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cindysunshine_gw

Need a Grass/Plant/Groundcover /Shrub Suggestion

15 years ago

Hi - I'm NE of St. Louis and garden on a hilltop. I'm looking to plant something on the hill alongside the little walk that leads up from the lower deck to the far yard beyond.

The view is really all top down - we have just property back there and nobody sees it unless we happen to trudge down the hill which is infrequently. but I want to have a nice view as you walk around and up to the yard on the far side where I have more planting beds and the vegetable garden at the back.

Behind our home I've planted japanese maples in the round planting areas we put on our lower deck and have large hosta that surround them. In the foreground in front of the verdigras green threadleaf, I have asiatic lilies, deep burgandy foliage coral bells, and I've put in some dahlias for fall color later.

This area faces rather SE - the maples do fabulously well down there they seem to have just enough protection from the wind. It used to be very shady, but we lost a huge old oak tree that used to sit off behind that post lamp - we did add three norway spruce trees this spring - so there is dappled shade now but it gets quite hot and sunny.

I'd like to add a couple either ornamental grasses or shrubs there to edget that area nicely. Requirements:

1) Tolerant/thriving in rather poor soil and drought - I can amend that soil and I have but it still is rather poor soil. It's difficult to water - furthest away from the hose - I can mess with it for a season but it needs to get with the program and be happy there.

2) Needs to stay low growing - I don't want to really block the view beyond, but frame it and the path.

At one time I amended and planted some large hosta in there - it was shadier then but they never did well.

Couple photoes - this is early morning and some of them are month ago when it was earlier in the season - the area is around behind that japanese maple.

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Better shot from upper deck of the entire area.

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Hydrangeas grow wonderfully down in the other direction but I built nice beds back there.

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My target area - I killed off the weeds with roundup - ready to fill something in. I supposed I could get a few terrace stones and stack them up to form a planting bed on that left side - that would probably help the situation a lot and allow me have something vine over the ledge...

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This is why you never are finished! Suggestions?

Comments (6)

  • 15 years ago

    Sorry mistake - the area faces NE not SE. I guess you can't edit a post here?

  • 15 years ago

    I love the Japanese maples and the stacked stones. Probably having the bed would be a great help. Gardens are always work, and , you are so right, never finished, but such a wonderful way to spend time.

    I really like the stacked s;ab steps. Yep, you need a bed there and the stones would be perfect. Then, you could add a little color if you like, or more cool greens.
    kay

  • 15 years ago

    It's a dry and shaded area. You could do dogwoods in that area or perhaps use yews or boxwoods. or cimifuga, astilbes or lunaria.

    I like your maples but your green needs a haircut to reveal it's beautiful trunk.

  • 15 years ago

    It looks shadier than it is - this is early spring and by mid summer it is very hot.

    ianna I did actually give that green maple a major haircut - my husband was appalled but I took a lot off - you can peek up under the skirt now - probably could take off more. I got that tree as a gift from my coworkers when my mother died - it has a lot of meaning to me and it really is a beautiful plant.

    I bought some sedums and the red toned hen and chickens that I plunked in - ordered a few of the low prairie dropseed grasses to edge along the back. We'll see how it does - I know I should stack more stones....if this doesn't work I'll do it next year.

    Thank you for the suggestions - we have a huge property and I am desperately trying to figure out how to make it easier to manage. Once it is "under control" I hope to think about that more seriously...

  • 15 years ago

    You do seem to have a large property although it's not shown in the photos. I thought perhaps you could take some examples from English landscaping. More than a hundred or so years ago, the English hillside was bare and they decided to create vistas by adding trees by the hundreds.

    In your case, I thought perhaps you can take this idea and add lilacs in the far horizon to create a view from afar.

    When you've done that, you could connect your garden to the far end by making trails. You can create areas of sweeping flowers (think meadow look)

    Closer to your patio, you can do an extension by creating terraced gardens - meandering iris or day lilies.

    I didn't mean to be abrupt about trimming your maple tree. I just couldn't see the trunk of the tree and I know from many Japanese garden views that you have a great tree there. I have done bonsai before and sometimes I can't help myself and think of ways to prune trees. I like shaping trees.

  • 15 years ago

    I appreciate all the thoughts and advice I really do. I snapped a pic this morning - you can see it's been pruned and I am standing on the upper deck, but when you stand next to it you can see up under it. I love that patch of orange pixie lilies that just pops for a jolt of color alongside.

    Ianna we have so much properly and a lot of gardens - actually in that view up the hill past the stone steps there is a large stand of lilacs just beyond that give that impact. We have a natural row of trees that divides the front yard into the the orchard area out front and then the house. Certainly we could do far more than we have and I have seen the terraced gardens in beautiful English homes. It would take some major hardscaping.

    {{gwi:671702}}

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