this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2026
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There's a small bed in the corner of my landscaping. It's separated from the landscaping coming down the side of the house by a stone drain for the downspout. Behind it is the back porch and it's edged by grass on two sides. I want something in the corner of the bed. Currently there are three English lavender along the curve of the two open sides with a red double knockout rose at the center of the curve. There's a catnip in the center of the bed and catmint filling in around it. The corner closest to the house has orange canna. I want something on the other corner that's out against the yard. I'd like it to be in the five to ten foot range with a spread of no more than three feet. A little taller would be better because I want it to provide some color above the lavender and rose as well as a little privacy for the porch. Along the back of the porch are orange rocket barberries so the plant would be a transition between the barberries and lavender. I'm not overly particular about the color but yellow or orange would stand out from all the purple or red would match the rose. A dwarf tree would be great there but I'm concerned about how close it would be to the concrete porch. My best idea right now is a to put a trellis there with a clematis, there's already a sturdy upright that I could connect it to. I would really like something with a longer bloom season though. It's full sun, zone 6b, with rocky clay soil.

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[–] Seleni@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I mean, if you want color, scent, and a long bloom time, you could go with a rebooming rose, like Scentimental or one of the Knock Out types. Most good rebloomers aren’t quite as tall as you were hoping for, although sometimes you can find them grown as standards.

There’s also lilacs, which even though you’d get only a short bloom, you could prune to whatever look you wanted.

If you want to just do a green dramatic accent, Ilex ‘Sky Pencil’ fits every other one of your requirements.

Probably the best tree that roughly fits what you want is Caragana arborescens ‘Pendula’. Not a rebloomer, but pretty flowers, a nice weeping habit, and a pretty yellow fall color do give it year-round interest.

[–] can_you_change_your_username@fedia.io 1 points 22 hours ago (1 children)

I like holly the red berries look nice through snow. The weeping pea is also interesting, I haven't seen that before. It doesn't need to rebloom if there's fruit, fruit is visually interesting too.

[–] Seleni@lemmy.world 2 points 13 hours ago

Japanese Holly actually gets small purple-black berries (assuming a male nearby). Still good for birds though.

The peashrub can set a sort of tan fruit; but after flowering what people usually enjoy is the weeping form, pruning it to be more open to show that off (it’ll end up looking sort of like a snuffleupagus if you don’t prune). ‘Walker’ is a variety with more delicate foliage so it shows the weeping habit better.

[–] dumples@piefed.social 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Prairie Moon has two Living Fence collections. I would select one of those. These super tall plants are similar to sunflower where is a single stem. I would look at one of those plants or plant sunflower. The edible sunflower are beautiful and would fit your needs but are annuals. There are native perennial sunflowers as well.

[–] can_you_change_your_username@fedia.io 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

That's an interesting collection. I think I've previously looked at three of the six. I'll give them another look. If I had the space for it I'd love to do a naturalized patch like they describe. I've also looked at sunflowers but, like you say, they are annuals and it's a pretty windy spot and they're vulnerable to wind damage. I've seriously considered false sunflowers I'm just concerned that they wouldn't get as tall as I'd like.

[–] dumples@piefed.social 2 points 1 day ago

I have some false sunflowers in my hell strip by my ally. It gets pretty tall around 6 ft but not as tall as some of the living fences.

You could do the perennial sunflowers. I think the Maximilian Sunflower is recommended because it's doesn't spread as much. But I don't have one

[–] kersploosh@sh.itjust.works 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

My local nursery recommended a particular variety of buckthorn as a tall, skinny option. They are in the size range you're looking for. Pictures and info:
https://www.wilsonbrosgardens.com/rhamnus-frangula-fine-line-fernleaf-buckthorn-2g.html

I like the featheriness. I think that would look good there and maybe a thicker plant like that would convince the birds to nest in the plant instead of the awning.

[–] Keilik@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Some of the dwarf varieties available from Mr. maple are wild (not just maples) so it could be a good option for trees, especially if you just put one in a very nice pot instead of planting it directly anyways. You can actually get trailing nasturtium to climb rather well so that could be a good option too.

There’s also some dwarf trumpet vines I’ve seen that should stay compact enough as well, but make sure you don’t plant the full size ones unless you enjoy constant pruning. I cut my (wild? It’s outlived the memory of anyone near this house at least) trumpet vine to the ground every year and they still start climbing the roof by the end of the year.

It’s probably not that terrible honestly, I just have asbestos shingles on my house so it gives me anxiety watching the vines yearning for them.

I had looked at trumpet vines but was concerned about how big it grows. I hadn't run across a dwarf variety. Summer Jazz Sunrise Gold looks really good.

[–] Shadow@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Maybe a fuschia? There's a hardy variety if necessary

Edit:I misread your size request, but take a look anyways. I'd probably do a fruit tree or something. There's also a hardy kiwi vine you could grow on a trellis

The fuschia looks nice. Not what I'm looking for but pretty. Hardy kiwi is an interesting suggestion. It looks like the Issai cultivar is a little less aggressive of a grower and self pollinates so I could get fruit with one plant. Definitely one to consider. Thanks for the suggestions.