this post was submitted on 28 Jan 2025
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Nature and Gardening

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We moved into this house about a year ago. I've been making an effort to have a mix of wild and cottage vibes for the garden, as this was our first winter I've been able to get some decent designing down. Last year was a bit of a panic as we didn't know how the sun would lay and with moving in, our planting was done really late. But this year is the year I establish hedges as even though we're in a wood no one has anything in their front gardens and not much in the rear including mine.

I put a pond in last summer after liberating a water tank out of a skip which lives in the wild part of the garden. So the plan is for the native hedging to run the length of the garden, with intermittent decorative ones like the sweet briar for the parts closer to the house.

The front of the garden is going to be the nepeta as it'll be easy to control it from spilling onto the path. It also allows people to see the front garden while giving us a bit more of an established boundary that grass alone doesn't really do.

Are there any tips or suggestions for anything I might be missing?

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[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Are there any tips or suggestions for anything I might be missing?

I know that roses, for example, don't do well at my place because the soil is too clay heavy, and drains badly. So soil compatibility is something you might like to check :)

[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 2 days ago

Awesome thank-you I've avoided roses all my life, But I inherited 2 here and brought them back from summer dormancy these are very traditional. Just reminded me to do a cursory check:

"Soilscape 7:Freely draining slightly acid but base-rich soil" but I'll add some light gravel when planting