A well as being an ideal setting for spontaneous entertaining, a pool is a beautiful addition to your garden landscaping. |
Pools areas are becoming increasingly formal but loads of pots on paving can be more maintenance than a garden!
In order for a pool to blend naturally into the garden, careful planting of trees, shrubs, foliage plants, flowers and lawn will make your pool a visual delight without creating unnecessary work in the years to come. A pool safety fence can be disguised with evergreen creepers provided they do not give a foothold to small children.
Planning tips
Palms
Palms are an extremely popular choice for poolside planting and justifiably so. Although they do drop their leaves, one or two large leaves every now and again is nothing.
Palms have a relatively small root system so established sizes are easy to transplant where quick results are desired. They are also good for growing in containers.
Most palms will tolerate full sun or semi-shade, but check with your plant shop when buying, as a small number of palms prefer shady conditions.
Pots
All plants in pots need constant watering, sometimes once or twice a day during hot dry weather. Palms in pots require a light fertiliser and need to be kept evenly moist, never soggy.
Clusters of pots full of colourful annuals such as petunias, calendulas, salvia, primulas and marigolds can brighten the poolside. Hardy shrubs like hibiscus, camellias, azaleas and lavender all look good in large tubs set back from the water's edge.
Source:Gardening Made Easy (Murdoch Books)
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