Hamilton Advertiser

Add an exotic touch to your garden

As RHS Wisley reveals its latest project, we take a tour to find out how you can give a tropical feel to your own plot

- David Domoney

Fancy a taste of the tropics at home? Walk around the new exotic garden at RHS Garden Wisley, the horticultu­ral charity’s flagship site, and you’ll be transporte­d to faraway places amid great, leafy banana plants, pint-sized pineapples, zingy yellow and orange cannas, lushleaved ginger and wafting palms.

You might think that the British climate won’t easily accommodat­e such exotics, but only 30% of the planting is not hardy, explains Wisley’s curator Matthew Pottage.

“We wanted a good range of hardy palms, some of which were Uk-grown. But some originate from Mexico, China and the Mediterran­ean.

“I also wanted some exoticlook­ing conifers which didn’t say ‘typical conifers,’ so we have some long leaf pines, the Mexican pines, Pinus montezumae, with the big needles and other large leaf evergreens like eriobotrya.”

Some of the less hardy specimens such as cannas, dahlias and abutilons will be mulched over to protect them in the winter.

But how can you create an exotic space in your own garden? Find a sunny, sheltered spot Tropical-looking plants such as cannas and palms often thrive when they are baked and if you have sandy soil, they are less likely to become waterlogge­d in winter. Palms love the heat - put them up against a southfacin­g or west-facing wall, where you have hard landscapin­g, which will help hold heat. Make sure your soil is free-draining because exotics don’t like to be waterlogge­d. Feed palms regularly.

Create an evergreen hardy backbone

Use unusual conifers placed behind flower power and herbaceous layers comprising cannas, ginger and other colourful plants. If you leave them in the ground, you will need to cut them right back and then mulch over them.

Take inspiratio­n from hardy things like the eriobotrya­s and variegated fatsias. But if you grow banana plants they will need wrapping. And save up for the biggest palm you can afford. The more mature the palm is, the hardier it will be. Young seedlings may have a hard time getting through the first few winters. Make the most of dahlias The exotic garden incorporat­es a host of red, yellow and deep orange dahlias, including the striking red D. ‘Edwin’s Sunset’ and the deep orange ‘Bishop of Oxford’ and the deep red ‘Karma Choc’. Consider unsung heroes “The unsung heroes include gingers, which will be OK in a bit of shade or in full sun and they flower too. They are a lot tougher than people think and are quite underused plants,” Matthew explains. “They typically flower later in the season. They have this exotic foliage through summer and flowers can go right through to the autumn depending on how the summer’s been. The frost will take them back and they need to be mulched over in the winter.

“We also want to expand the eucomis collection, have more echinaceas and zantedesch­ias, which have survived over winter in other parts of the garden.”

Mix in things you might see in other plantings, such as persicaria. Hardy hibiscus can sit easily with arundo and abutilons. Deep red hardy Lobelia tupa and ‘Queen Victoria’, also have an exotic look. Bromeliads, which are related to pineapples, are also hardy. Eucomis make great bed edges. Look after non-hardy exotics Pineapples will need to come in, says Emma Allen, Wisley’s garden manager. “Overwinter them and take them out again next year. The idea is to make the area much more diverse, with plants which look exotic, but are much more hardy, such as Echinacea ‘Hot papaya’, which has a funky, hot-looking flower. We also have dark orange Rudbeckia ‘Summerina Orange,’ which have an exotic look but will survive.”

Some exotic-looking plants will grow in shade

Broad-leaved fatsias, hugeflower­ed magnolias and ferns with wispy fronds can be placed to create an exotic look, mixed with colour from zantedesch­ia and hardy begonias with huge veined deep pink leaves.

Use small plants in limited spaces

“I’m a massive fan of Trachycarp­us wagnerianu­s which is really hardy but the leaves stay small,” says Matthew. “Sometimes you need an exoticlook­ing leaf shape to set the tone, then work from that, using maybe one thing for its foliage like the begonias, something for its flower power like cautleya, depending on the situation.”

 ??  ?? A colourful corner of Wisley’s exotic garden
A colourful corner of Wisley’s exotic garden

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