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Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

I've been talking to a fellow HOL-er, Ronald Evans, about what flowers might be suitable for a grave he visits in Tottenham. They would need to be very low maintanance and able to go without water for a while as he can not get to the cematary very often. They would be in full sun and planted (vs being in a pot).

Any ideas very gratefully received.

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Yes, i wondered about them but i dont know how much cossetting they need as I've never grown them. I also wondered about geraniums (pelargoniums). They seem to cope well without water. Both would need replacing each year.

agapanthus, crocosmia, heuchera,  bronze fennel, rudbeckia.  i have only rarely had to water any of them.

What about succulents? I've got a window box of them on the hottest sill in the house, they rarely, if ever need watering, form a carpet and some varieties have lovely flowers.

I planted lavender on a relative's grave about twenty years back and it thrives still today.

I think lavender would be great, can imagine it doing very well in those conditions. You could plant it with other plants that like hot and dry conditions, like thyme. Would look and smell lovely, would just need a trim each year.

Whichever plants/flowers Ronald chooses, a mixture of vermiculite into a layer of compost (?? 1:5 or stronger) would probably help to retain moisture from normal rainfall - not necessarily over the whole grave but in clumps here and there.

(I think herself indoors is planning for pyracantha, greenbriar and nettles when she finally gets me planted. With a suitably doleful yew in the corner, I trust. HOL members cordially invited to pee on the grave for moisturising purposes.)

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