For the purposes of this project I am posing as my own client and in this way I can think of the space and the choices to make more objectively. I am working with a small space in the front of an apartment which is south east facing. The space is long and narrow with a window/wall on one side and an open railing on the other.
I began in the spring of 2013 by growing a few vegetables - yellow peppers, jalapeño peppers, lemon cucumbers and tomatoes. I continued to collect succulents and eventually decided to put some together in a large pot I picked up cheaply and added them to the space.
I didn't add anything else for awhile - the vegetables did their thing and the manager of the building had some rather unattractive plastic pots with some impressively large succulents and I left it at that until I decided to build a couple of planter boxes to attach to either side of the railing and I could start to put some colour together that would attract the locals:
Digitalis pupurea, common name Foxglove. I have found it to be listed sometimes in the family of Scrophulariaceae and sometimes in the family of Plantiginaceae. When I initially planted this it had a tall, blooming stem which snapped within a few days, since then a couple of more stems have grown and are blooming.
Also, this plant attracted ants and aphids so I will have to find a remedy to this - my partner tells me that ants farm aphids which was news to me!
This is a spring and fall blooming Cuphea hyssopifolia from the Lythraceae family, common name Mexican Heather, that I planted on the inside railing box. This along with the Foxglove have attracted some local pollinators.
I haven't found out what this is yet.
Perovskia atriplicifolia from the Lamiaceae family, common name Russian Sage has been a big attraction for bees
and offers a delicious aroma.
I planted this Lobularia maritima, common name Sweet Alyssum from the Brassicaceae family, as ground cover between larger plants in the boxes.
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