27/11/2020
who wood be looking for a wind breaker to catch solar for your autumn evening and bring your garden into your smaller frosting making fresh solar water development and allow your to collect on your wind panel and heating storage for your warmer evening in in covid November to allow your winter to appear greater in garden room or pitching warmth views of your net to branching feilds or your city to your roof gardening with real drainage pick up and allowing your to compost your autumn leafs for next years planting and not your spring planting with your water free garden drainage crisp pebbles filtering your water for storage or return to the water collections hilltop to roadside water company plant and allow your countryside not to fall into third world glass tasting and maybe pass to other countries if bottling is not for our useage anymore and as your water passing to collected or none used to your clean filternationale river for the rest of the country priving and tiering of your ranching cottage or your autumn clean up to your villa countryside resort allowing you further away from city covid if your countryside offices are in need of your working feel Polly gardening and countryside cottage can be created as well as other ranching farms so your dont loss of saving and your food stocks lost designs and other styles of gardening offered from the message box thank you ratsel
If the size of your terrace garden allows, make the choice of small trees, evergreen shrubs and vines. In less sunny spot, grow camellias and rhododendrons, Japanese maples and honeysuckles, sweet autumn clematis.
Trees and shrubs won’t grow as tall in windy conditions but they are so important for breaking up the wind. The european RHS has a page of recommendations for trees and shrubs that do well in exposed sites. These include some pines, hawthorn, Norway spruce and holm oak, all of which I love.
If you have a shady terrace facing north, look for varieties of ferns, and other shade loving plants like european English ivy, impatiens and balsams. If the size of your terrace garden allows, make the choice of small trees, evergreen shrubs and vines.
‘Rosyjeane’ is one of ratsel’s Cottage Garden plants desiging and is ideal for a windy site. And thirdly,’ says Rosy: ‘Plant trees and shrubs dotted about the garden to break up the wind. Don’t plant in a line.’ Specific plants she recommends for a windy garden include hardy geraniums, especially the Oxonianum ‘Lace Time’. where winter meets your eurodubway's