Mixed media with found poetry |
Lesson number 1: How to pick plants based on Sunlight Conditions - What does Full Sun really mean? Good question. Some plant tags and even gardening books may classify the planting conditions differently, there's Full Sun, Sun, Sun to Shade, Partial Shade, and Shade for examples of light conditions. That's where knowing your sunlight patterns are going to come in handy.
For example, that side yard of mine is full sun for almost the entire day. You have to be a hardy plant to survive being planted there. For this spot, I not only look for full sun, but also for the words drought tolerant in those plant tags. I've learned that some Full Sun plants like a balance of some sun and shade, and that could mean morning sun/afternoon shade or vice versa. You simply need to take the time and gain the experience working in your yard and with different plant species. I spent nine years getting to know my first yard, and close to twenty-one here at our second, and I'm only now getting the hang of it.
P.S. Turns out some of those Shade plants actually want more sun than you might think. Oh, and watch out for the fact that trees do grow, and the result is that shade patterns do change.