rest of the garden?



Also keep in mind that 'low maintenance' is a relative term. If you
want

something that requires no watering, prunning, weeding or mulching
then


plant concrete.



David-

Or mulch. In my area (So. Calif coastal), water is very expensive,
so the City encourages xeriscaping. It even offers rebates for type
conversion.

Over the years, as I walk around the neighborhood, I see more people
covering the ground with a thick layer of wood mulch -- the larger
pieces -- with just a few well-placed succulents, cacti, and grasses.

This can look quite nice, if properly designed, and requires little
or no
maintenance. Plus, of course, little water.

Poster's objective may not be directly related to water usage, but
succulents and cacti are definitely low maintenance. There are
hundreds, if not thousands of varieties to choose from.

HB


Thanks very much for both replies I'm in Donegal Ireland and it gives
me other options to think about
Brandyball



Ireland is not a place I would want to try out xeriscaping, rather you may
need bog tolerant plants. The enourmous difference is conditions between
California and the Emerald Isle is a good example of the need to design for
the location.

D


Brandyball 09-02-2014 12:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by David Hare-Scott[_2_] (Post 998394)
Brandyball wrote:
Higgs Boson;998362 Wrote:
On Friday, February 7, 2014 1:35:17 PM UTC-8, David Hare-Scott
wrote:- Brandyball wrote:
-
Hi I have a corner of my garden that I want to change to low-
-
maintenance I would appreciate any ideas that could help me Thank
you-
-
-
-
-
-

+-------------------------------------------------------------------+-
--
Filename: garden pic.jpg
--

--
Download:--
--
http://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/attachment.php?attachmentid=15931|--
-

+-------------------------------------------------------------------+-



There are no instant general answers to such a question.



Where are you and what is your climate? In what way is the present
planting

high maintenance? What is its aspect? Does the wind often blow
strongly,

if so from which direction? What do you want to do with the space?
What

style is the rest of the garden?



Also keep in mind that 'low maintenance' is a relative term. If you
want

something that requires no watering, prunning, weeding or mulching
then


plant concrete.



David-

Or mulch. In my area (So. Calif coastal), water is very expensive,
so the City encourages xeriscaping. It even offers rebates for type
conversion.

Over the years, as I walk around the neighborhood, I see more people
covering the ground with a thick layer of wood mulch -- the larger
pieces -- with just a few well-placed succulents, cacti, and grasses.

This can look quite nice, if properly designed, and requires little
or no
maintenance. Plus, of course, little water.

Poster's objective may not be directly related to water usage, but
succulents and cacti are definitely low maintenance. There are
hundreds, if not thousands of varieties to choose from.

HB


Thanks very much for both replies I'm in Donegal Ireland and it gives
me other options to think about
Brandyball



Ireland is not a place I would want to try out xeriscaping, rather you may
need bog tolerant plants. The enourmous difference is conditions between
California and the Emerald Isle is a good example of the need to design for
the location.

D

Thanks again for all the ideas I think Patio is a good option weather here is not mild :)

brooklyn1 09-02-2014 07:30 PM

Help please
 
Brandyball wrote:

Thanks again for all the ideas I think Patio is a good option weather
here is not mild :)


I thought you'd like my patio suggestion. And you can set potted
plants on a patio. I'd use flagstone rather than concrete, this way
if you change your mind flagstone is easy to move and can be used for
something else, like a retaining wall... just don't cheap out and use
gravel, it will migrate, make a mess, and create maintenence. You can
also use that far corner for composting, and/or a vegetable garden.


Brandyball 10-02-2014 10:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brooklyn1 (Post 998420)
Brandyball wrote:

Thanks again for all the ideas I think Patio is a good option weather
here is not mild :)


I thought you'd like my patio suggestion. And you can set potted
plants on a patio. I'd use flagstone rather than concrete, this way
if you change your mind flagstone is easy to move and can be used for
something else, like a retaining wall... just don't cheap out and use
gravel, it will migrate, make a mess, and create maintenence. You can
also use that far corner for composting, and/or a vegetable garden.

Thanks for all the input I really appreciate it :)

Brandyball

natty85 19-03-2014 02:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brandyball (Post 998443)
Thanks for all the input I really appreciate it :)

Brandyball

I would agree with the patio option, although decking would work well too if you've considered that :)


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