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5 Messy Plants You Don't Want Near the Pool

You need to aware while selecting poolside plants or take guidance by hiring a Landscape Designer and find out how far their root systems are likely to spread, so you won't get roots in your water pipes. Acacia - This Plant can be grown as a tree or shrub that grows along its stems from late winter to summer, depending on where you live. Keep in mind that all species of acacia are fire-resistant. If you are having an acacia plant it in the front yard and hope a mighty wind doesn't blow around the time of pod and flower drop.

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Azalea – They are also known as the royalty of the garden. They are available in different colors like pinks, reds, purples and white, and there are approximately 800 species belonging to this large group.

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Azaleas are either evergreen but they drop all of their leaves in the fall. In dry climates, the plants may shed their leaves earlier than usual. Leaves will then grow back in the spring. During warm winters, deciduous azaleas may keep some of their leaves through the winter. Bottle rush – They are naturally compact and make ideal hedges for privacy. Those red bottlebrush-looking flowers are known to shed, and when they do, all those individual red needle-like parts scatter into many pieces. If it's near your pool or in the same yard, the wind will blow it you-know-where.

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Crape Myrtle – They are elegant-looking trees that are drought tolerant or resistant if planted (where they are subject to mildew). The tree has pretty flowers in white along with vibrant shades of pink and red during the summer months, with a pretty gray-brown bark that tends to peel off annually.

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