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By *opsy Rogers OP   Woman
over a year ago

London

Who loves it?

I'm moving soon and the garden is a complete blank canvas, I can't wait!

I've had many over the years and inherited loads of good and bad stuff but this will be a first so for inspiration, what one thing in your garden would you not be without (veg patch, lawn, patio, trees, awning that sort of thing) and one thing that was a disaster?

I'll be laying mine mostly to pavers and having a sort of car port built onto the back wall of the house for shade (south facing) and joy of joys, choosing a tree for more shade.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

I got a landscape gardener to look at mine, but he said he couldn’t help me cause mine was portrait .

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

Probably the lawn and s. The front garden over the summer I let the lawn go wild and always leave some s in the back garden. Not so much designed but, apart from some purposefully grown plants, I wait to see what else might come up each year and go from there.

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By *ophieslutTV/TS
over a year ago

Central

I'd not do without fragrance, as you can often smell the fragrances of flowers night and day. So much choice too - fragrant plants for all of the year, including winter honeusuckle.

Some great climbers are incredible in a smaller space, adding their scents up to higher levels. Climbing roses can even count. My summer honeysuckles of different varieties and colours, are probably my top performers, as they completely fill the garden at night with their scent. Often not great in a very hot, dry part of the garden, as they can become prone to infection. Otherwise, dead simple. For a very hot spot, I'd probably take 1 of my jasmines.

Obviously, unlike those 2 climbers, there are fragrant smaller olants of many typesm

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By *opsy Rogers OP   Woman
over a year ago

London


"I'd not do without fragrance, as you can often smell the fragrances of flowers night and day. So much choice too - fragrant plants for all of the year, including winter honeusuckle.

Some great climbers are incredible in a smaller space, adding their scents up to higher levels. Climbing roses can even count. My summer honeysuckles of different varieties and colours, are probably my top performers, as they completely fill the garden at night with their scent. Often not great in a very hot, dry part of the garden, as they can become prone to infection. Otherwise, dead simple. For a very hot spot, I'd probably take 1 of my jasmines.

Obviously, unlike those 2 climbers, there are fragrant smaller olants of many typesm "

I was just talking to a friend about honeysuckle and I think it was the first flower I sniffed as a child, I adore it and thanks for the reminder of evening fragrance

I'm planning on being as insect friendly as possible, especially bees and want to plant at the edges and in large planters.

I really have a love of scruffy plants, anemones, hellebores, nasturtium, anything that isn't uniform.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"Probably the lawn and w**ds. The front garden over the summer I let the lawn go wild and always leave some w**ds in the back garden. Not so much designed but, apart from some purposefully grown plants, I wait to see what else might come up each year and go from there."

Was supposed to say w-e-e-d-s

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By *opsy Rogers OP   Woman
over a year ago

London


"Probably the lawn and s. The front garden over the summer I let the lawn go wild and always leave some s in the back garden. Not so much designed but, apart from some purposefully grown plants, I wait to see what else might come up each year and go from there."

Fantastic isn't it! I've moved at least twenty times over the years and that's exactly what I do, wait to see what comes up. The most memorable was the garden of an Edwardian house I had, part in full sun, part in moist shade where amazing ferns grew.

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By *ingle Beds LassWoman
over a year ago

Bedfordshire

My gazebo is a godsend ... got it from IKEA 3 years ago. Has the UV filter thing going on... keeps me dry if it rains... did have my hot tub under it, but that didn't come out this year, just table and chairs. Usually leave frame up all year round just take off the fabric during winter

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"Probably the lawn and s. The front garden over the summer I let the lawn go wild and always leave some s in the back garden. Not so much designed but, apart from some purposefully grown plants, I wait to see what else might come up each year and go from there.

Fantastic isn't it! I've moved at least twenty times over the years and that's exactly what I do, wait to see what comes up. The most memorable was the garden of an Edwardian house I had, part in full sun, part in moist shade where amazing ferns grew."

I love ferns. Got about four (one just popped up in another pot) in pots which I have in a shady drop down bit where the patio ends. It's a bit of a 'dead spot' in the garden. But the ferns look good there.

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By *opsy Rogers OP   Woman
over a year ago

London


"My gazebo is a godsend ... got it from IKEA 3 years ago. Has the UV filter thing going on... keeps me dry if it rains... did have my hot tub under it, but that didn't come out this year, just table and chairs. Usually leave frame up all year round just take off the fabric during winter "

It must be a really sturdy one then, I'll have to look on their site.

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By *riar BelisseWoman
over a year ago

Delightful Bliss

I always have a nature area with plenty of bee friendly plants and bug boxes and I am also a tad addicted to acer trees in pots

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By *opsy Rogers OP   Woman
over a year ago

London


"I always have a nature area with plenty of bee friendly plants and bug boxes and I am also a tad addicted to acer trees in pots

"

I LOVE acers! It's a shame the well established ones are so expensive but at least one is part of my plan.

Have you got a good variety?

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By *ettyboop61Woman
over a year ago

St Neots


"I always have a nature area with plenty of bee friendly plants and bug boxes and I am also a tad addicted to acer trees in pots

"

I have loads of Acer's in pots at least 8 the oldest is 24 years old.... beautiful but now it's starting to loose its leaves winter is coming

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By *eliciousladyWoman
over a year ago

Sometimes U.K

Have just recently put up a greenhouse in preparation for the winter, so the plants and lemon trees can escape from frost.

Love my wild garden area for the bugs and bees to enjoy.

My hammock to chillax in while reading a book and sipping tea or wine.

Finally, there has to be a shaded patio for breakfast and fresh coffee al fresco.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

I love trees, preferably planted into the ground, they give great shade and give great air quality, grass, some of which i let go wild, buddleia's, several of them, gunnera, roses and generally a big selection of plants, i also love bedding plants in large pots, mainly fuschia's and lobellia. Fruit and veg plants. We only have a small garden but pack a lot into it.

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By *opsy Rogers OP   Woman
over a year ago

London


"Have just recently put up a greenhouse in preparation for the winter, so the plants and lemon trees can escape from frost.

Love my wild garden area for the bugs and bees to enjoy.

My hammock to chillax in while reading a book and sipping tea or wine.

Finally, there has to be a shaded patio for breakfast and fresh coffee al fresco.

"

The shaded patio is the first thing on my list! I've been looking at all sorts of options but the best for price and practicality is going to be a stylish sort of car port. I had thought of an awning but the wall width restricts the canopy to only 2m and I want more shade than that.

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By *opsy Rogers OP   Woman
over a year ago

London


"I love trees, preferably planted into the ground, they give great shade and give great air quality, grass, some of which i let go wild, buddleia's, several of them, gunnera, roses and generally a big selection of plants, i also love bedding plants in large pots, mainly fuschia's and lobellia. Fruit and veg plants. We only have a small garden but pack a lot into it."

I think a small packed garden is easier to manage, can't over do it.

There are allotments about a three minute walk from the house, if I stop nomading around the country, I may just apply for one.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

Jasmines just for their heady scent at night.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

Part of my job..love having a blank canvas and being left to it..dobe some amazing gardens with structural engineering reinforcing and terracing steep slopes and planting up..love it

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By *opsy Rogers OP   Woman
over a year ago

London


"Jasmines just for their heady scent at night. "

There are very few plant smells I dislike but jasmine is one of them...and coriander!

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By *opsy Rogers OP   Woman
over a year ago

London


"Part of my job..love having a blank canvas and being left to it..dobe some amazing gardens with structural engineering reinforcing and terracing steep slopes and planting up..love it "

Swoon! I hope you have pictures.

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By *ittleAcornMan
over a year ago

visiting the beach

rhubarb and honeysuckle...

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"Jasmines just for their heady scent at night.

There are very few plant smells I dislike but jasmine is one of them...and coriander!"

I agree with coriander yes a really dry sort of smell, I couldnt live without jasmine though

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"Part of my job..love having a blank canvas and being left to it..dobe some amazing gardens with structural engineering reinforcing and terracing steep slopes and planting up..love it

Swoon! I hope you have pictures."

I do but not on here...done a couple that involved abseiling etc..wkd and to see the plants later blossom and the perfumes on the air

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By *ophieslutTV/TS
over a year ago

Central


"I'd not do without fragrance, as you can often smell the fragrances of flowers night and day. So much choice too - fragrant plants for all of the year, including winter honeusuckle.

Some great climbers are incredible in a smaller space, adding their scents up to higher levels. Climbing roses can even count. My summer honeysuckles of different varieties and colours, are probably my top performers, as they completely fill the garden at night with their scent. Often not great in a very hot, dry part of the garden, as they can become prone to infection. Otherwise, dead simple. For a very hot spot, I'd probably take 1 of my jasmines.

Obviously, unlike those 2 climbers, there are fragrant smaller olants of many typesm

I was just talking to a friend about honeysuckle and I think it was the first flower I sniffed as a child, I adore it and thanks for the reminder of evening fragrance

I'm planning on being as insect friendly as possible, especially bees and want to plant at the edges and in large planters.

I really have a love of scruffy plants, anemones, hellebores, nasturtium, anything that isn't uniform."

I've had some hummingbird hawk-moths around my honeysuckle - they're amazing and can be like clockwork, appearing at the same time everyday. They're definitely a great and very versatile plant. Our own native honeysuckle has obviously supported many types of wildlife for centuries, so the cultivars ee can buy are familiar to them. They carry red berries in autumn and winter, so feed birds then too.

I'm with you on lack of formality and like the scruffy look of flowers. I have tons of hellebores, I let them selfseed, they firm new merged colours, their oversized leaves are great for the hedgehogs to mooch around in here for food.

Some of the climbers are ideal in tubs - they definitely make the most of any space that's restricted. My non-fragrant climber I've been enjoying for a few years is a deep purple passion flower, which is covered in buds atm - I can pretend that there's a stronger scent

My Nicotiana sylvestris is Flowering madly now. Normally an annual, it can live through winters with a little protection. It's a cousin of the tobacco olant, a really tall species that has a heady scent similar to carnations/Dianthus.

If you can have a winter honeysuckle near to the doorway, it's great to smell through winter, when little else is around. It's more if a shrubby bush, unlike the climbers that flower in summer that we know. It's great against a wall, will grow to 8' or so.

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By *ophieslutTV/TS
over a year ago

Central


"Jasmines just for their heady scent at night.

There are very few plant smells I dislike but jasmine is one of them...and coriander!

I agree with coriander yes a really dry sort of smell, I couldnt live without jasmine though "

There are a few plants known as jasmine. Jasminum, the genus is I assume what we can only truly refer to as jasmine. Some colloquial 'jasmines' I assume were given their common names because they bore some similarities, such as strong scents and star like flowers. The type of the perfume can be very different, so some may like some, others different ones. I have a pink jasmine that is the must-visit plant for all bees in my garden. I don't like its almost invisible scent but bees presumably prefer its food supply.

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By *oachman 9CoolMan
over a year ago

derby


"Probably the lawn and w**ds. The front garden over the summer I let the lawn go wild and always leave some w**ds in the back garden. Not so much designed but, apart from some purposefully grown plants, I wait to see what else might come up each year and go from there.

Was supposed to say w-e-e-d-s "

Weeds will always find a way they were here long before most garden plants and If not before them there are certain ones you have to keep in check like bramble If along with any nettles you may have but If you have a spare corner for these plants and you manage them that is cut them back when needed you,ll create a small area for wildlife birds will nest in the bramble when its thick enough and any thorns in the branches will help to deter cats, nettles will encourage butterflies to lay their eggs on like small tortoiseshell butterflies along with others to that might pass by, similar to yourself I let my garden do its own thing for a while till I set about it for a bit If you can mulch the ground occasionally where dug with bark mulchings the ground will benefit from that.

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By *eliciousladyWoman
over a year ago

Sometimes U.K


"Jasmines just for their heady scent at night. "

Personally, I find jasmine too strong a scent. Probably because my sight and sound isn’t the best, this heightens my sense of smell (and taste)

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

If my garden was bigger I’d have some hydrangeas.

They were my nanas favourites.

Love you nana

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"If my garden was bigger I’d have some hydrangeas.

They were my nanas favourites.

Love you nana "

If you stick a penny in the soil on one half they go blue.

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By *eliciousladyWoman
over a year ago

Sometimes U.K


".. Finally, there has to be a shaded patio for breakfast and fresh coffee al fresco.

The shaded patio is the first thing on my list! I've been looking at all sorts of options but the best for price and practicality is going to be a stylish sort of car port. I had thought of an awning but the wall width restricts the canopy to only 2m and I want more shade than that."

Can you use some fast growing plants or tubs for shade and a large sun umbrella, rather than having a construction built?

A patio that has shade at varying times of the day is ideal, so a combination of sunshade and plants would be more practical?

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"If my garden was bigger I’d have some hydrangeas.

They were my nanas favourites.

Love you nana

If you stick a penny in the soil on one half they go blue. "

Get the fuck outta here!!!

She had ones just like that either side of her front doors.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"If my garden was bigger I’d have some hydrangeas.

They were my nanas favourites.

Love you nana

If you stick a penny in the soil on one half they go blue.

Get the fuck outta here!!!

She had ones just like that either side of her front doors."

I used to call them sleeping beauty plants because one side was pink, the other was blue and in the middle they were pink and blue mix. Like the dress when the fairy godmothers couldn’t decide what colour it should be

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By *inky_couple2020Couple
over a year ago

North West


"If my garden was bigger I’d have some hydrangeas.

They were my nanas favourites.

Love you nana

If you stick a penny in the soil on one half they go blue.

Get the fuck outta here!!!

She had ones just like that either side of her front doors.

I used to call them sleeping beauty plants because one side was pink, the other was blue and in the middle they were pink and blue mix. Like the dress when the fairy godmothers couldn’t decide what colour it should be "

That phenomenon is called incomplete dominance or co-dominance

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By *hisisntpofMan
over a year ago

bristol

it would have to have a koi pond,a pergola maybe,all in modern styles and colours,also a hot tub covered area plus a not looked over suntrap,artificial grass as less maintenance along with it having a few paved areas ,who is alan titchmarsh/ titwank anyway lol

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By *opsy Rogers OP   Woman
over a year ago

London


"I'd not do without fragrance, as you can often smell the fragrances of flowers night and day. So much choice too - fragrant plants for all of the year, including winter honeusuckle.

Some great climbers are incredible in a smaller space, adding their scents up to higher levels. Climbing roses can even count. My summer honeysuckles of different varieties and colours, are probably my top performers, as they completely fill the garden at night with their scent. Often not great in a very hot, dry part of the garden, as they can become prone to infection. Otherwise, dead simple. For a very hot spot, I'd probably take 1 of my jasmines.

Obviously, unlike those 2 climbers, there are fragrant smaller olants of many typesm

I was just talking to a friend about honeysuckle and I think it was the first flower I sniffed as a child, I adore it and thanks for the reminder of evening fragrance

I'm planning on being as insect friendly as possible, especially bees and want to plant at the edges and in large planters.

I really have a love of scruffy plants, anemones, hellebores, nasturtium, anything that isn't uniform.

I've had some hummingbird hawk-moths around my honeysuckle - they're amazing and can be like clockwork, appearing at the same time everyday. They're definitely a great and very versatile plant. Our own native honeysuckle has obviously supported many types of wildlife for centuries, so the cultivars ee can buy are familiar to them. They carry red berries in autumn and winter, so feed birds then too.

I'm with you on lack of formality and like the scruffy look of flowers. I have tons of hellebores, I let them selfseed, they firm new merged colours, their oversized leaves are great for the hedgehogs to mooch around in here for food.

Some of the climbers are ideal in tubs - they definitely make the most of any space that's restricted. My non-fragrant climber I've been enjoying for a few years is a deep purple passion flower, which is covered in buds atm - I can pretend that there's a stronger scent

My Nicotiana sylvestris is Flowering madly now. Normally an annual, it can live through winters with a little protection. It's a cousin of the tobacco olant, a really tall species that has a heady scent similar to carnations/Dianthus.

If you can have a winter honeysuckle near to the doorway, it's great to smell through winter, when little else is around. It's more if a shrubby bush, unlike the climbers that flower in summer that we know. It's great against a wall, will grow to 8' or so."

Hedgehog holes! Thanks for the reminder. Very few cars in the area and the back of the house is quiet and not overlooked so I bet theres a few piggies around, they can hoover up the bloody slugs. The garden is all wooden fence so I'll put some holes in.

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By *opsy Rogers OP   Woman
over a year ago

London


".. Finally, there has to be a shaded patio for breakfast and fresh coffee al fresco.

The shaded patio is the first thing on my list! I've been looking at all sorts of options but the best for price and practicality is going to be a stylish sort of car port. I had thought of an awning but the wall width restricts the canopy to only 2m and I want more shade than that.

Can you use some fast growing plants or tubs for shade and a large sun umbrella, rather than having a construction built?

A patio that has shade at varying times of the day is ideal, so a combination of sunshade and plants would be more practical? "

I'll be constructing a kitchen in that bit (not a BBQ) and I'm very sun averse so I'll be looking for proper shade. It will have climbers all over it though

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"Probably the lawn and w**ds. The front garden over the summer I let the lawn go wild and always leave some w**ds in the back garden. Not so much designed but, apart from some purposefully grown plants, I wait to see what else might come up each year and go from there.

Was supposed to say w-e-e-d-s Weeds will always find a way they were here long before most garden plants and If not before them there are certain ones you have to keep in check like bramble If along with any nettles you may have but If you have a spare corner for these plants and you manage them that is cut them back when needed you,ll create a small area for wildlife birds will nest in the bramble when its thick enough and any thorns in the branches will help to deter cats, nettles will encourage butterflies to lay their eggs on like small tortoiseshell butterflies along with others to that might pass by, similar to yourself I let my garden do its own thing for a while till I set about it for a bit If you can mulch the ground occasionally where dug with bark mulchings the ground will benefit from that."

I'll remember that about the bark mulchings. In the back garden have a specific area for letting it go wild but haven't kept on top of all the s as well as I should do. But I find it has a certain charm with a slightly managed run down look. Feels like there is more life in it.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"If my garden was bigger I’d have some hydrangeas.

They were my nanas favourites.

Love you nana

If you stick a penny in the soil on one half they go blue.

Get the fuck outta here!!!

She had ones just like that either side of her front doors.

I used to call them sleeping beauty plants because one side was pink, the other was blue and in the middle they were pink and blue mix. Like the dress when the fairy godmothers couldn’t decide what colour it should be

That phenomenon is called incomplete dominance or co-dominance "

fancy!

And there I was calling them sleeping beauty plants

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"I love trees, preferably planted into the ground, they give great shade and give great air quality, grass, some of which i let go wild, buddleia's, several of them, gunnera, roses and generally a big selection of plants, i also love bedding plants in large pots, mainly fuschia's and lobellia. Fruit and veg plants. We only have a small garden but pack a lot into it.

I think a small packed garden is easier to manage, can't over do it.

There are allotments about a three minute walk from the house, if I stop nomading around the country, I may just apply for one."

I agree about small gardens we do have a fair sized area of grass still for the grandchildren to run about on.

Our garden is an unusual shape so some of our veg and fruit are in a secluded area away from the house but we have strawberrys, tomatoes and fruit trees near the house.

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