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New to gardening-need help!
in Plants
Hello
I'm new to this gardening lark and need advice please! I've just moved into a house with a backyard - and it is just that...a yard. So I'm looking to brighten it up with some tubs, hanging baskets, whatever I can really. So we're in July now, is there anything I can do now to make a start in transforming it? I'm also thinking about getting some growbags and maybe try to grow some veg, any ideas?
I would appreciate any advice anyone can throw my way! Thanks.
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Depending on your area, many garden centres still have planted-up hanging baskets for sale - those would brighten up your yard immediately. You will may also find that they still have fuchsias and begonias, which can both grow in tubs for the summer; they are also likely to have Shasta daisies, coreopsis and rudbeckia, that will keep flowering into the autumn.
One of the first things you need to find out is how much sun your little yard gets. Which way does it face? Where does the sun rise and set? Are you surrounded by high buildings or trees which will cast shadows in the spring and autumn?
You need to know these things so that you know where you can plant your sun-lovers and where the plants that need shade will like it best.
I think the first thing I'd do to cheer it up is buy a few pretty pelargoniums (what used to be called geraniums) in pots and put them by your back door step to make you smile as you go in and out. They'll need to live indoors in the winter, but that's ages away.
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
Hello fabulousemmalina: the best advice is - make haste slowly! When you first move to a new garden, be it large or small, you need to spend some time appraising it, seeing how much natural light you get, whether or not you have a microclimate, and also checking soil conditions.
It would seem that you have little natural soil available, so are thinking more about tubs and troughs etc. It is very late in the season to start, so unless you want to invest in a few "quick fixes" for colour, which will be expensive and may be wasted effort, you may be better off observing what you have, and gradually making plans.
You say you have a "yard". How big is it? Where are you located? Do you know which direction your yard faces? It may be that you will be lucky enough to create a mediterranean feel. But if it's north facing for example, you will have to deal with much more shade, which will restrict the plants that are possible to grow.
Let us know on the forum some of the basics, and we'll see if we can help. Doubtless there will be differences of opinion and of suggestions - but I'm sure some of the people who post here are extremely well informed and can give invaluable help.
Hi Fab. When you do your hanging baskets, don't limit yourself to flowers. I have planted up baskets on my allotment this year with trailing tomatoes called Garden Pearl, filled out with salad leaves and they're actually doing better than the flowery ones. That way you get some veggies in a small space plus some interesting (and useful) hanging baskets. Good luck!
I'm in the same situation, with only having a small yard I have many pots everythere! I find strawberrys are one of the easiest things to grow with such limited space, as they grow well in pots - but must be kept well watered and fed with liquid feed weekly, and they produce both lovely white flowers and delicious strawberrys! They are also produce more plants easily with both runners and seeds, and even the plants themselves can be split, so do pay for themselves.
I did manage to grow sweetcorn once in a very large pot! and potatoes too, but I found these took up far too much space. I have an allotment for these, which sadly has been turned into a lake with all the rain we've had, and the weeds and slugs love it!
I noticed in this weeks What to do now that there was a load of veg to be sown, look here.
Thanks everyone. Here's a few basics about the yard.
-The yard is north facing
-surrounded by 6 foot fence
-about 8m long
-shed and wheelie bins on the left
-appears to get morning sun directed on the right of the yard
I also have the problem of a corgi which is likely to nibble on things. I have acquired a patio rose and a hanging basket with fushias. There are already a few tubs/troughs with fushias (no flowers) in them too and also some parsley & chives. Everything is out of the way on a table or a crate, and I also got an iron and wood bench from freecycle.
I can put some pictures up to give a better idea.
Excuse the storage tubs, waiting for it to stop raining so I can clean them and put them away!
With such high fences a vertical garden would look great. Lots of pots on the fence full of trailing plants and veg, salads and grasses. There was one on gardeners world a couple of weeks ago at a show but can't remember which one. Google will know
If you hang things from fence you need to establish who owns the fence first
http://www.gardenersworld.com/forum/the-potting-shed/fences-legal-high/4237.html
and that it can take the weight-bearing in mind you need something put onto the fence to support whatever it is.
As for flowering plants you need something that will tolerate mostly shade-begonias instantly come to mind but there are plenty of others
http://www.gardenersworld.com/plants/features/flowers/plants-for-shade/1108.html
As for vegetables you may struggle in that situation from lack of sunlight-and they are high maintenance-you haven' t got a lot of space -what did you have in mind?-what do you like?