Steve Edney
Steve Edney - How to Create a Herbaceous Border
Saturday 4th February 2023 at Monks Eleigh Village Hall
The first EAGG meeting of 2023 saw a really good turnout of members and lots of welcome guests for Steve Edney’s well-received talk on starting a herbaceous border.
Steve was head gardener at The Salutation in Kent for 17 years, before Covid hit and they parted ways in January 2019. Together with his talented partner Lou Dowle, they took this opportunity to establish the No Name Nursery, which they are stocking from a new three acre garden they have created from a local field. In the same year they won a gold medal at Chelsea and Best in Show at Hampton Court, and Lou won a local “best wild life garden award” for their own garden.
Lou has impeccable sustainability credentials and everything on site is recycled, including a home-made green waste mulch applied 6 to 8 inches deep to counter water loss, and a bore hole.
The border of Steve’s talk is 100m x 6m, romantically planted in a limited colour scheme of purple and blues, backed by a purple beach hedge, cut once a year at precisely 7ft - the height Steve can cut it without requiring ladders. For full summer impact the border is not cut back until March, giving plenty of structure year round. Steve described designing in four dimensions. Given a bare site, he uses canes to indicate the depth, horizontal and vertical spread. The fourth dimension is time and he spoke about planting densities here, preferring to thin as plants grew rather than having a lot of bare earth. All the plants were grown on site by seed, cuttings or propagation.
Year one calls for discipline and ruthlessness as the site is fenced and hedges planted, soil prepared and weeds controlled. The rule is that weeds can be tolerated but must never be allowed to seed. Year two was about changing what isn’t working. Steve and Lou keep rigorous records for all 400 plus varieties they’ve used to help judge what measures to take and when. By year three the long border was looking astonishingly well-assembled and established. I look forward to hearing what happens next.
Sally Long
EAGG Member
Steve Edney's Long Border plant list EAGG talk 4th February 2023
Top 5 grasses
Poa libillardierei
Miscanthus Poseidon
Dechampsia cespitosa Goldtau
Top 5 early summer perennials
Nepeta Junior Walker
Geranium Sirak
Iris x robusta Dark Aura
Baptisia Pink Truffles
Salvia nemerosa Jan Spruyt
Stipa gigantea Gold Fontaene
Stipa Calamagrostis Lemperg
Top 5 late flowering perennials
Persicaria Janet
Sanguisorba Nettlesworth Wand
Aster Pink Buttons
Sedum Purple Emperor
Vernonia lettermanii
Top 5 long flowering perennials
Nepeta Amelia
Osteospermum jucundum
Phuopsis stylisation Purpurea
Geranium Terre Franche
Penstemon Garnet
Top 5 shrubs
Anesidontea El Royo
Indigofera heterantha
Sambucus Milk Chocolate
Rosa Bengal Crimson
Pittosporum Wrinkled Blue
Top 5 drought tolerant plants
Erodium manescavii
Allium senescens sub sp glaucum
Oraganum Marchants seedling
Centaurea delbata Steenbergii
Calamintha nepetafolia Gottfried Khon
Top 5 Seed heads
Serratula tinctoria subsp seoanei
Orzopsis mileacea
Miscanthus Rossi
Glycyrrhiza yunnanensis
Eryngium agavefolium