Project advice needed - create a flower bed of orange white and green

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Posted by tauran on August 15, 2011, 3:59 pm
 
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Hi guys,

im new here and new to gardening, would really appreciate your help in
helping me out on a project i want to undertake.


Aim: I want to create a flower bed represnting the India flag. Orange
White and Green with central Blue circle.


Time: It needs to flower around August 2012

Space: I want to fit it in a space 2m x 1m

Size: I would really like flowers that stay at a low-level with a thick
coverage so the pattern is easily noticeable.



Would really appreciate any advice here, the main thing would be the
actual flowers.


Thanks for your time, hoping you can help.




--
tauran



Posted by Martin Brown on August 15, 2011, 6:04 pm
 On 15/08/2011 20:59, tauran wrote:

My suggestions would be:

Blue, White      as trailing lobelia
Orange      as calendula (or low growing French marigolds)

Green          as thyme or a low growing hebe

Chosen on the basis of being easy to grow.

Doubtless others will have suggestions. Quite a few people in our
village are planning to do red, white and blue plantings next year.

Any suggestions for a foolproof low growing red flower?

Regards,
Martin Brown

Posted by Sacha on August 16, 2011, 5:10 am
 On 2011-08-15 23:04:41 +0100, Martin Brown


There's a dark red nasturtium called something like Red Velvet. There
are some good bright red Pelargoniums and some of the verbenas are red.
--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon



Posted by Martin Brown on August 16, 2011, 5:49 am
 On 16/08/2011 10:10, Sacha wrote:

I was thinking about some of the sempervivums like cv 'Red Devil'. I
don't know of any that are true bright scarlet red though.

Actually we might as well broaden the question out into all the colours
of the rainbow and low growing compact floriferous plants that are
either easy to grow (preferably from seed) or cheap to buy. The ideal
plant should give nearly solid colour at the peak of its display and
last for a decent length of time (so Day Lilies are out).

Sedum acre 'Golden Queen' would count as bright yellow flowers in summer
and lime green yellow foliage in winter.

Regards,
Martin Brown

Posted by Chris Hogg on August 16, 2011, 7:14 am
 On Mon, 15 Aug 2011 23:04:41 +0100, Martin Brown



Salvia splendens and its cultivars, such as Scarlet King?

--
 
Chris

Gardening in West Cornwall overlooking the sea.
Mild, but very exposed to salt gales