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Gardening

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Help please gardeners! Planting new shrubs in area with no soil, where do I start?

3 replies

ilikeyoursleeves · 11/09/2012 20:35

Hi, I'm looking for some advice cos I am a total novice at gardening!

I'm getting decking put down over the old concrete base where our garage used to be (it was demolished last year). There is a one meter space between the side of the old garage base and the neighbours fence. I'm keeping this area undecked and plan to grow shrubs there so we can get our privacy back (neighbours can see right into our garden since the garage was demolished).

From what I can see there is barely any soil is this area but only leftover bits of hardcore that the builders dumped there (we had an extension built) and this is on top of blaze (spelling?), which is that orange stuff that's on school football pitches IYKWIM. I was planning on digging down a bit but I'm not sure of the following:

A) how far do I dig to plant shrubs?
B) how do I know if the area is well drained or not?
C) what type of soil do I put in this area to grow shrubs?
D) I have lots of veggie bed soil leftover that I bought last month, will this do?
E) what types of shrubs are best for growing bushy and thick to about 2m in height for privacy?

The area in question has full to partial sun for about 4 or 5 hours a day.

Any help would be great thanks!!

OP posts:
TirednessKills · 14/09/2012 16:39

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ilikeyoursleeves · 14/09/2012 21:28

Thanks for your reply. The decking was done today and the joiner made a raised bed out of left over pieces so looks like I now need to buy literally a tonne of soil!

Does anyone know what type of soil I need to fill it? Thanks

OP posts:
purplewithred · 15/09/2012 09:00

To see if it's well drained dig a foot-deep hole and pour in a bucket of water. See how long it takes to drain away. If it disappears in seconds it's very well drained; if it just sits there you have no drainage and will have a swamp in winter.

Shrubs need to go in at the level they were in the pot but you need to dig a bigger hole than the pot so they can get their feet down. Although figs/buddleia will manage in a fairly constricted space

Your veggie bed soil will be fine

Holly is great for privacy!

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