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This is absolutely not my thing! I am so un-green fingered it is embarrassing I like your garden just as it is Emma, the only thing I would do would be to grow some sort of small hedgerow at the rear of the garden |
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Emma, your garden is amazing!! As Fran says, looks great as it is, but if you want it to have that cottage garden feel, then plants such as lupins, delphiniums, foxgloves, digitalis, honeysuckle, lavender would be lovely. |
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hedgerow?? rear of the garden???? hey that would cut of my view of the fields, rabbits, foxes, deer etc!!!! lo Thanks Kim, a lot of people like my garden as it is, but it really needs jazzing up a bit, and I love gardening, I also really need to get some colour in it!! as I have a lot of plants up in borders at the top of the bungalow that need moving to borders elsewhere, these need to be moved so I can reach my windows and give them a clean!!! lol |
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I've heard that the spines of the Monkey-puzzle tree are extremely sharp and nasty, and that you should get a male tree as the cones can weight 4-8 kg which you don't want falling on your head. True? |
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You've got a perfect blank canvas there Emma. It might even be worth paying £40 or so to get a plan designed? However, I did ours just by drawing a scale plan and playing around with it. It was useful going upstairs and looking out and I used canes to show proposed boundaries etc. Good luck. PS - monkey puzzle - mmmm, not my taste and I believe they grow quickly and mercilessly. Might be worth researching a smaller variety? |
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Ohhh this is heaven simply heaven. I have to agree with DM I spend hours laying out canes and as marker then running in and looking at them for every angle And laying out the borders with either hosepips or snad on the lawn will give you an idea what shape you want and then where you have say the borer coming out - then find some plant you want to have on the bit that comes in and put a broomstick withsomething as wide as your eventual plant will be and put that out giving you an idea of the width then look again in case it cuts off a view. I think birchs look nice in groups of 3's and the shade they cast is not a lot and they are lovely trees. Planting now or late autumn. Not sure I would plant tree's after May day as they drink loads. I wonder if you could cut the willow down and use the trunk as a base of a table or working table/bench for the garden? just a thought. |
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I have always loved Monkey Puzzles, I know they can grow very big, but on my walk to the next village I saw one that had been "shaped" it was really nice, next time I go I will take my camera with me. The trouble with the bungalow Kazz is that I haven't got an "upstairs" to look at the garden from, sometimes the garden doesn't look very big, but I know that putting in some borders will change that. Good idea about planting the birches in 3's. When I come to start on the garden Kazz, I have a very nice garden centre (independant) just down the road to me so if you fancy a visit |
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