Here are some varieties of ferns. Make your choice !
- One of the best known, asplenium . It has evergreen foliage and grows well in humus soil without excess humidity in winter.
- The variety ‘Cristatum’ has leaves that look like salad!
- Polystichum setiferum ‘Congestum’ has evergreen or semi-evergreen foliage. The fronds can freeze and disappear in the winter when it is too cold. Cut them at the end of winter so that they start again. Height: 40 to 70 cm.
- Dryopteris lepidopoda grows to 70 cm in height. The fronds that grow in spring turn from yellow to red before finally turning green.
- Dryopteris erythrosora has a beautiful salmon color on young foliage.
- Polystichum polyblepharum (or bear’s paw) rises to 80 cm in height and has very chiseled foliage.
- Athyrium niponicum ‘Ursula’s Red’ has deciduous, purple and silvery decorative foliage. Height: 40 cm.
Plant them:
- Choose a location in a grove under trees.
- Lift the earth with a claw.
- Bring chippings and compost to poor soils .
- Place the fern in the ground.
- Bring back the existing soil to fill the hole.
- Tamp lightly.
- Return the existing foam to the foot.
Ferns can also be planted in an old stump or a low wall. For that :
- Make a mixture of soil with a little compost.
- Incorporate it into the stump and plant the fern (here an ox tongue / asplenium).
Whether deciduous or persistent, ferns bring freshness to the garden as long as it is exposed to partial shade.
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