GROUND COVER
Gardens and
gardeners change as time marches on. The gardens follow the fashion of the day,
and today that seems to have ease of maintenance at its heart. When you go for
a walk around the towns and villages of any location looking for garden ideas
you see major changes, especially in new developments where hard landscape
seems to take up most of the available outdoor space. Lawns and borders take
second priority to space for the cars. In times past we kept our cars in the
garage, but they are now so full of other things that there is no room left for
a car.
Delosperma cooperi and Senecio |
The garden with its
lawns, borders and fruit and vegetable patch were our place of sanctuary, where
we escape the pressures of modern living to be one with nature while at the
same time we grow fresh fruit and vegetables for our healthy living. However
there is such an abundance of other leisure activities available that gardening
is going out of fashion for many folks. When I check the papers on the Thursday
to see the houses for sale, I see numerous modern dwellings stuck in the middle
of sterile hard landscapes where paving, sets and tarmac have replaced a green
landscape.
Doronicum and red tulips |
Then as some of us
that do gardening on a slope get a wee bit older we find the energies of youth
beginning to fade and we begin to look for the easy solution. The days of
double digging every patch of soil and removing trees complete with roots no
matter how big are becoming a distant memory. Thus we bring in more ground
cover in our planting schemes to reduce the need for weeding and continual
planting of bedding, bulbs and annuals. With clever design and knowledge of
plants flowering times and heights we can still create very attractive planting
schemes with a more permanent theme that will be easy to maintain.
Erica carnea |
Some ground cover
plants are evergreen such as heathers, ivy and London Pride and others such as
Euonymus and Houttuynia Chameleon are variegated so give us winter colour. When
planning location of ground cover plants give thought to soil type, drainage,
exposure to sun, shade and season of interest as well as height of plants, as
they all have different needs.
Many plants are
appreciated best in winter such as the variegated types especially if grown
together with dogwoods, maples with coloured bark and winter flowering heathers
such as Erica carnea to create a winter garden.
In the rock garden
the dwarf saxifrages which can smother the ground, flower in late March at the
same time as early tulip Scarlet Baby. Another excellent attractive rock garden
plant is the mauve red Sedum spathulifolium purpureum. Plant the tulips
adjacent but not amongst these plants.
Euphorbia polychroma |
In mid spring it is
the Doronicums with bright yellow flowers that make a splash especially if
under planted with mauve and red early flowering tulips. Doronicums grow about
a foot tall, so plant a drift of scarlet phlox subulata next to them. The phlox
hugs the ground and flowers at the same time. From spring to early summer the
dwarf Japanese azaleas take over the display for several weeks. They are easy to
grow, happy in sun or dappled shade with a well drained but moist soil.
In summer good
ground cover plants include the lemon yellow flowering Euphorbia polychroma,
the mauve Campanula, the yellow and mauve succulents Delosperma and the white
Shasta daisy. Although many heathers flower all summer the late flowering Calluna
H E Beale is a real show stopper and makes a perfect ground cover plant.
In autumn it is time
for the berried plants to take over such as numerous types of Cotoneaster and
Pernettyas, though the latter needs a male pollinator as the berried plants are
all female.
Most plants have now
gone dormant as winter approaches, but some vegetables such as Swiss chard and
rocket continue to grow slowly, just enough to balance replacing shoots as you
pick them for use. They are both valuable health giving vegetables packed with
goodness to keep using them into winter. Remove any flower shoots that develop
on rocket and chard so the plants can retain their strength for growing young
hardy shoots.
END