The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

GREAT OUTDOORS

Plant buyer Jeremy Hall tells Hannah Stephenson how to brighten the patio

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Clever planting will perk up your pots and make your garden glow.

Don’t worry if your summer containers are now past their best because you can perk up your pots with autumn plantings that will give you colour and texture through the cooler months and beyond.

There are two approaches to autumn and winter pots, says Jeremy Hall, group plant buyer for Squire’s Garden Centres.

“If you are a tonal person and like things in harmony, a good way of doing that is to match the colour of the flowers to the colour of the foliage you are using. Lamium with silver foliage and a pink flower would look great with the silver foliage of cyclamen.

“If you take an ‘I-like-it-mixed’ approach and like rustic charm, heucheras are great at giving contrast of foliage. I’d probably use two colours of heuchera together – go for a burgundy type with a bright yellow one.

“To get some flower colour in there, I’d use autumn flowering callunas (heathers) called Garden Girls, which come in a host of colours. Their buds swell – but never open – and they last for ages.”

Other combinatio­ns he recommends include Ajuga Black Scallop – which has very dark, almost black, foliage – planted with white mini cyclamen or with the silver foliage of calocephal­us.

For a traditiona­l autumn feeling try orange pansies and viola with Ajuga Burgundy Glow, which has a pinkthroug­h-to-burgundy foliage colour. Alternativ­ely, go for a tonal effect by combining the ajuga with pink mini cyclamen.

Lamium Beacon Silver is another great subject for tonal planting. Its silver foliage edged in green is a great foil for pinks and whites.

Permanent plantings of acid-loving plants such as azaleas will require ericaceous compost in the pot but if you are just planting up your pots short-term to last from autumn to spring, a multi-purpose compost with added feed should suffice, he advises.

Flowering plants such as pansies and violas, which bloom in autumn, become dormant in the winter months but will re-emerge and flower again in spring.

Other autumn and winter favourites, such as heathers, skimmia, ivy and other evergreens, will give you at least some interest in the cooler months and if you plant some bulbs underneath them in autumn, such as dwarf narcissi or muscari, they will add colour in spring.

“In our autumn barrel, we are using the miniature daffodil Tete-a-tete, which is the most popular because it’s small growing and produces three or four flowers from a single bulb from February onwards,” Jeremy explains.

“Bear in mind, the height of the plants in the pot versus the flowering height of the bulbs you put underneath them. You

can get a pleasing effect if you put tulips in which are clearly going to flower above the height of other plants. But if they are too tall, it will look crazy.

“If you use a mixture of bulbs you’ll get a succession of flowers. Muscari are our second-most popular, which flower just after the dwarf narcissi.”

Plant hellebores in pots in the autumn and they should give you winter interest.

“I’d recommend Helleborus niger for pots,” says Jeremy. “Christmas Carol flowers really early, as does Verboom Beauty. They will flower just before Christmas, if you’re lucky, and then right through to March. They prefer a slightly shadier location but aren’t really fussy about soil.”

Put more plants in your pots when autumn-planting than you do in summer, he advises.

“As the day-length is shortening and light intensity is not so great, the growth rate is much smaller and, other than a filling out, you won’t get plants overflowin­g like you do in summer.”

Good specimens for permanent containers which will provide winter interest include Choisya ternata Sundance, which gives a fabulous splash of golden-yellow foliage colour followed by fragrant white flowers in mid-spring.

If you want berries in winter, add Skimmia japonica subsp. Reevesiana to your display, a small, spreading female shrub with deep green leaves which produces clusters of bright red berries in winter.

Ornamental cabbages are gaining popularity, as good breeding work has helped produce more compact plants, he points out. Curly Pink, Curly White and Curly Red are the most popular.

They’ll last up until Christmas, although the best colour comes from them when the nights are colder, and are good combined with heucheras.

Ornamental grasses, such as pennisetum­s, are also gaining popularity, their seedheads giving soft, wispy movement to containers and will come back year after year. Combine them with violas, hedera and callunas for further colour, he suggests.

 ??  ?? Tonal tips: When buying autumn and winter pots, gardeners can mix it up with pots full of contrastin­g foliage or match the colour of the flowers to the colour of the foliage for a more harmonious feel.
Tonal tips: When buying autumn and winter pots, gardeners can mix it up with pots full of contrastin­g foliage or match the colour of the flowers to the colour of the foliage for a more harmonious feel.
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