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It's Mac 13-04-2004 03:42 PM

Pruning African Daisies
 
Hi folks, new to the group, new to gardening.

Just been out to tidy up a bit, amazingly enough, some plants have survived
the winter. They're African Daisies ( Dimorphoteca). Trouble is they look a
bit sad, trailing along the ground in search of the sun, and, maybe a little
too big for their location.

There's some new shoots growing at the base, can I trim back last years
branches or is that a bad idea?

While I'm here, one side of my garden only gets a couple of hours sunshine
in the morning. Would it be best to plant shrubs along here or are there any
good shade loving plants I could try, preferably not annuals.

Thanks
Mac



JennyC 13-04-2004 04:34 PM

Pruning African Daisies
 

"It's Mac" wrote in message
...
Hi folks, new to the group, new to gardening.

Just been out to tidy up a bit, amazingly enough, some plants have survived
the winter. They're African Daisies ( Dimorphoteca). Trouble is they look a
bit sad, trailing along the ground in search of the sun, and, maybe a little
too big for their location.

There's some new shoots growing at the base, can I trim back last years
branches or is that a bad idea?

While I'm here, one side of my garden only gets a couple of hours sunshine
in the morning. Would it be best to plant shrubs along here or are there any
good shade loving plants I could try, preferably not annuals.

Thanks
Mac


Welcome to URG Mac,

Have a look and the URG FAQ - plants for shade;
http://www.tmac.clara.net/urgring/faqshade.htm

Jenny



Kay Easton 13-04-2004 05:11 PM

Pruning African Daisies
 
In article , It's Mac afatlout@R
EMOVETHISclara.co.uk writes
Hi folks, new to the group, new to gardening.

Just been out to tidy up a bit, amazingly enough, some plants have survived
the winter. They're African Daisies ( Dimorphoteca). Trouble is they look a
bit sad, trailing along the ground in search of the sun, and, maybe a little
too big for their location.


Some of the Dimorphotheca species are hardy here

There's some new shoots growing at the base, can I trim back last years
branches or is that a bad idea?


As a general rule, if you have lots of strong fresh new shoots growing
from the base of a plant, cutting back last year's tatty shoots does no
harm.

While I'm here, one side of my garden only gets a couple of hours sunshine
in the morning. Would it be best to plant shrubs along here or are there any
good shade loving plants I could try, preferably not annuals.

There's lots of good shade loving plants! - see the FAQ (url is in the
abc post which appears weekly). And most of them aren't annuals. What
sort of things do you like? eg colours, how lush, what times of year do
you want it to look good, is fragrance important?

--
Kay Easton

Edward's earthworm page:
http://www.scarboro.demon.co.uk/edward/index.htm

Chris Hogg 14-04-2004 06:36 PM

Pruning African Daisies
 
On Tue, 13 Apr 2004 15:24:37 +0100, "It's Mac"
wrote:

Hi folks, new to the group, new to gardening.

Just been out to tidy up a bit, amazingly enough, some plants have survived
the winter. They're African Daisies ( Dimorphoteca). Trouble is they look a
bit sad, trailing along the ground in search of the sun, and, maybe a little
too big for their location.

There's some new shoots growing at the base, can I trim back last years
branches or is that a bad idea?

While I'm here, one side of my garden only gets a couple of hours sunshine
in the morning. Would it be best to plant shrubs along here or are there any
good shade loving plants I could try, preferably not annuals.

Thanks
Mac


IME, they cut back and re-shoot very well. You may even find some of
the longer bits have rooted where they are in contact with the soil,
and can be re-planted to increase the numbers, if you so wish.


--
Chris

E-mail: christopher[dot]hogg[at]virgin[dot]net


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