One garden we had was north facing but was in sun virtually all day due to being on a hill, the back of the garden was higher than the house. Great for plants not so great for knees! Latest garden is more South West but no part gets sun for more than a few hours due to other houses and garages, drawbacks of a new build estate. It's just a matter of finding the right plants for your garden and even those that say they require full sun will often be fine.
That make sense. Maybe the houses in front of us are blocking the sun all the time
I see 'full sun' as roughly meaning "continuous sun through out the summer from equinox to equinox". Some hours here and there is not "full sun". A north facing wall is the opposite of full sun. A south facing spot that bakes all day in the summer is full sun, I would say.
@mandyroberts99 looks like north facing side is probably partial shade in summer, would you say it is full shade rest of the year or still partial shade?
I see 'full sun' as roughly meaning "continuous sun through out the summer from equinox to equinox". Some hours here and there is not "full sun". A north facing wall is the opposite of full sun. A south facing spot that bakes all day in the summer is full sun, I would say.
@mandyroberts99 looks like north facing side is probably partial shade in summer, would you say it is full shade rest of the year or still partial shade?
@TheRainyGarden full shade mid winter with vary degrees between winter and summer. If full sun in the sun all year round?
Posts
https://www.trees.org.uk/Trees.org.uk/files/d1/d13a81b7-f8f5-4af3-891a-b86ec5b1a507.pdf
https://busygardening.co.uk/understanding-shade-in-an-unfamiliar-garden/