Allotment Gardening Advice Help Chat
Growing => General Gardening => Topic started by: Eblana on April 20, 2015, 09:54
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Hi all, Archie my boxer pup has struck again! I had a fig tree in a large pot which was sitting in front of a south facing red brick wall. The other day Archie decided that it looked tasty and literally ate it down to a three inch stump. Although it was about 5 years old it had never produced any figs and never really put any growth on either. I will leave replacing it until Archie has stopped chewing but was wondering if anyone had suggestions on something else I could try instead either ornamental or productive.
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Would prickly plants deter Archie i.e gooseberries, japonica, rasperries etc. ? I would wait until you have found a way to save plants from Archie, even if you have some sort of guard around them so he can't get close enough to completely destroy :) Good luck :)
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I will probably leave replacing it until next year. He is being neutered tomorrow and we are creating a dog run for him for when I have to leave him unattended hopefully he will settle a bit shortly. The fig was a focal point in the garden so I would like to replace it with something that would be attractive to look at.
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Quince trees are beautiful in bloom, and nice added to apple in pies/puddings. There is a very dwarf variety for pots.
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Quince trees are beautiful in bloom, and nice added to apple in pies/puddings. There is a very dwarf variety for pots.
Ooh didn't know you can get a dwarf one, might look into that.
What about an Acer,very decorative, or I like Crinoodendron hookeri an evergreen shrub with lovely lantern flowers
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I have a small Acer in another pot but the colour doesn't work with the red brick. I will look into the dwarf quince and the Crinoodendron. My husband has suggested an Olive what do you think?
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Acres aren't all red, there are lovely green ones too, olives are nice but seem to be very slow & a rat hey untidy habit I've found
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I will have a look at the green acres as well. Not wild about the Olive idea myself
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I'd just like to speak up in favour of the olive tree - tough as old boots, won't outgrow the pot, evergreen , scented flowers, with luck an olive or two, and they take pruning into shape extremely well. They are not that slow growing , my last one in the ground 5 years ago has grown about 90 sms in that time. I'll get my coat now!