Adding some year-round colour to North-facing garden

Adding some year-round colour to North-facing garden

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Escapegoat

Original Poster:

5,135 posts

135 months

Saturday 25th March 2017
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Mrs Goat has delegated the job of sorting out the front garden to me. At the moment it has a wide selection of poorly-chosen deciduous stuff and not-at-all-chosen self-seeded chaos.

My plan is to go for low-maintenance shrubs - primarily evergreens - to create something that doesn't show us up when we/I don't pay it enough attention. (Ordinarily we don't see the front garden often because we come/go via the back door.)

The front garden is quite small: about 5m across by 4-5m with the usual 1m-wide path. But it's North-facing; it gets a bit of sun first thing in the morning, and a bit more last thing at night, plus overhead sun in the middle of Summer, of course.

Thoughts so far:
Thuja occidentalis Rheingold
Variegated holly
Viburnum?
Prostrate Juniper (instead of lawn/gravel)
Evergreen honeysuckle for climbing
Box
some compact+colourful conifers

Ideas please?

Only one rule: nothing spikey!

Simpo Two

85,390 posts

265 months

Saturday 25th March 2017
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Anemone japonica doesn't flower year round but it grows almost anywhere, needs no care and looks nice.

dmsims

6,515 posts

267 months

Sunday 26th March 2017
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We have a Jasmine on a north wall which does well

https://www.rhs.org.uk/plants/search-Form

Paul Drawmer

4,878 posts

267 months

Sunday 26th March 2017
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Hydrangea petiolaris. Quite a large evergreen climber with a profusion of white flowers.

https://www.rhs.org.uk/Plants/97624/Hydrangea-anom...

Does fine on north facing walls.

8-P

2,758 posts

260 months

Sunday 26th March 2017
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Camellia
Rhododendron
Azehlia

Escapegoat

Original Poster:

5,135 posts

135 months

Sunday 26th March 2017
quotequote all
Thanks for the suggestions. I'll dust off my books and check each of them out.

One thing: don't rhodedendrons get rather big? I'm imagining most of the shrubs being perhaps 50-100cm in diameter when established. There's already a flowering cherry and a magnolia for taller interest (magnolia not doing very well at the moment).

I like the idea of some colourful climbers. There is currently a large and quite vigorous buddleia, which I'd quite like to kill off (sorry bees) and then train some colourful climber to use as a support. As a side q: would the copper nail trick work to kill off the buddleia? (Leaving the woody bits in tact.)

Steve Campbell

2,132 posts

168 months

Sunday 26th March 2017
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Lily of the valley forest flame.

Evergreen with young red leaves that turn green, with small white flowers. Easy to maintain.

Simpo Two

85,390 posts

265 months

Sunday 26th March 2017
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8-P said:
Azehlia
Google will work better with 'Azalea' nerd

Turn7

23,604 posts

221 months

Sunday 26th March 2017
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My Evergreen honeysuckle loses leaves really badly, all through the year.