Hi. Been in our first home for 4 months now and trying to keep the garden going. I did a post about our yellowing lawn, which we are aerating, too dressings and fertilising as the soil has become compacted. I was wondering if we are having a similar problem elsewhere in the garden.
The hedge has survived, but doesn’t look great. It is a Portuguese laurel (I think?) and the better one seems to have ok soil when I use my moisture measures, whereas the worst one seems to have very compacted soil like the grass has. How do I address this without further damaging the plants, or harming the roots? Also is there a reason this has happened and can I stop it happening again?
The garden had topsoil put on it everywhere, which looked like normal soil you would buy in a bag, but underneath I know the soil is poor and stony. It was apparently fertilised so I was surprised I might need to fertilise the lawn. Also unfortunately my father in law put far too much mulch on it, ‘mulch volcanoes’, and I had a newborn and no energy to remove the excess. Wanting to avoid further issues. Will not tell my father in law as not someone who ‘learns easily’ 🤣.
Thanks so much!
Deb
(picture of best and worst plants in question. )
observations for information:
worst plants:
-more compacted soil
-wilt more on low cloud cover days especially, although all do
-wilt somewhat on hot days but worst on hot days with less cloud cover
-worst have more yellowed leaves on them
-daily watering has not improved them beyond this point, roughly an hour of ‘heavy rain’ amount of sprinkler, making sure all are covered by sprinkler well. On testing seems to be 10-14mm water in 1 hour delivered.
- pattern of yellowing: not specifically outer most leaves, but definitely on sun facing side. Almost none on fence facing side.
- east facing garden.

