Return to the Australian Native Plants Forum
| Post a Follow-Up
Replacing exotics with natives in front garden
| | |
Posted by artiew QLD Aust (My Page) on Sun, Jul 31, 05 at 23:56
| Hi All,
Prior to this point, I've been concentrating on the back garden, and most of you will be familiar with my 'natives alongside exotics' approach.
When it came to the (severely neglected) front garden, however, I have surprised myself with the extent to which I am now prepared to have almost every single exotic ripped out, and the joy of replacing each of them with natives. The previous owners seem to have planted things willy-nilly : large Eucalypts alongside date palms, Bougainvillea, bromeliads and (cough, splutter) roses ...
Its all looking pretty bare at the moment, but removing the two Euphorbia 'Snowflake' shrubs and the hideous Duranta on the weekend gave me a great deal of pleasure. The neighbours seemed horrified, but their dismay will soon disappear behind a wall of Backhousia Citriodora and assorted lillypillies on one side and tropical Grevillea on the other. None of this is rocket science, but its astounding how poorly matched many of the plantings in Rocky front yards seem to be - no apparent theme tying anything together, and no attempt to group the needier plants away from their hardier colleagues.
All I have to do now is find the right spot for the Toona Clilata and I'm laughing :)
Cheers,
Artie |
Follow-Up Postings:
RE: Replacing exotics with natives in front garden
| | |
| Oh, good for you Artie. I am still mixing my exotics with natives. My front yard has a cottage/potager theme. So I have hedges of westringia and lilly pillies, and lots of native irises, some very pretty runny postman as ground cover, grevilleas grouped together under the silver princess, three euc. ficifolia (grafted). But then I also have a nectarine, 2 dwarf peaches, black mulberry, white mulberry, apricot, 2 oranges... and, to my shame, I have 10 roses. To my astonishment, it actually works really well (I think). Please let us know what you plant, and how you are grouping them. cheers Aggie |
RE: Replacing exotics with natives in front garden
| | |
| Wow - that sounds like quite a front garden, Aggie ! Mine is considerably more modest, and I'm trying to build it around simplicity, and the need to get some of my favourite trees in the ground. Although I was initially going to plant the Xanthostemon at the front, that has found its way to the far rear of my block, so I'm left with the Backhousia and a Blueberry Ash (Elaeocarpus reticulatus) - these will complement an already established Syz Leuhmannii. Underplantings are pretty basic - lots of lillipillies for screening on one side, and the aforementioned tropical Grevillea on the other side (mainly small and prostrate forms under 1.5 metres). I know that my approach is a contradiction - many people seem to regard the front garden as a showpiece - but I dont want to spend too much time in the front garden - the back is where the action is with my 'fruit salad' :) Amusingly, you are the second lady who has defied my 'no roses' edict today - each to their own :) |
RE: Replacing exotics with natives in front garden
| | |
- Posted by roysta Gosford NSW (My Page) on
Wed, Aug 3, 05 at 20:12
Artie The way you described your front "exotic" garden brought all my memories flooding back. We bought our place in 2001 and tore out the entire garden and replaced it with natives. A real hodgepodge was in the front, nasty bougainvillea, Cocos palms (and those awful orange balls)and yes, roses, all behind a 2 metre high wire fence. Along the front bank now are 7 Backhousia citriodoras, which will eventually be a hedge. Next to them on either side of our driveway are 2 Livistona australis. Behind the citridoras are 7 Cyathea cooperis. Also in the front yard are a Xanthostemon Crysanthus an Evodiella muelleri, 5 Archontophoenix alexandrei and 2 Archontophoenix cunninghamia. It's going to be the most spectacular jungle. Go for it I say. Roy |
RE: Replacing exotics with natives in front garden
| | |
| Thanks Roy - your front garden sounds like it will have the effect I'm trying to achieve in my *back* garden : dense plantings and tropical ambience. My palms and tree ferns have suffered somewhat of late - a lot of wind followed by alternately warm and cold days - but I'm confident that they will bounce back when Spring takes hold. Tearing *everything* out is tempting, but I cant bring myself to remove a couple of established Murrayas and two massive clumps of Golden Cane palm. As I said, its more about screening the world than creating a showpiece for me - the less the neighbours see of my patch, the happier I'll be :) |
RE: Replacing exotics with natives in front garden
| | |
I am imaginig how fantasic both these gardens look as these should be a blue print for tropical type oz gardens me im still love my heath land but wow wow wow |
RE: Replacing exotics with natives in front garden
| | |
| Thanks Warcrazy, but I dont think you'd be so thrilled with my garden in its current 'work in progress' state. I guess thats something that separates the 'serious' gardener from the average Joe : the vision (and patience) to take something from a bare block to an oasis within a few years. As I await the next visit from my tree-lopper, I'm seriously considering having most of the exotic palms and one of the Poincianas take out before I try to plant anything else. The irony is that I continually lamented the lack of established plants in my old garden, but it all comes back to what the garden will look like in 3 years, not 3 months. Speaking of heath, I noticed that Don Burke ('Indigenous') was thrilled to find a groundcover which stood up to anything (soil, sun, shade) in any part of the garden - Dianella. All I have to do now is find some in the local nurseries :) |
RE: Replacing exotics with natives in front garden
| | |
| Artie - there's something about gals and their roses ... I thought I could let go, but I just couldn't. I have recently planted some annuals amongst my natives in the front - so together with the bulbs, poppies and alyssum, I also have leschenaultias, correas, k'roo paws, melaleucas. Amongst my grevilleas, I have some thyme and marjoram. Come summer, I will be popping in sunflower seeds (nothing makes it feel more like summer than sunflowers). My garden is definately overplanted, and definately fruit salad ... but it has some quiet aspects too - particularly the westringia hedge and the lovely silver princess in the background. Oh, and come summer, the 50 yr old frangipani will be covered in white and yellow flowers. |
|
|
|
|