Succulent garden ideas: 13 looks for a stylish outdoor oasis
Succulent garden ideas: 13 looks for a stylish outdoor oasis
Aside from the range of colors, shapes and textures available in succulent garden ideas, succulents are extremely well suited to survival in many conditions. They have adapted their structures to hold on to water so they can survive in inhospitable dry conditions and extreme heat.
The diversity of color and form is fascinating, including the likes of aloes, houseleeks and agaves. Most succulents use their fleshy leaves to store water, but some also use their stems and roots, and the leaves tend to be thick and waxy to reduce evaporation. This makes them ideally suited to hot, dry climates and as part of a drought tolerant garden scheme.
Make succulents part of your tropical garden, particularly if you live in hotter parts of the US and Australia. You should be able to grow these plants outdoors in these areas with few problems. Even the more tender succulents, such as sansevieria and crassula. In the UK these will be perfect as indoor succulent gardens.
Then there are those that are borderline hardy, like Aloe striata. If your garden is frost-free you should be able to grow these outdoors all year round. But don’t worry if this isn’t the case, says Louise Curley expert at Amateur Gardening. 'Lots of succulents, such as houseleeks and sedums, are completely hardy. Excess water can be a problem, so you’ll need to improve drainage by adding plenty of grit or gravel. Alternatively, grow in pots so you can move them under cover in winter.'
So not matter where you live, there's a way to incorporate some on-trend succulent garden ideas in your space.
Click through to read the full story...
By Teresa Conway
For drought tolerant, low maintenance displays, our succulent garden ideas are hard to beat