Welcome to the Garden Ninja Gardening Forum! If you have a gardening question that you can't find answers to then ask below to seek help from the Garden Ninja army! Please make your garden questions as specific and detailed as possible so the community can provide comprehensive answers in the online forum below.

Welcome to the ultimate beginner gardening and garden design forum! Where no gardening question is too silly or obvious. This online gardening forum is run by Lee Burkhill, the Garden Ninja from BBC 1's Garden Rescue and a trusted group of experienced gardeners.

Whether you are a beginner or an expert gardener, it's a safe place to ask garden-related questions for garden design or planting. If you have a problem in your garden or need help, this is the Garden Forum for you!

Garden Ninja forum ask a question

Posting Rules: This space is open for all garden-related questions. Please be polite, courteous and respectful. If you wouldn't say it to your mum's face, then don't post it here. Please don't promote, sell, link spam or advertise here. Please don't ask for 'cheeky' full Garden redesigns here. They will be deleted.

If you need a garden design service, please use this page to book a design consultation. I will block anyone who breaks these rules or is discourteous to the Garden Ninja Community.

Join the forum below with your gardening questions!

Please or Register to create posts and topics.

Evergreen vs perennials in flower beds

Hi there,

I started gardening June 2020 and now feeling a bit lost.

I have 3 triangular shaped beds at the start of the garden. Pre june 2020 they were structured, low maintenance eg) cordalines, grasses, topiary, small confiners, ferns etc no flowers , it looked good 99% of the time.

<span;>When I started gardening in June2020 I changed it to be more bee friendly and took everything out and replaced with perennials like Foxgloves, lupins, corepsis. Snapdragon. Aqualegias,  echinacea etc all grown from seed

My main issue is it looks messy a lot of the time when in bloom and then dead the rest of the time.

<span;>Looking for more balance, I did some research and have now bought some Camelias and hebes and will remove / reposition some of the perennials

<span;>So my question is...

would you plant things symmetrical or in groups with the beds being triangle shapes? And How to balance the evergreens and perennials?

(Hope this doesn't count as redesign advice, if so please delete, best wishes ) one pic june 2020 showing the shape of the beds,  And june 2022 showing some blooms

 

Thanks so much

Uploaded files:
  • Screenshot_20230220-161708_Gallery.jpg
  • Screenshot_20230220-161927_Gallery.jpg
HelenPD has reacted to this post.
HelenPD

Hi @weedy

First off those beds look amazing when in full flight so please don’t be disheartened. The issue you’re having from reading your comment is two fold. 

Firstly you’re wanting year round interest which is where succession planting comes from. 

Secondly you’re not blending enough evergreen to herbaceous or deciduous either meaning there’s blobs of green but not much else or a riot of colour midsummer and then not much in the winter. 

You’ve got a few choices. Either mix in some smaller evergreens such as Hebes to bring a bit of winter structure or add a few grasses to your herbaceous flowering mix. Then leave the grasses throughout the winter for structure. 

As for planting I rarely advocate formal symmetrical layouts. They rarely work unless immaculate.

Follow my guide below or read my flower bed guide here for a more natural layout.

Last tip. I’d plant your evergreens in the back beds and use the front for a more seasonal display of summer and spring flowering plants. That way the main structure is good year round and you can switch that up as you please. Also don’t be too quick to have a perfect and neat border. Wildlife will love the border you already have and it’s far more ecological to plant like that than a year round boring set of symmetrical low fuss shrubs. So don’t be so hard on yourself for perfection. Looks pretty lovely to me! 

Happy gardening. 

Lee

HelenPD has reacted to this post.
HelenPD

Thanks for asking a question I had, @Weedy and thanks for your useful reply, @Lee : )

Online garden design courses

Share this now!