Need a Deer Fence Around Your Flower Garden?
9:20 AM | Posted by
Donald
You don't necessarily need a fence to keep the deer from eating your flower garden. It all depends upon what you plant and how you plant it.
Yes, deer will eat a lot of plants like hostas, phlox, hydrangeas, daylilies and other favorite flowers. To grow plants that deer like, you do need a fence or a high-maintenance repellent plan. Spraying plants repeatedly with repellents is costly and time-consuming. And, just when you miss an application of repellent, the deer will move in and munch the plants. Do you really want bars of soap hanging on your plants? Do you really like to go through electric wire to see your flowers?
To garden happily alongside deer, give up on what they like and find your new favorites among the many deer resistant plants.
There are lots of colorful flowers you can grow that deer won't destroy. My favorite perennials are agastache, salvia, nepeta and gaillardia. Cleome, snapdragons, marigolds and larkspur are my favorite annuals. Buddleia, osmanthus fragrans, clumping bamboo and crepe myrtle are my favorite deer resistant ornamentals. Herbs like thyme, lavender, rosemary, oregano and basil grow in my gardens. Bulbs include daffodils, Dutch irises, allium and Spanish bluebells.
Deer will sample a lot of plants, so even the most deer resistant plants may have an occasional missing bloom or leaf. However, the deer aren't as likely to do sufficient damage to keep you from enjoying the flowers and foliage of select plants. In times of severe drought or overcrowding of habitat - when no food is available in the wild, starving deer will eat unusual plants in order to survive.
I've also learned that a large garden that is wide and long, with no clear path for the deer to travel is less likely to be entered. I do have stepping stone paths through my garden and the deer know where those are located. However, since I grow deer resistant plants, their efforts to come into the garden haven't been rewarding. What's the point of going to a restaurant if you don't like what's on the menu? The deer have learned that my garden isn't appetizing or filling.
To block the deer path that was established before I started the garden, I planted large woody ornamentals such as clumping (not running) bamboo, ornamental grasses, bronze fennel, rosemary, buddleia and mass plantings of tall agastache 'Blue Fortune' and 'Salmon and Pink'. These tall and wide ornamental plantings have now grown close together to form a "green" deer fence that cuts off their old trail.
Deer do not like to enter an area where they cannot see an exit. They do not like to be trapped or cornered. By forming "walls" with the taller deer resistant plants, I've blocked the view and not given them anything interesting to nibble.
My deer resistant gardens were planted in 2007. I am still adding and subtracting plants for design and weather conditions, rather than the deer.
I don't stress out over the deer in my garden. I can relax and enjoy the flowers.
Photos and story by Freda Cameron; Location: Home Garden; July 2009
Labels:
deer resistant,
garden design
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Categories
- artists
- Asclepias
- Asclepias incarnata
- book review
- butterfly garden
- Container garden
- cottage garden
- Deer
- deer resistant
- drought and xeric
- environment
- Europe
- favorite accent
- favorite combination
- Flower
- flower bulbs and seeds
- food
- fragrance garden
- Garden
- garden design
- garden inspiration
- Gardens
- Gravel
- gravel garden
- home
- Home and Garden
- Hunger Games
- Irises
- Japanese iris
- Leaf
- Little Lime
- meadow
- Monarch
- Monarch Butterflies
- Monarch Butterfly
- Monarda
- Monet
- musings
- North Carolina
- nursery review
- Pest and Disease Control
- Plant
- plant care
- Plants A-F
- Plants G-L
- Plants M-Z
- Public
- Purple milkweed
- rabbit resistant
- Recreation
- rose_campion
- seasons
- Shopping
- Shrub
- sources
- Stemware
- Sweet pea
- technology
- travel
- United States
- Wayside
- wildlife
- Wine
Archive
-
▼
2009
(182)
-
▼
July
(16)
- Return of the Roses
- Garden Inspiration: Black and White Flowers
- Zinnias - An Annual Event
- Beware an Email Scam
- Garden Fresh Meals
- Wrong Label - Buy When Plant is in Bloom!
- Need a Deer Fence Around Your Flower Garden?
- Not in France? Enjoy Chocolate Croissants at Home
- My Favorite Mistake: Hardy Ageratum
- Host Plants for Butterflies; Loved By Bees
- Summertime Blues: Perennial Color
- Compare Photos: Sun and Clouds
- Staying Alive: Agastache During A Drought
- A Commotion: Gaillardia 'Tizzy'
- Annuals Among Perennials
- Le Tour and My Tours
-
▼
July
(16)
Powered by Blogger.
Popular Posts
-
The image of a table laden with a bountiful harvest isn't just for Thanksgiving. Local farmers' markets and Community Supported Agri...
-
By Freda Cameron Although the weather has passed for planting, this is a great time to plan a garden with the children in your family. Durin...
-
George Washington's Mount Vernon is a reminder of the self-sufficiency of farms of historical significance. Did you know that Washingto...
-
Coreopsis ' Star Cluster ' in bloom with companions Eucomis 'Sparkling Burgundy' ( foliage left) echinacea (multiple...
-
There are few plants in the garden that are virtually maintenance-free. My favorite foliage plant is carex hachijoensis 'Evergold' ...
-
I tried to make a garden plan when I spread the soil in fall 2006 to create the outer gardens. I researched and researched the right plant...
-
These "green" disfigured coneflowers were removed and destroyed. I didn't plant any new " green bloom " echinace...
-
Katie and the Giant Cabbage The idea for Katie’s Krops began with a 9 year old girl and a 40 pound cabbage. In 2008 Katie brought home a ti...
-
May I see your identification please? Theft comes in many forms and recently garden bloggers have discovered that there are bad guys who wi...
-
By Freda Cameron What is the process of working with a professional garden designer? I asked this question at a local garden center that ha...
0 comments:
Post a Comment