Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as you have good sun: day lilies, peonies, viburnum, sweet pepperbush, buttonbush, butterfly weed,ornamental grasses, yarrows, Black-eyed Susans, dwarf chaste tree. And though it may be an unpopular opinion, I have a few non-invasive butterfly bushes.
For part shade: astilbe, native columbine, Cardinal flowers, heuchera.
Thank you! I’m completely new to gardening, so that is a great list to start with. I have lots and lots of clay, which I’m told is typical for this area. Do you do anything special to combat this, or just the usual amendment during initial planting?
NP. I recommend amending the entire bed and not individual planting holes. Then keep mulching with either leafgro or pine fines, and your soil will improve with time.
This is probably a very stupid question, but... my beds are already full. If I want to remove some of the clay and mix in good compost, what do I do with the extra? If I just dig and add compost, the beds will come out over the top of the bed edges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as you have good sun: day lilies, peonies, viburnum, sweet pepperbush, buttonbush, butterfly weed,ornamental grasses, yarrows, Black-eyed Susans, dwarf chaste tree. And though it may be an unpopular opinion, I have a few non-invasive butterfly bushes.
For part shade: astilbe, native columbine, Cardinal flowers, heuchera.
Thank you! I’m completely new to gardening, so that is a great list to start with. I have lots and lots of clay, which I’m told is typical for this area. Do you do anything special to combat this, or just the usual amendment during initial planting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as you have good sun: day lilies, peonies, viburnum, sweet pepperbush, buttonbush, butterfly weed,ornamental grasses, yarrows, Black-eyed Susans, dwarf chaste tree. And though it may be an unpopular opinion, I have a few non-invasive butterfly bushes.
For part shade: astilbe, native columbine, Cardinal flowers, heuchera.
Thank you! I’m completely new to gardening, so that is a great list to start with. I have lots and lots of clay, which I’m told is typical for this area. Do you do anything special to combat this, or just the usual amendment during initial planting?
NP. I recommend amending the entire bed and not individual planting holes. Then keep mulching with either leafgro or pine fines, and your soil will improve with time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as you have good sun: day lilies, peonies, viburnum, sweet pepperbush, buttonbush, butterfly weed,ornamental grasses, yarrows, Black-eyed Susans, dwarf chaste tree. And though it may be an unpopular opinion, I have a few non-invasive butterfly bushes.
For part shade: astilbe, native columbine, Cardinal flowers, heuchera.
Thank you! I’m completely new to gardening, so that is a great list to start with. I have lots and lots of clay, which I’m told is typical for this area. Do you do anything special to combat this, or just the usual amendment during initial planting?
Anonymous wrote:As long as you have good sun: day lilies, peonies, viburnum, sweet pepperbush, buttonbush, butterfly weed,ornamental grasses, yarrows, Black-eyed Susans, dwarf chaste tree. And though it may be an unpopular opinion, I have a few non-invasive butterfly bushes.
For part shade: astilbe, native columbine, Cardinal flowers, heuchera.