Arranging heather and sedum
in Plants
Got a spare area here in the border. I've got 6 small winter-flowering heathers and a sedum autumn joy to plant. Any suggestions on how to make it look fairly natural?
I was going to try and mix them up but I'm not sure there's a way of doing that without them looking too obviously formal.
Best to clump all the heather together for a big swathe of ground cover and have the sedum on its own?
Might shift the two dianthus about or move them elsewhere, either way I've got a load of crocus and daffodil bulbs to intersperse between the lot too.

I was going to try and mix them up but I'm not sure there's a way of doing that without them looking too obviously formal.
Best to clump all the heather together for a big swathe of ground cover and have the sedum on its own?
Might shift the two dianthus about or move them elsewhere, either way I've got a load of crocus and daffodil bulbs to intersperse between the lot too.

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Just look around your garden, and you may have plants and other materials you can use to create a feature of interest where you are planning to put your plants. Wishing you the best of luck ... enjoy gardening.
I like the border just being plants.
If you had a few summer heathers, you'd get some continuation, but you'd also need more sedums to get a decent coverage. The only thing you can do is have the sedum as a 'full stop' at the end of the border, and the heathers as the main planting area. The bulbs are good, but they'll also be done by by late spring.
The border's not deep, so have you got some vertical planting you could slot in? Alliums for instance. Maybe a couple of other slightly taller summer flowering perennials to give a little height and contrast to the heathers when they're dormant, and link the flowering time. Geums or geraniums or similar, depending on your colour preferences.
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
Perhaps just the heathers, and a few spring bulbs, and find another spot for your sedum. Although they do best in sun and well drained soil, I also have them in the opposite conditions - north west facing, in wet clay, with only some late afternoon/evening sun in summer.
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...
"We don't stop playing because we grow old; we grow old because we stop playing." - George Bernard Shaw
Hey - good to see you w.edges. Did you have a bit of flooding? Haven't seen you for a little while and was wondering if you were affected by all the bad weather down your way
Apologies Harry - I'm a bit off topic...
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...