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Funky Junk Bog From the gigantic, crinkly leaves of Gunnera manicata to the tiny sticky fly traps of the sundew bog plants are amazing and make a really fascinating addition to the garden. They all like to grow in really wet soil that doesnt dry out, if you dont have these conditions in your garden or dont have much space then a creating your own junk bog is the perfect solution. You could even have a miniature windowsill bog garden. Anything that is watertight and will hold compost is a suitable home for a bog plant, buckets, wellies, waste bins, tin cans, food packaging, bowls or even a punctured foot ball will fit the bill. Planting a Junk Bog
You can gradually increase the number of containers in your collection, arranging them to show off your collection of amazing bog plants. Here we have Acorus gramineus variagatus planted in a football and a welly, Houttuynia planted in a bowl, Gunnera manicata planted in a bucket, Pharlaris and Lobelia Hadspen in another bucket and a carnivorous bog in a plastic bowl. There are plenty of plants to chose from so pick the ones you really like.
Insect Eating Bog Gruesome, fascinating and quite beautiful all at the same time, carnivorous
plants are some of the most interesting and unusual bog plants. They
get their nutrition from digesting the insects they capture in their
cunning traps rather than the compost. The sundew (Drosera) has sticky
globules on fine red hairs which hold an insect fast, Sarracenias attract
insects with a nectar around the rim of their funnels, once they land
on the plant insects soon loose their grip and fall into the funnels
or pitchers to be digested. While the Venus fly trap (Dionea muscipula)
snaps shut on any insect unlucky enough to land on it.
Clare Matthews, Clare Matthews Garden Design Ltd. |
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