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#1
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out of frying pan and into fire?
I have 8ft.high stone walls on two sides of the garden, up till a few
weeks ago they were both covered in ivy, I have left one covered cos it suits the area but am thinking about planting a climbing hydrangea on the other, are they as robust as ivy and will I regret it in a few years time? advice would be appreciated:-) kate |
#2
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out of frying pan and into fire?
They are deciduous, so you'll be faced with a bunch of bare twigs in winter.
They also tend to grow outwards from the wall quite some distance - so it will be more like having a big shrub growing in front of the wall than a thin coating of ivy. Mal "Kate Morgan" wrote in message ... I have 8ft.high stone walls on two sides of the garden, up till a few weeks ago they were both covered in ivy, I have left one covered cos it suits the area but am thinking about planting a climbing hydrangea on the other, are they as robust as ivy and will I regret it in a few years time? advice would be appreciated:-) kate |
#3
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out of frying pan and into fire?
They are deciduous, so you'll be faced with a bunch of bare twigs in winter.
They also tend to grow outwards from the wall quite some distance - so it will be more like having a big shrub growing in front of the wall than a thin coating of ivy. Mal "Kate Morgan" wrote in message ... I have 8ft.high stone walls on two sides of the garden, up till a few weeks ago they were both covered in ivy, I have left one covered cos it suits the area but am thinking about planting a climbing hydrangea on the other, are they as robust as ivy and will I regret it in a few years time? advice would be appreciated:-) kate |
#4
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out of frying pan and into fire?
They are deciduous, so you'll be faced with a bunch of bare twigs in winter.
They also tend to grow outwards from the wall quite some distance - so it will be more like having a big shrub growing in front of the wall than a thin coating of ivy. Mal "Kate Morgan" wrote in message ... I have 8ft.high stone walls on two sides of the garden, up till a few weeks ago they were both covered in ivy, I have left one covered cos it suits the area but am thinking about planting a climbing hydrangea on the other, are they as robust as ivy and will I regret it in a few years time? advice would be appreciated:-) kate |
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