don't bother with a Black Dwarf Fern. Despite the fairly awesome name, it's way too thirsty to live in this climate (you and I are neighbors, after all).
Also keep in mind just how many dead hookers would fill a plot 2 feet wide by 20 feet long. And, with winter coming up, so, too, is hooker season.
awesome.[ Parent ]
first question would be, how much sun does this thing get? full, partial, shade?---------if de-virgination results in me being able to birth hammerhead sharks, SIGN ME UP!!! --misslake
and you need some shrubs to hold up that garden during the floral lulls. pieris or daphne maybe. any of the broad leafed evergreens, rhodos or azaleas maybe. i love laurels, the small of them is amazing and i think you're gonna have the right soil and climate for them.
and off the top of my head: creeping thyme, iris. are you looking for something that doesn't requre a lot of water? something low maintenence? something that is tough? something that is showstoppingly awesome or awe inspiring?
dahlias are planted early spring. you might have to lift them in the late autumn, and then store and replant in spring again. cannas might be good too, if you are a bulb and tuber kinda gardener. giant leaves, flowers in late summer early autumn.
for climbers i reccomend scarlet runner beans. tasty green beans and lots of hummingbirds.
Gerberas are where it's at.
wait, you mean the flowers, don't you[ Parent ]