As a novice gardener (unless there anything more remedial than novice) I'm grateful to have stumbled upon this site.
This afternoon a very helpful woman at the garden store sent me home with a lovely assortment of goodies for what we believed to be a garden bed in our backyard. After two hours of digging, I discovered that it was about 10 inches of soil that covered a rock garden. At the very base is. . .blacktop.
Does anyone have good suggestions for perennials that would tolerate a shallow bed in full sun? We're in NE Ohio.
I'll likely post in another section asking for advice on the front yard, which is where I'll likely have to re-designate the plants purchased for the backyard.
Thanks in advance for any advice!
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- Greener Thumb
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You need good drainage for most perennials so why don't you consider planting goundcover such as ajuga which generally is more shallow rooted and does well in sun. There are other groundcovers that do not need deeping draining soil and use the plants purchased for other areas on your lot. When nature calls we must be adaptable.
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freshstart, have I got a book for you! Gardening on pavement, table, and hard surfaces by George Schenk
The possibilities are limitless. 10 inches is a good depth for most plants except for the really deep rooted plants like native tall grasses and false indigo. In my back garden the 2 feet of flower bed next to the driveway is really built up soil with a rock edging just like yours directly on the asphalt. I have also grown a full 30 ft. long by 2 ft wide bed directly on concrete with about 6" of soil using only long strands of ivy holding the soil and plants in. (By the way I would never plant ivy because it is very invasive in most of the US.)
In my experience there is never a drainage problem because excess water seeps out though the rocks. In order not to lose soil with the escaping water I plant the bed heavily and use ground cover type plants at the edges.
My first suggestion is to look into native plants. Where are you located ? If you google your native plant society I'm sure they have suggestions for sunloving natives. At the ends of my beds I have the very lovely native (for me) bird's foot violet (V. pedata) that likes full sun and sandy soil. I also use moss phlox (P. subulata) as an edging plant - low evergreen needle like leaves and lovely spring flowers. Penstemon (P. digitalis) particularly the cultivar Husker Red with black eyed susans. After flowering the maroon jewel like seed heads from the Penstemon add a special touch to the neighboring susans.
Many of the sun loving herbs will do well, lavender and thymes in particular.
Irises like the rhizome exposed and baking in the hot sun, a particularly nice combination is the Iris that has variegated leaves of white and green gray with white flowering thyme.
Daylilies and Siberian Iris also grow well.
One of the small leaved Hardy geranium will also work as an edging plant.
The possibilities are limitless. 10 inches is a good depth for most plants except for the really deep rooted plants like native tall grasses and false indigo. In my back garden the 2 feet of flower bed next to the driveway is really built up soil with a rock edging just like yours directly on the asphalt. I have also grown a full 30 ft. long by 2 ft wide bed directly on concrete with about 6" of soil using only long strands of ivy holding the soil and plants in. (By the way I would never plant ivy because it is very invasive in most of the US.)
In my experience there is never a drainage problem because excess water seeps out though the rocks. In order not to lose soil with the escaping water I plant the bed heavily and use ground cover type plants at the edges.
My first suggestion is to look into native plants. Where are you located ? If you google your native plant society I'm sure they have suggestions for sunloving natives. At the ends of my beds I have the very lovely native (for me) bird's foot violet (V. pedata) that likes full sun and sandy soil. I also use moss phlox (P. subulata) as an edging plant - low evergreen needle like leaves and lovely spring flowers. Penstemon (P. digitalis) particularly the cultivar Husker Red with black eyed susans. After flowering the maroon jewel like seed heads from the Penstemon add a special touch to the neighboring susans.
Many of the sun loving herbs will do well, lavender and thymes in particular.
Irises like the rhizome exposed and baking in the hot sun, a particularly nice combination is the Iris that has variegated leaves of white and green gray with white flowering thyme.
Daylilies and Siberian Iris also grow well.
One of the small leaved Hardy geranium will also work as an edging plant.
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Or . . . start a rock garden, with sedums, hens & chicks, creeping thyme, dwarf conifers, ornamental grasses. All these plants need very little soil (10" is plenty), and very little water. Throw in some decorative river rock (fist sized to basketball sized and even larger), set the plants in place, and then add a gravel mulch.
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