Are there any succulents that thrive in full shade?
bellpepperguy
12 years ago
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bellpepperguy
12 years agowantonamara Z8 CenTex
12 years agoRelated Discussions
My grass is thriving in partial shade and dwindling in full sun
Comments (6)Review your many watering practices. Pick the one that looks most like this: Water deeply and infrequently. Deeply means a full inch (as measured by a tuna or cat food can). Infrequently means once a month this time of year gradually changing to once a week during the hottest part of the summer. You'll have to measure your own sprinkler to time how long it takes to get an inch. Mine takes 8 full hours. My neighbor's takes 20 minutes. Once you know that information, try watering a full inch and adjust your water frequency according to how long it takes your lawn to look withered. Don't water just because you haven't watered recently. Water when the grass looks dryish. With St Aug that is a fragile time. Water at the first sign that any of the lawn is getting dry. Mow St Augustine at the mower's highest setting. If you can go 2 or 3 weeks in between mowing, do that. I have a St Aug yard that has not been mowed in 14 months and, if you like tall grass, it looks great. It seems to have stopped getting longer at about 30 inches tall. You don't need to do that but I can tell you that 2 inches is way too low, 3 inches is still too low, and 4 inches is lower than I like. The taller the better especially out in the full sun. Do not ever till your lawn. If you ever get that urge, stick your finger in a light socket until the urge goes away. If you till it you will be mowing a progressively bumpier and bumpier lawn for years to come. Jackalleness is new to this forum. He lives in Oz and apparently is not familiar with St Augustine. It does not grow from seed. Maybe they do things different down under....See MoreThe beautiful chalk maple ... Can it thrive on full sun?
Comments (20)Oh, and FWIW, although, if you believe the official range maps, we're technically about ~15-~25 miles SE of the edge of Acer saccharums native range, the planted ones that are extremely abundant here have no problem spreading their seeds & those seeds sprouting and growing. The empty house next door to me that is being remodeled had a 2" caliper sugar maple sapling yanked out of a permanent (built into the porch) raised bed the other day (I'd have tried to dig it myself had I known it was there) that was obviously a seed that sprouted itself. You also see them popping their little heads up over the boxwood and azalea plantings around here sometimes. So I'm sure a mixed planting as you and I both suggest could yield some interesting crosses 15 or so years from now. Who knows...there might be a genetic combination that could create a tree far more able to dominate our forests than what we have now (since A. saccharum is a minor component in MD even where it is native, except at some high elevations in the far western part of the state)....See MoreAny plants for a full shade, shallow soil site?
Comments (13)we had a concrete yard with a foot high layer of soil in a raised bed and we raised rocket lettuce basil spinach and chard in there. if you have about two or three foot you could try anything just buy some seeds and see how they fair seeds are fairly cheap and if nothing comes of it theres little lost. just top up whats already there with a good layer of compost and sprikle your seeds on top. wildflowers native to your area will grow almost anywhere they can find footing even out of walls and many are shade loving you could try collecting seeds from wildflowers along shaded woods that take your fancy or if your permitted taking the plants and a good chunk of soil with them and replanting beside your trees. beans will also grow in shade and climbers will creep up the trees and find light something like honeysuckle or jasmine so long as they have enough food to feed the roots while they are climbing up. you may get less of a crop of flowers or fruit from anything in shade like kale will grow much smaller but it will still grow....See MoreAny one has luck with Madame Alfred Carriere in full shade? thanks!
Comments (28)Jackie and ordphien, thanks for your posts, I have found them most interesting and informative... and I apologise if anyone thinks I'm putting them on the spot here, but Jackie, if I may take your case in point, and I think you have illustrated to me just what I'm getting at, that when you say your location in particular is a great place to grow roses, and your garden is always superbly presented, but it seems with the proviso that you have to irrigate most of the year... ...I think I read that the Sacramento Cemetery garden irrigates once a week, and maybe this is why Descanso dug out their old roses... ...so the question should be, where are the best places in the States to live to grow roses...? where you've got to irrigate or else the whole place would dry up? or areas where you don't..? I think that's an important question in this day and age.....See Morerosemariero6
12 years agocactusmcharris, interior BC Z4/5
12 years agobellpepperguy
12 years agohanzrobo
12 years agohijole
12 years agochachacharlie
12 years ago
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