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| Hi, I'm new to the forum and to gardening as well. I just bought a house and so now I have this little but nice piece of backyard that needs my love and care. |
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| Well I would put clematis vines along that back wall. I have a small yard and have 17 clematis vines, 3 honeysuckle, 1 wisteria blue moon and a variegated porcelain vine. They are amazing and outperforms the perennials that I have and the best thing of all is that they don't take up a lot of space. |
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| Elisa, I don't live in New York,but the last time I visited,there was plant life around.Is that grass and something growing in a container in the picture?If these those are real,then yes,things can grow in NY. One of the easiest and important things to keep in mind,is to make sure the chosen plants are right for your Zone,temperature wise,which is probably Zone 6.That is the USDA (United States Department of Agriculture) rating.Lower numbers are colder during the winter and places like parts of California can be at 10.Most nurseries will have a Zone rating with each plant.It's probably best to stay at 6 or a little lower number for your area. There are many choices for your area.I suggest either going to a local or online nursery(I believe there are both in NY)and seeing what they have.Fruits,vegetables,flowering plants,vines.They can all grow there.There are plenty of books too.Maybe ask at a local library or do an online word search about growing plants in New York.Hope this helps a little.Brady |
This post was edited by Bradybb on Sun, Dec 23, 12 at 11:22
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| My suggestion is to go to your local library or bookstore and check out the garden section. You should see some books that catch your eye about gardening for beginners, etc. Meanwhile you can do some planning over the winter. Take note of the orientation of your property, i.e.where north, south, etc are. Areas facing south and southwest get the most sun. Those facing north and northeast get less sun. Check the various part of your yard to see which areas get the most sun, which areas are shaded by the house or trees, etc. This will help you to plan where to put your veg. garden, your child's play area, etc. Veggies need full sun, but you probably want the play area at least partially shaded. You might want the play area where you can see it from the house windows, depending on the age of your child. I like to see my flowers from the windows too. |
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| My thought is that THE most imp. thing when starting a new garden is to prepare the soil. Add TONS of compost and peatmoss. This is the best and easiest time to do this. Then it is done! After that make sure you have enough sun to grow veggies. Herbs grow well for me in Buffalo- oregano, parsley(winters over but can get tough),thyme,sage(winters over)Mint(make sure you put it in a container because it spreads like crazy.Basil grew GREAT! Tons of pesto and froze the rest.Pretty good luck with tomatoes,beets,beans. Hope you don't have woodchucks as they eat it all just when you're ready to pick! Enjoy. |
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| http://planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/PHZMWeb/ this is plant hardiness zone map. Find the number the coordinates with your zone and never forget it. Plants that only live one season, are call ANNUALS, they are number higher than your zone. Plants the come back eyery year are called PERENNIALS, they are your zone number or lower. Look around your area and see what is already growing there that you like. ASK what it is. Write it down. Look it up. Most plants come in more than one size/color/shape. You may like another one better. Check its zone before you buy. |
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| If I may add to all these suggestions... Before you even plunk down a single cent on any plants, do your garden planning first. (There are tons of plants that are suitable in your zone). Try to plot out on paper what you'd like to do first. Determine what sun this area gets. Are you facing north, south, west, east? - if it's full sun, then we can work on tons of good flowering plants. if it's a shady garden, then we'll work on shade plants. If it's somewhere in between, there are many more plants you can add. Locate where you'd like a patio. Set your seats around the area.. then see if you'd like some 'privacy'. You can 'block' your neighbor's from seeing you by setting a tree, posts (with climbing plants) in that particular area... It's all about good planning. A good tool for doing all these is your camera. Take photos of your yard, print them out on paper and draw directly on the photos. Say a tree here, a shrub there.. all that. so you get a feel on what you need to do. Once you make this determination.. then we can advise you on what plants to use. |
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| Hello again, thank you again for helping back then, I have been doing sooo much reading and I definitely know a bit more now. I've ordered and planted vegetables, even got some nice broccoli plants sprouted from seeds (I know, I read they're pretty easy)... I will have some pictures for you soon. |
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