Using Annuals as Screens West Chester OH

The majority of gardens in West Chester have something that needs screening from view—an oil tank, a compost bin, a neighboring house. Quick screens using annuals are particularly necessary in new gardens to provide privacy and much appreciated color until permanent plantings become established. Long-term screens using perennials can also be used to divide a garden into smaller areas, or simply to serve as a living backdrop for other plants.

Station Road Farm
(513)-777-3650
6749 Station Rd.
West Chester, OH
Pine Crest Nursery
(513)-777-3184
9883 Cincinnati Columbus Road
Cincinnati, OH
Butlers Better Blooms
(513)-777-6776
9870 Cincinnati- Columbus Rd.
Cincinnati, OH
Denny McKeown's Landscape & Bloomin Garden Centre
(513)-984-8733
8793 Kenwood Rd
Cincinnati, OH
Loveland Greenhouse
513-683-1581
11924 N Lebanon Road
Loveland, OH
Gear's Florist & Garden Center
(513)-779-2324
7400 Tylersville Rd
West Chester, OH
Natorp's Garden Stores
(513)-398-2550
5373 Merten Drive
Mason, OH
Bigg's Hypermarket
513-459-8809
9600 Mason Montgomery Road
Mason, OH
Sayer's Landscape & Garden Center
513-769-3737
3295 E Sharon Rd
Sharonville, OH
Pipkin's
(513) 791-3175
5035 Cooper Rd
Cincinnati, OH
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Using Annuals as Screens

The majority of gardens have something that needs screening from view—an oil tank, a compost bin, a neighboring house. Quick screens using annuals are particularly necessary in new gardens to provide privacy and much appreciated color until permanent plantings become established. Long-term screens using perennials can also be used to divide a garden into smaller areas, or simply to serve as a living backdrop for other plants.



There are two ways of using annual climbers to make a quick and colorful screen, and the choice will depend on how advanced your planting is:



1. If your garden is brand new and you haven’t set up a permanent trellis, you can place stout rustic poles at 6 to 12 foot intervals and staple cheap plastic bean netting to the posts. At the end of the season, when your annuals begin to die back, you can simply cut the netting and the plants down in one pass.



2. If trellises are already in position and you’ve installed a permanent planting of climbing roses or other perennial climbers but they have not yet climbed very high, you can run annual climbers up the trellis. It takes a little more time to clear away their spent growth at the end of the season, but in the meantime they’ll look so good you may be tempted to keep growing annuals even after your perennial climbers are established.



Read about recommended annual climbers



Read more tips


From Horticulture Magazine