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| 4. Link all the pieces. Once you have your foundation plants, accessories and "pepper" plants, you have one bed completed and you are ready to move onto phase two of garden planning — linking the pieces of the garden together. In this example, a star magnolia tree is added to the mix. Notice that the tree is the same color as the lemon balm, with similar-size leaves and the same rounded habit. |
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| 5. Learn the 'sedum secret.' What about building a garden on top of an existing garden? How do you reclaim a garden space without just mowing the whole thing and starting from scratch? The basic concepts of foundation and "pepper" plants work well in this situation too. In this example, I will show you how with the "sedum secret." This photo is the "before" photo of a garden bed once overrun with weeds and overgrown plants. |
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| To give you a better idea, in this shot the white circles are all weeds and the black circles are a few overgrown plants worth keeping. To save a garden like this:
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| I say "plant" loosely, because sedum is one of the few plants that you can take little stems of and easily create a new plant in a few months. I stuck 15 to 20 little stems of sedum all around the pathway, and by fall they filled in beautifully. |
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| 6. Add cover plants. In addition to the sedum, I was able to add a few accessory plants and cover plants. Cover plants are annuals that help keep weeds away. In my case, I added zucchini and pumpkin vines. These plants grow fast, with large leaves that shade out weed seedlings that might try to grow. In fall, they come out of the ground, and the space is there for your mature plants to grow into next spring. |
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| Here is the pathway this spring. Those little balls of sedum will grow tall again by fall, and the path is almost completely weed free thanks to the combination of the weed-blocking cardboard and mulch. |
Dancing fish -- you can literally snap off stems with your fingers and then plant those cuttings. Here is some more info on how I do it:
http://www.anestforallseasons.com/2011/08/showing-you-underbelly-river-of-sedum.html
Various other beginner plants are here: http://www.anestforallseasons.com/p/for-gardeners.html
Would they grow in Phoenix?
zones 5-11 - What zone is Phoenix? My roses here in PA don't need additional water, but I would assume you would have to water fairly regularly for them to do well in a desert climate, but I am not an expert on that region, so someone else might have better info for you!
One important note: it is illegal to propagate (by cuttings, grafting, budding, etc.) a rose that is currently under patent. Even for your own home use.
Knock Out's were introduced in 2000. So for the next 20 years they'll be under patent.