My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Find tips and tricks to make your garden or allotment flourish on our Gardening forum.

Gardening

Scented plants for an (outdoors) pot

12 replies

ErrolTheDragon · 02/02/2020 16:20

Last year I fell in love with the scent of sweet box, bought one and then couldn't find anywhere to put it in the beds so I shoved it in a pot. With the happy result that now I've moved it next to the front door to inhale every time I go out and in.

So... now I'd like some ideas for other scented plants for pots for other times of year.

OP posts:
Report
MereDintofPandiculation · 03/02/2020 09:42

Sweet peas, Matthiola incana both do OK in pots. Lavender. Rosemary for the leaf scent - brush your hand through it every time you go past.

Report
ErrolTheDragon · 03/02/2020 09:53

I do have a lavender which goes by the door when it's flowering.

I didn't know what Matthiola incana but I see its stocks - good idea, I'd not thought of them or sweet peas, I'd been thinking more about small shrubs and perhaps missing the obvious!

The rosemary is by the back door handy for the kitchen. Smile

OP posts:
Report
Hefzi · 03/02/2020 09:59

Wintersweet does OK in pots, as do the various daphne odorata strains: both lovely when not much else is around.

For later in the year, jasmine, if you can support it (and bonus of being evergreen) - there's also some bushy and compact varieties. I prefer sambac personally, but there's lots you can get, especially if you look at nurseries as well as garden centres. Or - my personal absolute favourite - cestrum nocturnum. Smells slightly like honey. It's not fully Hardy, but can cope in to about ten degrees - if you bring it inside, though, as I do, it's fine in a light, unheated room, and barely loses any leaves. I put it by the door once the frosts have passed until it stops flowering--it reminds me of my happy young adulthood in the Middle East.

Report
TooGood2BeTrue · 03/02/2020 10:16

I second lavender and rosemary; they both smell beautiful, won't die in the winter and don't need much watering at all during summer. Roses and lemon balm also smell really nice and again will last for years.

Report
housinghelp101 · 04/02/2020 09:15

Lantana camara are great for the summer, look fab and smell of guava fruit. It always reminds me of childhood holiday memories.

Report
MereDintofPandiculation · 04/02/2020 10:27

lemon balm Lemon verbena has an even nicer lemon smell, though is a bit tender, as are scented leaved pelargoniums (which can come in rose, lemon, eucalyptus, pine and chocolate mint flavours).

Lily of the valley can be grown in pots. So can pinks.

Report
MereDintofPandiculation · 04/02/2020 10:28

Oh, I forgot - for later in the year, try Nicotiana sylvestris. You'll need to re-grow from seed each year, but it produces abundant long-lasting seed.

Report
ErrolTheDragon · 04/02/2020 10:41

Some good ideas! My lilies of the valley are spreading, I think I'll dig some out and pot.

I love lemon verbena but I don't think it would do well here (NW England).

OP posts:
Report
TooGood2BeTrue · 04/02/2020 12:22

Be careful with those lilly of the valleys, OP, as do they do spread indeed; same with bluebells.

Report
ErrolTheDragon · 04/02/2020 13:01

They've been in the same place for a couple of decades, just started escaping from where I wanted them last year.

OP posts:
Report
GarethSouthgatesWaistcoat · 04/02/2020 22:24

Something ate my lily of the valley, I wanted it to spread!

Report
MereDintofPandiculation · 05/02/2020 14:36

I love lemon verbena but I don't think it would do well here (NW England). I have it at 400ft above sea level in Yorkshire, but I bring it in for the winter and stand it in an unheated porch. It loses its top growth be re-shoots in spring.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.