Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dwarf varities of ecchinacea are complaint and are said to stand up to dog urine.
I was hoping to select something that would remain attractive in winter, but maybe I need to give up on that goal.
Anonymous wrote:Dwarf varities of ecchinacea are complaint and are said to stand up to dog urine.
Anonymous wrote:Try:
Tiarella cordifolia (foam flower)
Heuchera (coral bells)
short varieties of cranesbill
fringed wild pertunia
native columbine
Indian pinks "Little Redhead"
grasses for shade:
poverty oat grass
white tinge sedge
Wood's sedge
Hobbs blue bunny
Pennsylvania sedge "straw hat"
Anonymous wrote:Are you familiar with DC's regulations about treebox planting? I'm guessing no, since you mention evergreen shrubs as an option (not allowed; nor are the rocks the prior owner put down).
Bascially, there are restictions about where in the treebox you can plant, and what you can plant, and lots of things you can't do.
The toughest part is that no plant can grow taller than 18 inches, but you also can't use plants that spread by runners, so no ground covers.
Take a look at:
DCMR 24-109
and
DC Public Realm Design Manual (v. 2.1, March 2019) [https://planning.dc.gov/sites/default/files/dc/sites/op/publication/attachments/DDOT Public Realm Design Manual.pdf ]
Anonymous wrote:Itea Little Henry (sweetspire) and dwarf varieties of Pieris japonica are compact shrubs that will grow in partial shade. If you have deer your hosta will get decimated.
Anonymous wrote:That’s a tough situation! Lack of water and dog pee are probably the biggest challenges. Hostas need quite a bit of water to stay looking good. How about huchera instead of hosta? They like shade and don’t mind less water. There are some tough grasses that might work, like little bluestem and purple lovegrass. Plus maybe some ground covers like violets, packera aurea, and creeping phlox. Then see what thrives and plant more of that the following year.
I think you can probably leave most of the rocks, maybe making them into piles where you dig them out for planting holes. Then mulch pretty heavily - the mulch will help build soil and will keep in moisture while the plants establish.