Rock On With My Garden
Dwarf Conifers in a Rock Garden
For over 25 years I have gardened a rockery or rock garden on a triangular patch of poor soil. I progressively scrounged and collected a range of granite, limestone and sandstone rocks and added them piecemeal. I aspired to growing alpine plants and recognised good drainage and shelter from winter wet weather would be key but that is as far as my planning would go. For the first couple of decades I was busy at work and wasn’t able to put in the effort of looking after small but hardy alpines.
One of the consequences of this lack of time was that I took the easy way out and planted ‘Dwarf and slow growing conifers’ that were a popular fad at the time. I also supported many alpine nurseries with my often ill chosen plant selections in attempts to buy a ready made garden feature. Latterly I joined the Alpine Garden Society and took advantage of shows and seed exchanges.
Then a latter stage crept up on me. The 10-20 year old conifers started to take over in scale and dare I say interest. Firstly dwarf can be a misnomer just because a conifer is small when planted it may very well just be a slow grower that has higher ambitions. I true dwarf conifer is a genetic feature of some species and are worth seeking out at the expense of other mass grown shrublets. Over time I dug out the larger and more boring specimens but still the alpines became less significant. I now have 20+ conifers of varying forms, colours and species taking over the alpines. The highest is 6 feet tall and may be the next for the chop one is low growing but spreads 5 feet wide and a favorite on mine is only 9 inches high. The space is still approximately 200 square feet but is extending into and adjacent bed past the crazy paved path.
Ideas for Rock Garden
- Natural rock gardens should ideally use the same type of local stone in continuous formations or rocky outcrops. Do not place rocks in isolation (although I did so I could stand on flat stones for access.)
- Peat beds can be created even if your soil is alkaline. You can buy peat blocks to make a bund wall or use a buried pond line to fill with soil for acid loving plants. link
- Walls and screes can be used to good effect to accommodate alpine plants
- York Gate Garden Adel uses very large pebbles planted in between with conifers to great effect.
A similar view from 5 years ago – the rabbitsĂ‚Â have now escaped!