
Ich plane, Sedums zwischen diesen kleinen Lavendelpflanzen zu pflanzen. Ich habe sie bereits und ich habe gelesen, dass sie gute Begleitpflanzen für Lavendel sind. Ich bin mir einfach nicht sicher, ob sie gut interkaliert aussehen. Was denkst du?
Von: Decent_Database8925
7 Comments
There are a lot of different sedums. Lavender will be grey/green for most of the year, so maybe a contrast such as a reddish sedum might work. The larger ones such as autumn joy might do better set back a bit deeper into the bed as there won’t likely be enough spacing otherwise. A ground cover sedum might work well if you want them between the lavender. That way when the lavender flowers it’s the highest and most visible.
I would say sedums are a good choice for a dry hot bed like this one. You might like to mix it up- a taller one with autumn interest (eg autumn joy) at the back, maybe interspersed with a purple leaves one, then ground cover at the front. I like to vary leaf colour and also hide soil.
Yes but I would say both plants will get onto conflict very quickly. Both plants love to expand, but sedums can push lavenders aside with their thick stems and thick leaves. Starving them off light encouraging woody stems..
Lavender will grow a lot – you probably don’t need anything between them.
No helpful advice – just came to say that I love the shape of the flower bed & that you’ve livened up the paved driveway street scenes with it. Looks great
If all goes well in terms of growth you could remove every other lavender and they’d still be pressed up against each other, they get pretty big. I don’t think there’s any scope to plant anything between them.
Sedum spectabile cultivars would for sure, id allow a 3′ radius for each one tho just so they don’t grow into each other too much
i think i’d plant them behind the lavender rather than between it. My baby lavenders have become a foot wide since April. And i know seedum can grow to three foot wide. maybe plant them a foot or two behind the plants you already have, but staggerd so they’re still between the lavender? I’ve seen that its a taller one – definately plant it behind, it’d make for a lovely layerd effect.
Oh, you can also cut new lavender down to the ground in late autumn to keep it looking fresh and green year on year. For established lavender – you need to stay at least 3-4 inches above any ‘woody’ bits.