hi folks - a bit of a garden engineering question/problem here. I just moved into this house and have this popout sort of flower box along about 10ft of the front, coming off the front of the house 8-10 inches. It was long neglected, filled up with old dead soil and tons of dead roots, etc, major job cleaning it out. But I got to the "bottom" of it, which is a pretty solid mix of 1-inch driveway stone and dirt starting about 2ft down (empty space now from cleanout) and going all the way to the ground, see my picture with markups. The previous people did a lousy job of protecting the facing of the house (basically the siding) inside the box, all of which has rotted off, leaving a sheet-plastic covering on the wood to try to do the job. What I'd like to know is:
1- what are some good showy (I want color!) perennial bush-flowers, or flowers that will stand up to blistering sun half the year, and cold nights the rest of the year (north coast CA). I know crepe myrtles are really good candidates, but I fear it would grow too big for the box, see #2 below. Bird of Paradise maybe? I have lots of irises in the back yard already, could always use more "impossible to kill", my arbor guy told me.
2- what is the best way to keep the plants from putting down roots too deep so I or later people can clean out the box again easily if needed. I was thinking of putting down a thin layer of concrete over the stone bed to limit the depth, but that would probably be stupid as I'd lose the drainage. Not sure what I can use to "stop" the root travel.
3- what is a good method to face-protect the siding wood inside the box (back of the box that is). Someone suggested concrete board, or whatever that really tough stuff is...no more plywood, the water will just rot it. In non-drought times this area gets avg 30 inches of rain a year, so there could be a hell of a lot of water going into that box.
Really appreciate any input, I'm a brown-thumb sort of gardener but want to get it greener! jt, Lakeport CA
best thing to do with this flower box
Hi, jp. I lived in SoCal for 20 years and NorCal for 18. Now I'm in TN. First off, I would nix the concrete idea. That could come back to bite you because good drainage is one of the most important considerations no matter what you decide to plant. You could use landscape cloth/fabric as a barrier and put wood mulch/chips or decorative gravel over that. You can cut an X in the fabric to install the plants. You'll have a nice weed barrier that permits water to drain through.
There are wood products and finishes made by Yellawood. I don't know if you can get them there. Here's the link. https://www.yellawood.com/products/
Living where you do, you have quite a large selection of plants to choose from. I prefer native plants. Here's another link that might help. https://www.houzz.com/magazine/10-top-california-native-plants-trees-and-grasses-stsetivw-vs~29024144
hi Cville_Gardener, thanks so much. You poor thing, I lived in SoCal for 20 years too, wondering if I'll ever get over it. I will follow your tips. Not sure I quite follow "You can cut an X in the fabric to install the plants". The fabric (I take it) will go over the rock bed...then potting soil on top of that, then flowers on top, do I have it right? I don't care if the flower/bush roots grow down into the rock bed, but I'd rather they didn't. Thanks!
The fabric goes over the soil. The X's are cut where the plants will be installed. Then the fabric is fitted around the plant bases and mulch goes on top of that.
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