Using Annuals as Screens Salt Lake City UT

The majority of gardens in Salt Lake City 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.

Skyline Flowers
801-466-8118
3398 Highland Dr
Salt Lake City, UT
Winchester Gardens
801-269-9229
389 W Winchester Street
Murray, UT
Sterner Seed
801-295-8529
668 W 3100 S
Bountiful, UT
Glover Nursery
(801)-562-5496
9275 South 1300 West
West Jordan, UT
Gilson Sprinkler/ Snowplow
(801) 466-2988
PO Box 1062
Salt Lake City, UT
Lambert Floral Spring Garden Plants
801 973-9158
3910 So Redwood Rd
West Valley City, UT
Oakbridge Greenhouse
801-968-4632
4740 W 3500 S
West Valley City, UT
Herbarium Landscape Design & Consultation
(801) 520-3293
406 S. 100 East
Bountiful, UT
Western Garden Center
(801)-571-9241
9201 South 1300 East
Sandy, UT
A-Abco Sprinklers & Irrgtn
(801) 467-0222
2896 E 3300 S
Salt Lake City, UT
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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