Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
What constitutes a autumn / winter Herbaceous border ???
Any recommendations
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
What constitutes a autumn / winter Herbaceous border ???
bigsteve wrote:
Any recommendations Winter hebaceous border is really a contradiction in terms: Definition: herbaceous plant Plant with very little or no wood, dying back at the end of every summer. The herbaceous perennials survive winters as underground storage organs such as bulbs and tubers. I suppose thinkg like Euphorbia could be grouped to give an evergreen effect but "herbaceous border" - nah! pk |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
What constitutes a autumn / winter Herbaceous border ???
Maybe you are thinking of having more colour or evergreen plants in
your garden for winter. I noticed that our garden these days is quite lush in the winter. There is a huge thornless bi-colour holly, a big leathery leaved ivy, conifers large and small, camelia, spotted laurel, choisya, phormium etc and many bulbs starting to come through. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
What constitutes a autumn / winter Herbaceous border ???
In message , p.k.
writes bigsteve wrote: Any recommendations Winter hebaceous border is really a contradiction in terms: In warmer parts of the world there are plants which die back in the drought of the summer, and grow and flower during the wetter autumn and winter seasons. Finding plants that behave like that in the British climate is difficult. There's the winter-flowering strains of pansies - perhaps also polyanthus. There's a few bulbous plants - such as species of Colchicum, Crocus and Galanthus. There's Eranthis. There's Iris inguicularis and Iris lazica. There's hellebores. If you stretch the boundaries there's Nerine bowdenii and some species of cyclamen at one end, and Bellis perennnis and assorted early spring bulbs at the other. Definition: herbaceous plant Plant with very little or no wood, dying back at the end of every summer. The herbaceous perennials survive winters as underground storage organs such as bulbs and tubers. I suppose thinkg like Euphorbia could be grouped to give an evergreen effect but "herbaceous border" - nah! -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
What constitutes a autumn / winter Herbaceous border ???
In article , Stewart Robert Hinsley writes: | In message , p.k. | writes | | Winter hebaceous border is really a contradiction in terms: | | In warmer parts of the world there are plants which die back in the | drought of the summer, and grow and flower during the wetter autumn and | winter seasons. | | Finding plants that behave like that in the British climate is | difficult. | | There's the winter-flowering strains of pansies - perhaps also | polyanthus. There's a few bulbous plants - such as species of Colchicum, | Crocus and Galanthus. There's Eranthis. There's Iris inguicularis and | Iris lazica. There's hellebores. If you stretch the boundaries there's | Nerine bowdenii and some species of cyclamen at one end, and Bellis | perennnis and assorted early spring bulbs at the other. In many years, quite a lot of plants do that in Cambridge, including a lot that you might think don't - such as even many weeds. On a sandy soil, in Cambridge, the summer is often hot enough and dry enough to cause that. In a wet year, they carry on through the summer. The only plant that RELIABLY dies back in summer and grows in autumn in my garden is Cyclamen coum. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
What constitutes a autumn / winter Herbaceous border ???
In message , Nick Maclaren
writes In article , Stewart Robert Hinsley writes: | In message , p.k. | writes | | Winter hebaceous border is really a contradiction in terms: | | In warmer parts of the world there are plants which die back in the | drought of the summer, and grow and flower during the wetter autumn and | winter seasons. | | Finding plants that behave like that in the British climate is | difficult. | | There's the winter-flowering strains of pansies - perhaps also | polyanthus. There's a few bulbous plants - such as species of Colchicum, | Crocus and Galanthus. There's Eranthis. There's Iris inguicularis and | Iris lazica. There's hellebores. If you stretch the boundaries there's | Nerine bowdenii and some species of cyclamen at one end, and Bellis | perennnis and assorted early spring bulbs at the other. In many years, quite a lot of plants do that in Cambridge, including a lot that you might think don't - such as even many weeds. On a sandy soil, in Cambridge, the summer is often hot enough and dry enough to cause that. In a wet year, they carry on through the summer. The only plant that RELIABLY dies back in summer and grows in autumn in my garden is Cyclamen coum. Regards, Nick Maclaren. One that slipped my memory was Eranthis (Winter Aconite). -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Herbaceous border [1/1] | Garden Photos | |||
What constitutes a flower as " wild" | United Kingdom | |||
Planting density - new herbaceous border | United Kingdom | |||
Winter ID of Herbaceous Plants? | Plant Science | |||
Herbaceous Paeonia - advice please | United Kingdom |