Here are the 'Before' photos:
Overgrown Kawakawas encroached on the edge of the boarder, with a few sporadic Rengarenags and Chatham Island forget-me nots. |
Finn and Dave cleared a lot of material from the rest of the path and beyond with the intention of opening up the space and planted decorative shrubs in place of the old kawakawa hedge. |
Now that I could see the space and what the remaining plants were like, I could now develop my planting scheme. Using the silver of the Astelia and Corokia hedge, and the research I had already done for my white garden display, it seemed a logical step to create a Silver and Gold garden.
I wanted to use the Pacystegia I has selected for my white garden, but Finn showed me a few that he had planted in a similarly dark area and they just hadn't performed very well, so I chose an alternative plant instead. Brachyglottis greyi - it has silvery pale foliage most of the year and then flowers with bright yellow daisies.
I also chose Pimilia protrata - for its pale foliage and small white flowers, its spreading habit should fill up the lower front of the border.
Interspersed with the pimilia, I planted clumps of Schlernathus biflorus - this has a much more vivid green to contract against the other pale plants, it will spread in spongy mounds.
Behind that, Hebe albicans, my new favourite hebe. It has a neat round form with white flower spikes, gowing to less than 1m high. a good foreground shrub.
Alternating next to the hebes, an Olearia with a deep green leaf with a white margin (whose species name has slipped my mind).
Behind this is the golden grass Libertia perigrines, to add a touch of gold all year round.
To block the view of the bowling club from the garden's path, I put in tall growing Oleaia avicenniaefolia. These should grow fairly quickly and bring the view back into the garden instead of out over the hedge into next doors carpark.
Before planting anything, I laid them all out into the positions I wanted and making sure they each had the correct spacings for the future growth. |
Et voila!! One newly designed and planted border. |
Now I just need to come back in a year and see how well they have grown and if they are happy in their positions. I'm very pleased with this. |
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