Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the fence material? If wood, you will have to be more careful about your choices.
It’s wood for ground contact.
It’s mostly shaded by a large tree and is on the north side.
The strip is pretty narrow and the sidewalk gets a lot of traffic so we hesitate to put anything that’s tall and might encroach in the sidewalk path. I would love to do black eyed Susan’s but the two types we have wouldn’t fit in the space. Also agree that stone is sterile though easy.
I would be careful then -- you have wood in North facing shade touching the ground, which means it will stay wet and rot faster/attract termites, especially if you start putting a bunch of plant material right up against it.
"Narrow" is pretty subjective, so how many inches are we talking?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is the fence material? If wood, you will have to be more careful about your choices.
It’s wood for ground contact.
It’s mostly shaded by a large tree and is on the north side.
The strip is pretty narrow and the sidewalk gets a lot of traffic so we hesitate to put anything that’s tall and might encroach in the sidewalk path. I would love to do black eyed Susan’s but the two types we have wouldn’t fit in the space. Also agree that stone is sterile though easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Geotextile fabric and stone.
Well, that's an option. A very sad and sterile one.
Anonymous wrote:Day lilies! Indestructible and beautiful when they bloom.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a perfect spot for some native/pollinator friendlyplants. How much sun does it get?
It's hard to go wrong with purple coneflower, monarda and muhly grass.
Anonymous wrote:What is the fence material? If wood, you will have to be more careful about your choices.
Anonymous wrote:Geotextile fabric and stone.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a perfect spot for some native/pollinator friendlyplants. How much sun does it get?
It's hard to go wrong with purple coneflower, monarda and muhly grass.