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Rhiannon Miller 08-04-2008 09:38 AM

Plants for shade
 
I have a flower bed at the front of the house, facing the
window, with nothing much in it. It has daffodils at the
moment but once they're over there's nothing more. It's on
the north side of the house so it doesn't get much sun at
all (and I'm in Scotland so the weather is often quite cool
in any event). The soil is quite heavy clay.

I'd like to plant something herbaceous and fairly
low-growing (say up to two feet) with bright colours, to
follow from the daffs (ideally, a plant or sequence of
plants for the whole summer). I'd prefer perennials or
bulbs, but could try annuals if I could grow them from seed.

Any suggestions?

Rhiannon

--
I'm trying a new usenet client for Mac, Nemo OS X.
You can download it at http://www.malcom-mac.com/nemo


Charlie Pridham[_2_] 08-04-2008 12:47 PM

Plants for shade
 
In article ,
says...
I have a flower bed at the front of the house, facing the
window, with nothing much in it. It has daffodils at the
moment but once they're over there's nothing more. It's on
the north side of the house so it doesn't get much sun at
all (and I'm in Scotland so the weather is often quite cool
in any event). The soil is quite heavy clay.

I'd like to plant something herbaceous and fairly
low-growing (say up to two feet) with bright colours, to
follow from the daffs (ideally, a plant or sequence of
plants for the whole summer). I'd prefer perennials or
bulbs, but could try annuals if I could grow them from seed.

Any suggestions?

Rhiannon

--
I'm trying a new usenet client for Mac, Nemo OS X.
You can download it at
http://www.malcom-mac.com/nemo


Dicentra formosa, , the lesser celandine has some nice garden
forms, Pulmunarias, Hostas, Ferns,
--
Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall
www.roselandhouse.co.uk
Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and
Lapageria rosea

Sacha[_3_] 08-04-2008 02:52 PM

Plants for shade
 
On 8/4/08 09:38, in article , "Rhiannon
Miller" wrote:

I have a flower bed at the front of the house, facing the
window, with nothing much in it. It has daffodils at the
moment but once they're over there's nothing more. It's on
the north side of the house so it doesn't get much sun at
all (and I'm in Scotland so the weather is often quite cool
in any event). The soil is quite heavy clay.

I'd like to plant something herbaceous and fairly
low-growing (say up to two feet) with bright colours, to
follow from the daffs (ideally, a plant or sequence of
plants for the whole summer). I'd prefer perennials or
bulbs, but could try annuals if I could grow them from seed.

Any suggestions?

Rhiannon

I strongly recommend Geranium 'Jolly Bee' and the other true Geraniums, too.
They don't mind shade and they flower over a long period. G. Jolly Bee is a
long flowering plant and even better than G Johnson's Blue, IOO.


--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'



Ornata 09-04-2008 04:11 PM

Plants for shade
 
On 8 Apr, 14:52, Sacha wrote:
On 8/4/08 09:38, in article , "Rhiannon





Miller" wrote:
I have a flower bed at the front of the house, facing the
window, with nothing much in it. It has daffodils at the
moment but once they're over there's nothing more. It's on
the north side of the house so it doesn't get much sun at
all (and I'm in Scotland so the weather is often quite cool
in any event). The soil is quite heavy clay.


I'd like to plant something herbaceous and fairly
low-growing (say up to two feet) with bright colours, to
follow from the daffs (ideally, a plant or sequence of
plants for the whole summer). I'd prefer perennials or
bulbs, but could try annuals if I could grow them from seed.


Any suggestions?


Rhiannon


I strongly recommend Geranium 'Jolly Bee' and the other true Geraniums, too.
They don't mind shade and they flower over a long period. *G. Jolly Bee is a
long flowering plant and even better than G Johnson's Blue, IOO.

--
Sachahttp://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


All the following do well in my garden on heavy clay soil in an area
that gets little or no sun (I'm aware that some of these probably
flower better with more sun but they still do a good job in shade):

Astilbes (as long as the soil doesn't dry out)
Tricyrtis (lots of different varieties, some of them not more than 2
feet)
Digitalis x mertonensis
Anemone x hybrida
Bergenia (also good for winter colour)
Helleborus x hybridus and Helleborus foetidus (there are varieties
with lovely, pewetery foliage)
Various Primula (e.g. P. denticulata, candelabra hybrids)
Cyclamen hederifolium and C. coum (for autumn/winter flowers and
beautifully marked, silvery foliage)
Arum italicum ssp italicum (for foliage marbled with white, and late
summer spikes of orange berries)
Brunnera macrophylla Jack Frost

Fluffball 09-04-2008 09:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sacha[_3_] (Post 783255)
On 8/4/08 09:38, in article , "Rhiannon
Miller"
wrote:

I have a flower bed at the front of the house, facing the
window, with nothing much in it. It has daffodils at the
moment but once they're over there's nothing more. It's on
the north side of the house so it doesn't get much sun at
all (and I'm in Scotland so the weather is often quite cool
in any event). The soil is quite heavy clay.

I'd like to plant something herbaceous and fairly
low-growing (say up to two feet) with bright colours, to
follow from the daffs (ideally, a plant or sequence of
plants for the whole summer). I'd prefer perennials or
bulbs, but could try annuals if I could grow them from seed.

Any suggestions?

Rhiannon

I strongly recommend Geranium 'Jolly Bee' and the other true Geraniums, too.
They don't mind shade and they flower over a long period. G. Jolly Bee is a
long flowering plant and even better than G Johnson's Blue, IOO.


--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'


Hostas are always good for shade.

I'd also say Foxgloves too, but they may be a bit tall for you.

Sacha[_3_] 09-04-2008 11:54 PM

Plants for shade
 
On 9/4/08 21:21, in article ,
"Fluffball" wrote:

'Sacha[_3_ Wrote:
;783255']On 8/4/08 09:38, in article
,
"Rhiannon
Miller"
wrote:
-
I have a flower bed at the front of the house, facing the
window, with nothing much in it. It has daffodils at the
moment but once they're over there's nothing more. It's on
the north side of the house so it doesn't get much sun at
all (and I'm in Scotland so the weather is often quite cool
in any event). The soil is quite heavy clay.

I'd like to plant something herbaceous and fairly
low-growing (say up to two feet) with bright colours, to
follow from the daffs (ideally, a plant or sequence of
plants for the whole summer). I'd prefer perennials or
bulbs, but could try annuals if I could grow them from seed.

Any suggestions?

Rhiannon
-
I strongly recommend Geranium 'Jolly Bee' and the other true Geraniums,
too.
They don't mind shade and they flower over a long period. G. Jolly Bee
is a
long flowering plant and even better than G Johnson's Blue, IOO.


--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'



Hostas are always good for shade.


They do prefer to be a bit damp, though.

I'd also say Foxgloves too, but they may be a bit tall for you.

You can never have too many foxgloves, IMO.


--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'



Rhiannon Miller 10-04-2008 08:57 AM

Plants for shade
 
In article
wrote:

I'd also say Foxgloves too, but they may be a bit tall
for you.


You can never have too many foxgloves, IMO.


I love foxgloves. I see there are some dwarf varieties in
existence, so I might try some of those. I do still want to
be able to see out of my sitting room window!

Rhiannon

--
I'm trying a new usenet client for Mac, Nemo OS X.
You can download it at http://www.malcom-mac.com/nemo


Rhiannon Miller 10-04-2008 09:11 AM

Plants for shade
 
In article

s.com Ornata wrote:
All the following do well in my garden on heavy clay soil
in an area that gets little or no sun (I'm aware that some
of these probably flower better with more sun but they
still do a good job in shade):
Astilbes (as long as the soil doesn't dry out)
Tricyrtis (lots of different varieties, some of them not
more than 2 feet)
Digitalis x mertonensis
Anemone x hybrida
Bergenia (also good for winter colour)
Helleborus x hybridus and Helleborus foetidus (there are
varieties with lovely, pewetery foliage)
Various Primula (e.g. P. denticulata, candelabra hybrids)
Cyclamen hederifolium and C. coum (for autumn/winter
flowers and beautifully marked, silvery foliage)
Arum italicum ssp italicum (for foliage marbled with
white, and late summer spikes of orange berries)
Brunnera macrophylla Jack Frost


Some great suggestions here, thanks! I'm particularly taken
by the toad lilies, especually given their late summer
flowering time.

Rhiannon

--
I'm trying a new usenet client for Mac, Nemo OS X.
You can download it at http://www.malcom-mac.com/nemo


Sacha[_3_] 10-04-2008 09:52 AM

Plants for shade
 
On 10/4/08 01:37, in article , "Anne
Jackson" wrote:

The message from Sacha contains these words:
On 8/4/08 09:38, in article
, "Rhiannon
Miller" wrote:


I have a flower bed at the front of the house, facing the
window, with nothing much in it. It has daffodils at the
moment but once they're over there's nothing more. It's on
the north side of the house so it doesn't get much sun at
all (and I'm in Scotland so the weather is often quite cool
in any event). The soil is quite heavy clay.

I'd like to plant something herbaceous and fairly
low-growing (say up to two feet) with bright colours, to
follow from the daffs (ideally, a plant or sequence of
plants for the whole summer). I'd prefer perennials or
bulbs, but could try annuals if I could grow them from seed.

Any suggestions?

I strongly recommend Geranium 'Jolly Bee' and the other true Geraniums,
too. They don't mind shade and they flower over a long period. G. Jolly
Bee is a long flowering plant and even better than G Johnson's Blue, IOO.


Rhiannon, I have some spare geraniums, not sure of the name, but
they are a bright pink. If you want to e-mail me, we could arrange
a time for you to pick them up? I am in Perth - up The Glens.


Just guess but possibly G 'Ann Folkard'?
--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'



Rhiannon Miller 10-04-2008 11:39 AM

Plants for shade
 
In article
AnneJackson wrote:
I strongly recommend Geranium 'Jolly Bee' and the other
true Geraniums,* too. They don't mind shade and they
flower over a long period. G. Jolly* Bee is a long
flowering plant and even better than G Johnson's Blue, IOO.


Rhiannon, I have some spare geraniums, not sure of the
name, but* they are a bright pink. If you want to e-mail
me, we could arrange a time for you to pick them up? I am
in Perth - up The Glens.


I already have loads of geraniums in my garden, so I won't
take you up on your kind offer, but many thanks all the
same. Are you planning to be at the Freecycle plantmeet in
Auchterarder on 26 April?

Rhiannon

--
I'm trying a new usenet client for Mac, Nemo OS X.
You can download it at http://www.malcom-mac.com/nemo


Sacha[_3_] 10-04-2008 01:51 PM

Plants for shade
 
On 10/4/08 13:43, in article , "Anne
Jackson" wrote:

The message from Sacha contains these words:

Rhiannon, I have some spare geraniums, not sure of the name, but
they are a bright pink. If you want to e-mail me, we could arrange
a time for you to pick them up? I am in Perth - up The Glens.


Just guess but possibly G 'Ann Folkard'?


I don't know, Sacha. I was given a great clump by one
of 'my old ladies' and she'd had it in her garden for
a long time. It's very low-growing.


I suggested that one because it's popular and it's also such a good colour -
great favourite.
--
Sacha
http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon
'We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
children.'



liketogarden 10-04-2008 10:53 PM

How about some coleus..colourful foliage plants. Easy to grow from seed, not too tall, and donīt like it too hot in summer.

Rhiannon Miller 11-04-2008 11:02 AM

Plants for shade
 
In article
AnneJackson wrote:
Rhiannon wrote:
Are you planning to be at the Freecycle plantmeet in
Auchterarder on 26 April?


Yes. You going?*

I was planning to pot up some of the geraniums to take
with me.


I hope to be able to go (with a small baby, I find I can't
guarantee anything these days). I think I've oversown on
petunias, at least I will have if all or most of them
survive, so I'm planning on taking some of them along.

Rhiannon

--
I'm trying a new usenet client for Mac, Nemo OS X.
You can download it at http://www.malcom-mac.com/nemo


jim 11-04-2008 07:59 PM

Plants for shade
 
What about bugle , mellisa What is freecylce

jim
soapmaker in kirkintilloch

"Rhiannon Miller" wrote in message
...
In article
AnneJackson wrote:
Rhiannon wrote:
Are you planning to be at the Freecycle plantmeet in
Auchterarder on 26 April?


Yes. You going?

I was planning to pot up some of the geraniums to take
with me.


I hope to be able to go (with a small baby, I find I can't
guarantee anything these days). I think I've oversown on
petunias, at least I will have if all or most of them
survive, so I'm planning on taking some of them along.

Rhiannon

--
I'm trying a new usenet client for Mac, Nemo OS X.
You can download it at http://www.malcom-mac.com/nemo




Dave Hill 11-04-2008 09:33 PM

Plants for shade
 
On 11 Apr, 19:59, "jim" wrote:
What about bugle , mellisa What is freecylce

jim
soapmaker in kirkintilloch

"Rhiannon Miller" wrote in message

...



In article
AnneJackson wrote:
Rhiannon wrote:
* Are you planning to be at the Freecycle plantmeet in
Auchterarder on 26 April?


* Yes. You going?


* I was planning to pot up some of the geraniums to take
with me.


I hope to be able to go (with a small baby, I find I can't
guarantee anything these days). *I think I've oversown on
petunias, at least I will have if all or most of them
survive, so I'm planning on taking some of them along.


Rhiannon


--
I'm trying a new usenet client for Mac, Nemo OS X.
You can download it athttp://www.malcom-mac.com/nemo- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -




Freecycle
http://www.freecycle.org/

Worth looking at,
David Hill


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