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Talkback: Most hated plants

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  • tattiannatattianna Posts: 182

    I'm with the rose haters, no specific reason I just don't like them. The same goes for foxglove. I do love dianthus with their beautiful fragrance and I adore the humble lupin though I am so close to giving up on them due to the horrible aphids that I just don't seem able to control.  

  • weejennyweejenny Posts: 386

    asters for one you cant get rid of them easily either. Reading the list of plants others dont like is so interesting we all have our different ideas which is a good thing

  • curlyonecurlyone Posts: 31

    I don't know what it's called but both my neigbours have it.  It's a rapid climber (fast like bindweed) with tendrils and I see the flower heads full of potential seed berries poking over our 7 foot tall boundaries waving in the breeze trying to get in to my garden.  It seems seriously sinister, I feel like they are taunting and threatening me. Errrgh!

     

  • Eddie JEddie J Posts: 108

    Box (buxus)

    It's also the one reason that I gave up watching GW. I don't want to see and hear it mentioned in every episode of the show.

    Given the chance, I'd see every example of it destroyed..

  • gardeningfanticgardeningfantic Posts: 1,019

    i hate busy lizzies and firs..

  • WintersongWintersong Posts: 2,436

    Yes! Thankyou gardenfantic, I've been wracking my brain over what plants I actually hate...busy lizzies for sure.image...I think...image...maybe...if they are the really gaudy kind, yes those gaudy type.image

  • auntie bettyauntie betty Posts: 208

    ooh, and hyacinths. i HATE hyacinths. they reek and they look like they're from Mars. I can appreciate most plants, really, and can see they all have a role if placed well, but if somebody FORCED me to put hyacinths in my garden i really have no idea where i'd begin trying to make them look nice. Yucksome, as my kids would say.

  • WintersongWintersong Posts: 2,436

    Hyacinths are rather ugly, I will agree.

    I think the crux of the matter for me, is not the actual plant but how its used.

    I cannot stand all bedding arrangements although bedding has its place and those of older generation took much pride in landingstrips of brightly coloured non-hardy vegetation.image

    My pet hate is gaps, as was the requirement in the 50s and 60s when showing off single specimens was the done thing whilst I'm also too much the control freak to let things run loose and flop everywhere in an unsightly manner. No no no.

    I like lush but controlled. I like shape and form, foliage and texture over colour and perhaps find plant combinations most difficult when having to consider flowering colours and seasons. I mean, my sofa only has to match the wallpaper and it stays the same colour and doesn't grow or need any pruning or maintenance and will never die on me just because we had a wet winter!!image

    I need a lie down now.image

  • ObelixxObelixx Posts: 30,049

    Anything that looks plastic so begonias, busy lizzies, exotic orchids although native meadow European orchids are lovely.

    Euphorbias in all their forms - native, exotic, poinsettias.

    Bedding plants and schemes from marigolds to Love Lies Bleeding and the Victorian and public planting schemes usuing flowers and foliage in gaudy colours and formations.

    Golden Rod.

    And then the abominations like pink delphiniums, blue roses, pink daffs and so on.   Definitely not an improvement on nature.

    Vendée - 20kms from Atlantic coast.
    "The price good men (and women) pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men (and women)."
    Plato
  • LowennaLowenna Posts: 88

    Bedding begonias and Michaelmas daisies 

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