Waikato Times

Miles of aisles for garden bargains

Right now is a terrific time to wander the aisles – in person or virtually – and see if you might just stumble across a deal or two, reckons

- Verbena rigida, Verbena bonariensi­s, Knautia macedonica, Sanguisorb­a officinali­s, Sanguisorb­a obtusa, Julia Atkinson-Dunn is the writer and creative behind Studio Home. For more informatio­n, see studiohome.co.nz or @studiohome­gardening

With the click over into autumn, we gardeners are rewarded with the fantastic arrival of garden centre sales. This is most exciting for those of us who spin our wheels over flowering perennials, which bring our spaces so much goodness in summer and often into autumn.

Perennials are already great investment­s as, after a year or two, you can dig up the mature clumps, divide them into ‘‘new’’ plants with a sharp spade and re-plant, drasticall­y multiplyin­g your garden stock.

I like to think of flowering perennials as the delicious, slowly unveiling ‘‘decoration’’ of my garden each year. They even ‘‘put themselves away’’ with minimal help and a quick chop each winter.

They are your garden’s party earrings, the lipstick that it puts on to feel great on a gloomy day and your own offering to mother nature’s bees, moths and butterflie­s.

One of the biggest adjustment­s I have had to make to my life is letting go of instant gratificat­ion and planting perennials in autumn with the aim of pleasing my eyes, sometimes a whole year away. Trust me, you will thank yourself.

Your garden, your style

Picking plants can be quite overwhelmi­ng, whether it be your first time, starting from scratch or working to transform your garden into one that personally makes your heart sing.

I have learnt (after my beginnings of buying ‘‘one’’ of every plant that attracted me like a magpie) that curating beds by repeating plants of fewer varieties gives a rich and luxurious feeling.

You might prefer a limited soft palette or brave, colour chaos, just don’t forget to consider the mix of texture versus shape of bloom versus foliage.

Finding variation in flower and plant size will give you a beautiful painterly effect.

The cherry on the top here is educating yourself on ‘‘when’’ each plant you are interested in flowers, so you can pair it with others that can take the bloom baton once it is finished.

Things to consider in perennials selection

Read the heights that each plant is expected to mature to, so you can imagine how all these new plants might work together, or where they can slot into your existing garden bed.

Pay close attention to how much sun they need. I have in the past (and continuall­y push the limits) planted sun lovers in shade and acted surprised when they didn’t grow at all, or instead, grew horizontal to the ground, searching for light. Not that pretty a result, as it turns out.

The plant you are considerin­g at the garden centre might be flowering, but looking a bit sad.

Don’t worry. It is simply approachin­g the end of its season before it puts itself to bed for the winter. Which is exactly what summer flowering perennials do. This means you are unlikely to get much pleasure from it this year, but even if it looks like it ‘‘dies’’ once planted, it is most likely receding to be dormant and grow its root base ready for next year.

You don’t have to know your purchased plant’s final destinatio­n in the garden. You can plant it anywhere, ideally in the position it prefers in regard to sunlight, then dig up and move it in spring when you can see the gaps better. Perennials are particular­ly easy-going in this way.

Some of my favourite perennials

Astilbe, delphinium­s,

geums, alchemilla mollis, shasta daisy, phlomis, nemesia, aquilegia, foxgloves, lupins, astrantia, filipendul­a and penstemon, among others.

Heleniums, echinacea, rudbeckia,

scabiosa, thalictrum, salvia,

achillea, gaura, Japanese anemones, hydrangeas, asters, centaurea, persicaria, echinops and eryngium, but I could go on.

While not all of these plants will be available in the autumn sales, at least you can do some research to get your hands on them in spring.

 ??  ?? Lupins
Astrantia
Japanese anemones
Lupins Astrantia Japanese anemones

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