I think the nandina looks pretty with bamboo, and you need contrast to the strong verticals with wide plants. Read more articles about Heavenly Bamboo. A reliable and robust variety that's widely considered to be the most desirable groundcover bamboo. An elegant, medium-sized bamboo with whip-like culms that shouldn't be exposed to too much hot, midday sun during the summer months. A vigorous, spreading evergreen bamboo with broad, glossy, dark green leaves that wither at the margins during the autumn.
Do consider adding applied moulding, which is very inexpensive, to the wall below the chair rail instead of expensive panelling. growing instead of heavenly bamboo. The margins of the leaves pale to a creamy silver as winter cold sets in. A dwarf evergreen bamboo with a tight, clump-forming growth habit and low, arching branches. are excellent choices for small trees that will tolerate shade.
Trees: Eastern redbud (Cercis canadensis), serviceberry (Amelanchier spp.) Bamboo is an exotic plant that can be seen in many gardens.
An elegant, medium-sized bamboo with whip-like culms that shouldn't be exposed to too much hot, midday sun during the summer months.
Thanks. Sometimes called heavenly bamboo, this easy-to-grow bush is control. Perfect for a contemporary, minimalist or oriental style garden, it looks good grown alongside an evergreen shrub with leaves that will contrast against the black canes. Quick growing, long-lived, easy to maintain. Can you recommend any shrubs/trees/grass that would complement the bamboo? Appeal: For tropical or Asian ambience.
Keep roots cool and moist with a mulch of rotted organic matter, which provides nutrients.
In tight growing clumps or grove-forming colonies, culms (canes) in many colors, with grooves, stripes, knobbles and swellings galore.
I thought of putting a really nice, artistic trellis against all that white of that garage side, and maybe growing some vine up that or perhaps placing one of those ubiquitous apple espaliers there. 10 years ago. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. Here are some links on bamboo. Avoid dry and desertlike soils or swamps. Can't afford a designer...can you tell?? ‘Jumbo’ has light green leaves and beautiful thin green stems which yellow with age.
We have a new home and there's absolutely no landscaping yet. Some, such as bamboo and grasses, are dynamic, rustling gently in the wind. Use heavy compost for stability but with good drainage. Not sure about what else. Great suggestion. It develops a strong, spreading root system making it useful for stabilising banks and slopes or growing as a medium-height groundcover plant.