PLANTS FOR WALLS AND FENCES
Clematis montana |
At some point we all
experience the trials and tribulations of moving house, usually in connection
with going for a new job, or as we get older we no longer need a large home so
we down size to a smaller house. Once settled in the keen gardener
can analyse
the existing garden’s merits or if the move was to a new build home then the
garden can be designed from scratch. The priorities are usually drives, paths,
lawns, then borders, shelter, patio, and then vegetable and fruit garden. Size
has a lot to influence how many of those must have plants we can fit in, so we
need to utilise all available spaces. Walls and fences can all accommodate a
few plants and this helps to blend the home into the landscape. Traditionally
north facing walls were the most difficult to find a good plant that was happy
with lack of sunshine, but then the south facing walls allowed us to experiment
with the more exotic plants looking for a hot spot. When planting against a
wall it is important to give the plants a good
start, so excavate the planting
area a foot deep and fork up the subsoil before replacing the top soil, with
some good compost added in. If you are planting the more exotic plants such as
vines or figs add some stones or gravel in the bottom of the pit to improve
drainage. After planting give the plants some fertiliser to boost growth to
help them get established, and keep them watered in dry spells in the first and
subsequent year.
Camellia Donation |
Solanum crispum |
North walls will be
fine for most plants, but some are better than others. The firethorn,
Pyracantha Orange Glow was always a favourite. It gets smothered with bright
red berries in the autumn which will feed the blackbirds for weeks and the bees
just love the flowers in spring for their nectar. It makes a dense climber,
great for nesting birds but needs support and some winter pruning.
Delosperma cooperii |
Hydrangea petiolaris
will also be fine on the north wall but again it will need support. Most
Camellias are fine on north and west walls but not east due to danger of sun
scorch on frosted buds, and south walls may be liable to drying out. Virginian
creeper can go on a north wall and has great autumn colour, but it can be very
rampant once it gets established. Clematis can go on any wall, but again some
varieties like Clematis montana
love to ramble, and climb through anything in its path.
Another three
rampant climbers for wall and fences are the yellow Jasminum nudiflorum, the
scented honeysuckles and the Chilean Potato vine, Solanum crispum.
Some climbing and
shrub roses can be trained up walls in any aspect, but they are so numerous
that you need time to study rose growers catalogues as they bring out new
varieties every year, and now they are concentrating on disease resistance as
chemical control is falling out of favour.
As well as flowers
and berries walls can also be used for fruit
production. Perfect places for a
Bramble such as Helen, or you can train apples, pears, peach Avalon Pride, (all
grown as fan trained,) cherries and fig Brown Turkey to grow and crop on a
fence or wall.
Delosperma nubigenum |
Grapes can also
benefit from the warmth of a south facing wall and it is hard to beat Brant,
though the bunches are not big, but the black grapes are sweet and juicy.
Grapes can be very vigorous so need constant summer pruning to restrict growth
and let the sun shine in to ripen up the grapes.
Tall stone built
garden walls can be planted with the succulent Delosperma which is happy to
grow from shoots pushed into cracks between stones where they will root. They
are quite drought
tolerant. Delosperma nubigenum hugs the wall and is smothered
in yellow flowers in late spring, and the other variety Delosperma cooperii has
purple flowers.
Outdoor grape Brant |
Anna trying out the first strawberries |
Wee jobs to do this week
Protect strawberries
from birds, slugs and soil splashes in wet weather. The strawberry season is
now upon us. I have been picking my early variety Christine since late May but
it had been growing under a low polythene tunnel for warmth and protection.
Normal varieties will crop from now for early varieties (Honeoye) and continue
as mid season (Elsanta) and late varieties (Florence and Symphony) come into
season, then finally the perpetual autumn varieties such as Flamenco will crop
till October. Protect the rows from birds with nets and lay straw along the
rows to prevent soil splash damage and if slugs and snails are a problem
sprinkle some pellets along the rows.
END