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Respected Contributor
Posts: 4,028
Registered: ‎03-19-2010

I swore up and down I was done buying new plants and was just going to concentrate on dividing and transplanting.

 

I failed.  Came home with a coppertina ninebark, a helleri holly and a brandywine viburnum, a purple rooster monarda didyma, and a sedum.  

 

If it wasn't for having to dig  thru crappy clay and amending the soil I would easily have probably bought several more shrubs.

Contributor
Posts: 23
Registered: ‎06-05-2015

Plants end up jumping in my cart too! Lol 

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Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 6,372
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

@Allegheny That sounds exactly like me!  

 

I usually do it with clearance plants, probably some sort of pine or shade flower to mix with my hostas.   Last year I got a weeping pine, the year before an Austrian pine.

Trusted Contributor
Posts: 1,417
Registered: ‎04-08-2013

I LOVE IT!!!  As us gardeners know all too well, there is always room for one more, okay, maybe ten more plants!  There is a wonderful lady down the street from us that sells perennials and annuals on her front lawn.  She doesn't do it everyday, but when she does I always come home with something.  So.....today's haul includes one large hosta, four creeping jennies, one yellow geranium and one potted dancing lady violet.  Then I went to Aldi and bought three potted sunflowers.  We are having a backyard party tomorrow and I thought they would look pretty on the tables.  Have I any control?  Nope!!!  :-)

Honored Contributor
Posts: 14,986
Registered: ‎03-15-2014

It's very hard to resist more plants!  I've been pretty good this year, as I'm flat out of space - putting in a new plant usually requires removing something else.  And I'm pretty happy with the way things are.  But I still browse at the nurseries, always looking for a bargain.  Maybe later this month, when markdowns on perennials start.

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 7,675
Registered: ‎03-28-2015

I can't look around a nursery without coming home with something either....LOL

Honored Contributor
Posts: 40,247
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

@Allegheny wrote:

I swore up and down I was done buying new plants and was just going to concentrate on dividing and transplanting.

 

I failed.  Came home with a coppertina ninebark, a helleri holly and a brandywine viburnum, a purple rooster monarda didyma, and a sedum.  

 

If it wasn't for having to dig  thru crappy clay and amending the soil I would easily have probably bought several more shrubs.


 

@Allegheny  In spite of my crappy clay soil, lol, I buy plants like crazy, and amend, amend, amend, the soil.

Respected Contributor
Posts: 4,028
Registered: ‎03-19-2010


 

@Allegheny  In spite of my crappy clay soil, lol, I buy plants like crazy, and amend, amend, amend, the soil.

 


@mousiegirl  I've seen your pictures and shared them with my husband.  I am just amazed!
I don't mind digging the holes, actually have fun making baseballs out of the sticky yellow muck and pitching it in the woods.  I am thinking I need to stock pile top soil.  

 

Honored Contributor
Posts: 40,247
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

@Allegheny wrote:


 

@Allegheny  In spite of my crappy clay soil, lol, I buy plants like crazy, and amend, amend, amend, the soil.

 


@mousiegirl  I've seen your pictures and shared them with my husband.  I am just amazed!
I don't mind digging the holes, actually have fun making baseballs out of the sticky yellow muck and pitching it in the woods.  I am thinking I need to stock pile top soil.
@Allegheny  I had a truck load of soil amendment brought in and dumped in the driveway, so DH loads a wheelbarrow and dumps it in the planting areas.  When DH would compost all leaves, twigs, etc. in a machine years ago, we had the best soil, not to mention the bunny t--ds, lol, but no machine and no bunnies any longer, but I do have a vege/fruit compost bin to add to those plants, and some chicken you know what. Smiley Happy
 

 


 

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 6,372
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

@Allegheny I failed twice today! 

 

I bought an Weeping Alaskan Cedar (Chamaecyparis nootkatensis "Pendula) and a Limber Pine, Vanderwolf's Pyramid (Pinus flexilis).

 

DH cut out three bushes.  He had them out by the time I got back.   .